
A taste of Kerala’s Syrian Christian traditions comes alive in Chennai this Easter
The Hindu
Set to unfold as a one-day pop-up on April 5, the Easter Sadya brings together both vegetarian and non-vegetarian menus, offering a peek into the food traditions of the Syrian Christian (Nasrani) community. While the traditional Sadya is often associated with dishes such as sambar, avial, and rice, this version expands to include community-specific festive dishes.
A distinctive take on the traditional Easter feast is coming to the city, as Chef Kavya Verghese teams up with her mother, Shirin Mammen, to present a Nasrani-style sadya rooted in memory, faith, and the layered culinary history of Kerala.
Set to unfold as a one-day pop-up on April 5, the Easter Sadya brings together both vegetarian and non-vegetarian menus, offering a peek into the food traditions of the Syrian Christian (Nasrani) community. While the traditional sadya is often associated with dishes such as sambar, avial, and rice, this version expands to include community-specific festive dishes.
Shirin Mammen and Kavya Verghese | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
The menu reflects this layered tradition, featuring dishes such as vattayappam and stew, Kerala matta rice, sambar, pineapple moru curry, avial with cheera, pappadam, ulli theeyal, tender jackfruit pickle, inji puli and jackfruit chips. Alongside, there are distinctly Nasrani additions like mappas, meen pollichathe, pothu olarthiyathu and duck mappas, rounded off with desserts like jackfruit payasam and nungu tender coconut pudding.
Kavya, who runs a multi-cuisine restaurant called Mex It Up, in Teynampet, frequently experiments with pop-ups, but this is the first time they are doing an Easter sadya. “We’ve served bits and pieces of Kerala food before, but this is the first time we will be serving the sadya in a way we actually eat at home.”
For Shirin, the menu is as much about storytelling as it is about food. “We call it the Nasrani way of cooking,” she explains. “It is a blend of Indian and West Asian influences. Our family traces its roots to the early Christian settlers, and over time, the cuisine evolved by adapting to Kerala’s ingredients and culture,” says Shirin.

Set to unfold as a one-day pop-up on April 5, the Easter Sadya brings together both vegetarian and non-vegetarian menus, offering a peek into the food traditions of the Syrian Christian (Nasrani) community. While the traditional Sadya is often associated with dishes such as sambar, avial, and rice, this version expands to include community-specific festive dishes.

Dakshina Kannada Zilla Panchayat has rolled out digital mode of water bill generation and collection in 23 gram panchayats on a pilot basis for the first time in Karnataka. This is set to be extended to the remaining 200 panchayats shortly, according to the Zilla Panchayat Chief Executive Officer Narwade Vinayak Karbhari.











