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New restaurant brings Pakistani food to Iowa City

cigaretteman

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When Fawad Nawaz moved from Pakistan to Yorkshire, England, at age 18, restaurant work was just what he did to pay the bills.



At an aunt’s suggestion, he took a job at a family Pakistani restaurant, where he learned to make the kinds of dishes that are British favorites across the U.K.


Now 42 and living in Iowa, he has opened one of Iowa City’s first Pakistani restaurants — and currently its only one — for something more than the money. Like many cooks from all ethnicities and walks of life, he does it for the reaction.



“I have the skills, and I love to feed people,” Nawaz said. “When they like it, I enjoy it, because I’m a people person.”


At Hot & Roll, the new restaurant owner is bringing a South Asian style to Iowa City with a European twist.


If you go​


What: Hot & Roll

Address: 1800 Boyrum St., Iowa City

Hours: Noon to 10 p.m. daily

Phone: (319) 337-0531

Online: Find Hot & Roll on Facebook

Details: A small menu of authentic, English-style Pakistani favorites, American favorites and fusions is available for no-frills dine-in, carryout or delivery via Chomp, DoorDash, Grubhub and Uber Eats.

What’s on the menu?​


With a small menu on this establishment’s no-frills tables, Nawaz takes pride in introducing a new cuisine to the city he’s called home for the past few years.


Dishes like roll paratha and chicken shawarma bring some of the most authentic options with an accessible entry point for those new to Pakistani cuisine. Diners may notice some similarities with Indian food — which makes sense for a country that shares a large portion of its border with India.


While cooked similarly, the two cuisines use a different range of spices and herbs.


The roll paratha combines lemon pepper chicken and gyro meat on a homemade, unleavened bread that still is a little doughy. Combined with a sweet base sauce with yogurt, red pepper, black pepper, salt and lemon pepper, the restaurant’s signature offers a refreshing wrap with a balanced crunch from lettuce and green peppers.









That dish’s place on the menu came at the insistence of University of Iowa students from Pakistan, Nawaz said.


Several kebab naan combo meals start at a modest price, complementing more familiar items made in a different style, including gyros and chicken shawarma. The chick pea salad, another signature, uses a sauce similar to the roll paratha.


American favorites are combined with some of his favorites, making new creations like gyro cheeseburgers alongside fries, tacos, Philly cheesesteaks and other grill standards.


Serving through the British lens he learned to cook through, Nawaz hopes to make Pakistani food here as much of a favorite as it is in the U.K. Since opening in late June, he said its unique style has been what customers love most — even on something as common as fried rice.


“If you ask people about Pakistani food there, they know it,” he said.


Eventually, he hopes to expand the menu to other British classics, like fish and chips, with a Pakistani twist.


How it happened​


At first, Nawaz simply wanted to run a food truck — the same one that sits in front of his restaurant today.


In 2008, he moved to Iowa, where his wife and family lived. After working other types of jobs, he was ready to employ his cooking skills again.


The brick-and-mortar restaurant came at the prompt of a health inspector, who noted he would need a different place to store leftover ingredients. When he signed a lease for the former location of Best China, which closed earlier this year, the idea grew to size.


Coming from a heritage of cooking, though, the larger responsibility may suit him. As he now cooks for others, childhood memories of watching his grandmother cook in Karachi, Pakistan, come out.


There, neighbors — many of them Indian — would come ask her how she made her food. There, the Muslim grandmother would cook for Hindus and teach them fundamentals they could apply and customize to their own lives.


Now, through Nawaz, it’s available for delivery, too.

 
Obvious response….


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When Fawad Nawaz moved from Pakistan to Yorkshire, England, at age 18, restaurant work was just what he did to pay the bills.



At an aunt’s suggestion, he took a job at a family Pakistani restaurant, where he learned to make the kinds of dishes that are British favorites across the U.K.


Now 42 and living in Iowa, he has opened one of Iowa City’s first Pakistani restaurants — and currently its only one — for something more than the money. Like many cooks from all ethnicities and walks of life, he does it for the reaction.



“I have the skills, and I love to feed people,” Nawaz said. “When they like it, I enjoy it, because I’m a people person.”


At Hot & Roll, the new restaurant owner is bringing a South Asian style to Iowa City with a European twist.


