From biryani to paratha rolls: Islamabad now gets a taste of Karachi

The picture taken on July 31, 2025, shows a customer taking a picture of food at Caffe Praha in Islamabad, Pakistan. (AN photo)
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Updated 03 August 2025
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From biryani to paratha rolls: Islamabad now gets a taste of Karachi

  • Hot N Spicy, Xander’s, Red Apple and Caffe Praha are some of the outlets that have expanded into Islamabad recently 
  • Islamabad customers say they relish the taste and dining experience offered by Karachi-based eateries in capital

ISLAMABAD: Waiters weave through the busy restaurant floor, hurriedly taking orders from famished customers and making room for plenty of others who amble into the busy Xander’s gourmet café in Islamabad. It has been a little over three months since the restaurant opened for business in Pakistan’s capital. The steady stream of customers suggests it’s here to stay.

This is the story of several restaurants from Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi that have opened their outlets in Islamabad in recent years and found success in the capital. These include Xander’s, Hot N Spicy, Red Apple, Caffe Praha, Student Biryani and others.

These people bring much-needed diversity to the city’s culinary landscape. The southern port city is home to the Memon, Bohra, Punjabi, Pashtun, Baloch, Bengali, Malbari, Sindhi and a large community of MuHajjirs--people who migrated from India at the time of partition. Each group has contributed distinct flavors to Karachi’s ever-evolving palate with their own signature dishes.

But while Karachi has always been famous for its mouthwatering biryani, slow-cooked beef stew popularly known as nihari and the haleem, a thick, savory porridge of meat, lentils, and wheat, Islamabad’s residents did not find the same delight in the capital city’s version of these dishes.

Hence it comes as no surprise that Karachi’s prominent eateries that tried their hand in Islamabad have gotten impressive results so far. Take for instance Red Apple, a Karachi-based restaurant food chain popular for its paratha rolls and barbecue items, that started in Karachi in 1996 and now has 25 branches in total in the city.  

“Three years ago, we launched in Islamabad and Lahore and within that period, have opened seven branches across Islamabad and Rawalpindi,” Hamza Channa, the general manager of Red Apple’s F-6 branch in Islamabad, told Arab News.

“There was no good roll paratha here. So Red Apple brought a good roll paratha and barbeque,” he said, adding the restaurant chain has the potential to open 20 outlets in the capital city.




The picture taken on July 31, 2025, shows Karachi-based eatery Red Apple in Islamabad, Pakistan. (AN photo)




The picture taken on July 31, 2025, shows a chef preparing a paratha roll at Karachi-based eatery Red Apple in Islamabad, Pakistan. (AN photo)

Xander’s, another Karachi-based eatery, describes itself as a modern gourmet café that serves simple and flavorful meals to customers. The cafe has been operating in Karachi for the past 14 years and found success with three outlets there before it expanded into Islamabad three months earlier.

Khasham Zaman, a businessman who has savored meals at both Xander’s outlets in Karachi and Islamabad, said the arrival of Karachi-based restaurants in the city is narrowing the gap in fine-dining experience in the capital.

“There is still room for improvement in the quality of the food, but I think they are doing exceptionally well,” Zaman told Arab News.

“I have tried Xander’s both in Karachi and after that in Islamabad. It’s a new addition and it’s fantastic.”




The picture taken on Juky 31, 2025, shows a customer taking picture at Caffe Praha in Islamabad, Pakistan. (AN photo)

Another Karachi-based eatery that has gained popularity in Islamabad is Caffe Praha. After operating in the southern city since 2019, Praha, which offers its customers the experience of relishing coffee and cakes at its outlets that it says are styled after Prague’s street cafés, opened for business in Islamabad on June 26.




The picture taken on July 31, 2025, shows a customer taking a picture of food at Caffe Praha in Islamabad, Pakistan. (AN photo)

For popular food vlogger “Guy Knows Food,” the popularity of new food chains opening in Islamabad has less to do with taste and more with “aesthetic appeal.”

“It is really easy for Karachi’s restaurants to enter Islamabad’s food market because consumers here have really low expectations when it comes to restaurants,” the vlogger told Arab News.

“They usually just focus on the aesthetic and/or location of the restaurant and are not concerned about actual fundamentals, like food or service or choice of ingredients, or its sourcing even.”




The picture taken on July 31, 2025, shows a chef preparing pizza at Caffe Praha in Islamabad, Pakistan. (AN photo)

He described Karachi’s range of food options as “absolutely amazing,” saying that restaurants based in the city are proof of that.

“Even Karachi’s restaurants don’t maintain the same quality of food and service here as they know that Islamabadi consumers won’t be too concerned,” he said.

“They can get away with it.”

Mahira Khan, however, absolutely relishes both the taste and experience that Praha offers. 

“As they are advertising from Prague to Islamabad, I was expecting the same kind of touch, [that is] European food,” she said, sipping her Peach Mojito.

“And yes, the food was exactly what I was expecting.”


Stars sign letter condemning Berlinale’s ‘silence’ on Gaza ‘genocide’

Updated 18 February 2026
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Stars sign letter condemning Berlinale’s ‘silence’ on Gaza ‘genocide’

DUBAI: More than 80 current and former participants of the Berlin International Film Festival, including Javier Bardem, Tilda Swinton and Adam McKay, have signed an open letter condemning the festival’s “silence” on the Gaza “genocide.”

The controversy began during the opening day press conference when jury president Wim Wenders was asked about the conflict in Gaza and the German government’s support for Israel.

He responded: “We have to stay out of politics because if we make movies that are dedicatedly political, we enter the field of politics.”

On Tuesday, major figures in the film industry accused the Berlinale of “censoring” artists who have spoken out.

The signatories include Angeliki Papoulia, Saleh Bakri, Tatiana Maslany, Peter Mullan and Tobias Menzies, as well as directors Mike Leigh, Lukas Dhont, Nan Goldin, Miguel Gomes and Avi Mograbi.

“We call on the Berlinale to fulfil its moral duty and clearly state its opposition to Israel’s genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes against Palestinians, and completely end its involvement in shielding Israel from criticism and calls for accountability,” the letter stated.

The letter also noted that the Berlinale had made “clear statements” in the past about other “atrocities” including in Ukraine.

Earlier this week, festival director Tricia Tuttle defended the event. “People have called for free speech at the Berlinale. Free speech is happening at the Berlinale.

“But increasingly, filmmakers are expected to answer any question put to them. They are criticized if they do not answer. They are criticized if they answer and we do not like what they say.

“They are criticized if they cannot compress complex thoughts into a brief sound bite when a microphone is placed in front of them when they thought they were speaking about something else,” she said.

Earlier, author Arundhati Roy, who was supposed to participate in the event, withdrew because of the refusal of Wenders and the jury to condemn Israel’s “genocide.”