If you go​


What: Hot & Roll

Address: 1800 Boyrum St., Iowa City

Hours: Noon to 10 p.m. daily

Phone: (319) 337-0531

Online: Find Hot & Roll on Facebook

Details: A small menu of authentic, English-style Pakistani favorites, American favorites and fusions is available for no-frills dine-in, carryout or delivery via Chomp, DoorDash, Grubhub and Uber Eats.

What’s on the menu?​


With a small menu on this establishment’s no-frills tables, Nawaz takes pride in introducing a new cuisine to the city he’s called home for the past few years.


Dishes like roll paratha and chicken shawarma bring some of the most authentic options with an accessible entry point for those new to Pakistani cuisine. Diners may notice some similarities with Indian food — which makes sense for a country that shares a large portion of its border with India.


While cooked similarly, the two cuisines use a different range of spices and herbs.


The roll paratha combines lemon pepper chicken and gyro meat on a homemade, unleavened bread that still is a little doughy. Combined with a sweet base sauce with yogurt, red pepper, black pepper, salt and lemon pepper, the restaurant’s signature offers a refreshing wrap with a balanced crunch from lettuce and green peppers.









That dish’s place on the menu came at the insistence of University of Iowa students from Pakistan, Nawaz said.


Several kebab naan combo meals start at a modest price, complementing more familiar items made in a different style, including gyros and chicken shawarma. The chick pea salad, another signature, uses a sauce similar to the roll paratha.


American favorites are combined with some of his favorites, making new creations like gyro cheeseburgers alongside fries, tacos, Philly cheesesteaks and other grill standards.


Serving through the British lens he learned to cook through, Nawaz hopes to make Pakistani food here as much of a favorite as it is in the U.K. Since opening in late June, he said its unique style has been what customers love most — even on something as common as fried rice.


“If you ask people about Pakistani food there, they know it,” he said.


Eventually, he hopes to expand the menu to other British classics, like fish and chips, with a Pakistani twist.


How it happened​


At first, Nawaz simply wanted to run a food truck — the same one that sits in front of his restaurant today.


In 2008, he moved to Iowa, where his wife and family lived. After working other types of jobs, he was ready to employ his cooking skills again.


The brick-and-mortar restaurant came at the prompt of a health inspector, who noted he would need a different place to store leftover ingredients. When he signed a lease for the former location of Best China, which closed earlier this year, the idea grew to size.


Coming from a heritage of cooking, though, the larger responsibility may suit him. As he now cooks for others, childhood memories of watching his grandmother cook in Karachi, Pakistan, come out.


There, neighbors — many of them Indian — would come ask her how she made her food. There, the Muslim grandmother would cook for Hindus and teach them fundamentals they could apply and customize to their own lives.


Now, through Nawaz, it’s available for delivery, too.

These fusion joints go broke. For example, see Zaika, which once was in the old capitol mall. Chicken schwarma ain't Indian or Paki. God knows why professional cooks in this town cannot cook Indian food worth a crap. If there weren't psychopaths among you, I would have gladly fed all of you. Indian and Pakistani food aren't dissimilar. Most of Pakistani cuisine is Indian Punjabi food. Kashmiri food is delicious but unavailable here not to mention we don't have a good veggie South Indian joint. Vivek should have run on that!
 
I went to this joint tonight. Nice enough guy. And a real life, I shit you not, Babbu Bhatt. I felt like Jerry err Jagdish. Zero people on a Friday night. Zilch. He sells everything from cheese curds to tacos to chicken strips to burgers to kebabs to gyros. I ordered the variety platter which had gyro meat, chicken Schwarma and a tiny seekh kebab. All of it was tasty but all of it was microwaved or defrosted and reheated. Not a gyro spit in sight.

He also lost his waitress and cook so he does everything himself.

I felt terrible for him and gave him a 25 percent tip on a to go order.

I give this experiment 3 months tops. Too bad. Very nice guy.
 
These fusion joints go broke. For example, see Zaika, which once was in the old capitol mall. Chicken schwarma ain't Indian or Paki. God knows why professional cooks in this town cannot cook Indian food worth a crap. If there weren't psychopaths among you, I would have gladly fed all of you. Indian and Pakistani food aren't dissimilar. Most of Pakistani cuisine is Indian Punjabi food. Kashmiri food is delicious but unavailable here not to mention we don't have a good veggie South Indian joint. Vivek should have run on that!
What are your thought on Taste of India here in CR? I love the food there but wouldn't be surprised if it was less than authentic. I used to like Taj for their buffet but idk if they brought that back after pandemic or not
 
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What are your thought on Taste of India here in CR? I love the food there but wouldn't be surprised if it was less than authentic. I used to like Taj for their buffet but idk if they brought that back after pandemic or not
Taste of India is not authentic but that's fine. The owner has always said his was "Indian fusion" whatever that means. And yes, there is an actual Indo-Chinese cooking style; numerous Chinese in India who settled ancient times ago. They make a dish called Chicken Manchurian or for veggie people, Gobi Manchurian. I believe he had that on the menu or maybe still does. That's pretty decent, the rest isn't.

Taj is decent. Their buffet isn't back and as you know, the ambience and general cleanliness is minus 10. Curries are fine to buy since they are piping hot and can kill the germs. Naan is decent also.

Sadly, in Iowa, we don't have good Indian restaurants but Taj is the best of the worst.
 
Taste of India is not authentic but that's fine. The owner has always said his was "Indian fusion" whatever that means. And yes, there is an actual Indo-Chinese cooking style; numerous Chinese in India who settled ancient times ago. They make a dish called Chicken Manchurian or for veggie people, Gobi Manchurian. I believe he had that on the menu or maybe still does. That's pretty decent, the rest isn't.

Taj is decent. Their buffet isn't back and as you know, the ambience and general cleanliness is minus 10. Curries are fine to buy since they are piping hot and can kill the germs. Naan is decent also.

Sadly, in Iowa, we don't have good Indian restaurants but Taj is the best of the worst.
Ive had the Gobi Manchurian its like fried cauliflower that kinda imitates chicken right? it's great iirc. You're totally right about Taj its always seemed a little unclean but good food and the dude that always used to be there was always super friendly and attentive. Theres supposed to be a new place in iowa city too that has the buffet I'll need to try.
 
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Ive had the Gobi Manchurian its like fried cauliflower that kinda imitates chicken right? it's great iirc. You're totally right about Taj its always seemed a little unclean but good food and the dude that always used to be there was always super friendly and attentive. Theres supposed to be a new place in iowa city too that has the buffet I'll need to try.
Yes, that's right with a tangy, spicy, sauce.
 
These fusion joints go broke. For example, see Zaika, which once was in the old capitol mall. Chicken schwarma ain't Indian or Paki. God knows why professional cooks in this town cannot cook Indian food worth a crap. If there weren't psychopaths among you, I would have gladly fed all of you. Indian and Pakistani food aren't dissimilar. Most of Pakistani cuisine is Indian Punjabi food. Kashmiri food is delicious but unavailable here not to mention we don't have a good veggie South Indian joint. Vivek should have run on that!
I miss Schwarma’s. We make them at home. Where do they originate?
 
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Taste of India is not authentic but that's fine. The owner has always said his was "Indian fusion" whatever that means. And yes, there is an actual Indo-Chinese cooking style; numerous Chinese in India who settled ancient times ago. They make a dish called Chicken Manchurian or for veggie people, Gobi Manchurian. I believe he had that on the menu or maybe still does. That's pretty decent, the rest isn't.

Taj is decent. Their buffet isn't back and as you know, the ambience and general cleanliness is minus 10. Curries are fine to buy since they are piping hot and can kill the germs. Naan is decent also.

Sadly, in Iowa, we don't have good Indian restaurants but Taj is the best of the worst.

It’s unfortunately closed, but Lzaza in Des Moines was some of the best Indian food I’ve had in Iowa. Completely random joint, looks like somewhere you’d take a body if you needed to get rid of it, but god damn the food was fantastic.
 
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It’s unfortunately closed, but Lzaza in Des Moines was some of the best Indian food I’ve had in Iowa. Completely random joint, looks like somewhere you’d take a body if you needed to get rid of it, but god damn the food was fantastic.
Sadly, along similar lines, I don't see this Pakistani restaurant making it to Christmas.
 
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Sadly, along similar lines, I don't see this Pakistani restaurant making it to Christmas.

I’ll have to give it a go. It’s weird that little places like that can’t make it if they’re good. Probably a little too much white bread here in Iowa.

The food is hands down the thing I miss the most from my trips to India.
 
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I’ll have to give it a go. It’s weird that little places like that can’t make it if they’re good. Probably a little too much white bread here in Iowa.

The food is hands down the thing I miss the most from my trips to India.
Please do. He could use your support. Be well.
 
I went to this joint tonight. Nice enough guy. And a real life, I shit you not, Babbu Bhatt. I felt like Jerry err Jagdish. Zero people on a Friday night. Zilch. He sells everything from cheese curds to tacos to chicken strips to burgers to kebabs to gyros. I ordered the variety platter which had gyro meat, chicken Schwarma and a tiny seekh kebab. All of it was tasty but all of it was microwaved or defrosted and reheated. Not a gyro spit in sight.

He also lost his waitress and cook so he does everything himself.

I felt terrible for him and gave him a 25 percent tip on a to go order.

I give this experiment 3 months tops. Too bad. Very nice guy.
Did he at least bring you a piping hot towel?
 
I miss Schwarma’s. We make them at home. Where do they originate?
The Lebanese restaurant Pita’z at two locations in CR makes amazing Schwarma. Just had it yesterday.
What are your thought on Taste of India here in CR? I love the food there but wouldn't be surprised if it was less than authentic. I used to like Taj for their buffet but idk if they brought that back after pandemic or not

Taste of India is not authentic but that's fine. The owner has always said his was "Indian fusion" whatever that means. And yes, there is an actual Indo-Chinese cooking style; numerous Chinese in India who settled ancient times ago. They make a dish called Chicken Manchurian or for veggie people, Gobi Manchurian. I believe he had that on the menu or maybe still does. That's pretty decent, the rest isn't.

Taj is decent. Their buffet isn't back and as you know, the ambience and general cleanliness is minus 10. Curries are fine to buy since they are piping hot and can kill the germs. Naan is decent also.

Sadly, in Iowa, we don't have good Indian restaurants but Taj is the best of the worst.
GOHOX, I thought you’d be armed and staring this restaurant down in the parking lot, waiting for them to make one false move. I kid. Is Delhicacy in CR authentic? We love it.

Also FYI, Taj ditched the restaurant and expanded the grocery (LOVE Magic Masala Lay’s).
 
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The Lebanese restaurant Pita’z at two locations in CR makes amazing Schwarma. Just had it yesterday.



GOHOX, I thought you’d be armed and staring this restaurant down in the parking lot, waiting for them to make one false move. I kid. Is Delhicacy in CR authentic? We love it.

Also FYI, Taj ditched the restaurant and expanded the grocery (LOVE Magic Masala Lay’s).
I didn't know that about Taj. I haven't tried Delhicacy but I'll happily do so soon and give you my reviews. Be well.
 
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I didn't know that about Taj. I haven't tried Delhicacy but I'll happily do so soon and give you my reviews. Be well.
I’ve heard that they’re a bit more authentic. Their Matar Paneer is great, but it absolutely blazes this white boy’s taste buds.
 
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Taste of India is not authentic but that's fine. The owner has always said his was "Indian fusion" whatever that means. And yes, there is an actual Indo-Chinese cooking style; numerous Chinese in India who settled ancient times ago. They make a dish called Chicken Manchurian or for veggie people, Gobi Manchurian. I believe he had that on the menu or maybe still does. That's pretty decent, the rest isn't.

Taj is decent. Their buffet isn't back and as you know, the ambience and general cleanliness is minus 10. Curries are fine to buy since they are piping hot and can kill the germs. Naan is decent also.

Sadly, in Iowa, we don't have good Indian restaurants but Taj is the best of the worst.
I like Mantra in Davenport.

At least it’s better than any of the places in Iowa City.
 
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The Lebanese restaurant Pita’z at two locations in CR makes amazing Schwarma. Just had it yesterday.



GOHOX, I thought you’d be armed and staring this restaurant down in the parking lot, waiting for them to make one false move. I kid. Is Delhicacy in CR authentic? We love it.

Also FYI, Taj ditched the restaurant and expanded the grocery (LOVE Magic Masala Lay’s).
I haven’t tried Delhicacy yet, I usually get Paradise Grill.
 
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