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India is going thru a very bad phase under bjp..they have let the voters down ...i am ashamed i voted them ..development of religion stuff is going on and not as country in whole
good, this ban is just ridiculous.. all bans are.
most Hindus who eat non veg have no problem with beef, in fact many people like it.
don't you ever get tired of pulling out these strawmen from your *** ?How about a ban on Rape or Murder ?
Eating and drinking body waste of cow, suggest something evil is behind this veg. diet.Pork is generally not on menu in India. Strict Hindus avoid all kinds of flesh, practicing in effect a vegetarian diet.
Mumbai British Raj club vows to keep serving steak pies despite Indian state ban on beef - Telegraph
Mumbai British Raj club vows to keep serving steak pies despite Indian state ban on beef - Telegraph
The Royal Bombay Yacht Club, one of India's oldest British Raj clubs, has announced it will continue serving its famous steak and kidney pie after the government announced a ban on the sale of beef.
The Maharashtra state government's decision to enforce a ban on the slaughter of cows and possession of beef has sent a wave of panic through India's commercial capital where it has never been off the menu. Some of the city's leading restaurants have reported a hungry surge in demand from diners who fear it could be their last real steak meal.
Despite a ban in many of the country's states and cities – in deference to the religious sensibilities of high caste Hindus who worship cows – it is widely enjoyed by Muslims, untouchable and low caste Hindus, Christians and secular gourmands throughout India. It is often served under the guise of synonyms like 'tenderloin' or 'undercut' to avoid giving offence. For many 'untouchable' dalits it is one of their main sources of protein.
The ban was first passed by the state government around twenty years ago but never implemented. Now a new Hindu nationalist-led administration is set to publish the law in its official gazette and remove beef from Mumbai's menus for good. Those who defy it could face five years in jail.
R.N Renjen, chief executive of the Bombay Gymkhana Club, where beef has been on the menu since it opened in 1875, said its 'Steak Manecki' in barbecue sauce, named in honour of a Parsi member, would no longer be served. "I will comply legally, I have no choice", he said, sadly.
Ardhendu Bose, Royal Bombay Yacht Club president, said both steak and kidney and steak and onion pies were prepared last night with parsley potatoes and sauted cauliflower. He had arrived at work on Wednesday ready to scrape 170 years of club history into the bin to remain within the new law.
But when he discussed it with a colleague, he remembered the 'steak' in their pies are from buffalo – similar but leaner and sometimes tougher – rather than cow and that the law could be defied for as long as they are sure their meat is 'buff' rather than beef.
"I spoke to my vice president and said 'we should do something, we don't want to get into trouble'. But he said buffalo is allowed, so we'll carry on as usual", he said today.
Vikram Doctor, one of India's leading authorities on food, said he doubted beef will be entirely banished from Mumbai and that beef lovers will continue to pass it off as buffalo to avoid arrest.
--Mumbai British Raj club vows to keep serving steak pies despite Indian state ban on beef - Telegraph
Mumbai British Raj club vows to keep serving steak pies despite Indian state ban on beef - Telegraph
The Royal Bombay Yacht Club, one of India's oldest British Raj clubs, has announced it will continue serving its famous steak and kidney pie after the government announced a ban on the sale of beef.
The Maharashtra state government's decision to enforce a ban on the slaughter of cows and possession of beef has sent a wave of panic through India's commercial capital where it has never been off the menu. Some of the city's leading restaurants have reported a hungry surge in demand from diners who fear it could be their last real steak meal.
Despite a ban in many of the country's states and cities – in deference to the religious sensibilities of high caste Hindus who worship cows – it is widely enjoyed by Muslims, untouchable and low caste Hindus, Christians and secular gourmands throughout India. It is often served under the guise of synonyms like 'tenderloin' or 'undercut' to avoid giving offence. For many 'untouchable' dalits it is one of their main sources of protein.
The ban was first passed by the state government around twenty years ago but never implemented. Now a new Hindu nationalist-led administration is set to publish the law in its official gazette and remove beef from Mumbai's menus for good. Those who defy it could face five years in jail.
R.N Renjen, chief executive of the Bombay Gymkhana Club, where beef has been on the menu since it opened in 1875, said its 'Steak Manecki' in barbecue sauce, named in honour of a Parsi member, would no longer be served. "I will comply legally, I have no choice", he said, sadly.
Ardhendu Bose, Royal Bombay Yacht Club president, said both steak and kidney and steak and onion pies were prepared last night with parsley potatoes and sauted cauliflower. He had arrived at work on Wednesday ready to scrape 170 years of club history into the bin to remain within the new law.
But when he discussed it with a colleague, he remembered the 'steak' in their pies are from buffalo – similar but leaner and sometimes tougher – rather than cow and that the law could be defied for as long as they are sure their meat is 'buff' rather than beef.
"I spoke to my vice president and said 'we should do something, we don't want to get into trouble'. But he said buffalo is allowed, so we'll carry on as usual", he said today.
Vikram Doctor, one of India's leading authorities on food, said he doubted beef will be entirely banished from Mumbai and that beef lovers will continue to pass it off as buffalo to avoid arrest.
--Eating and drinking body waste of cow, suggest something evil is behind this veg. diet.
BJP don't have balls big enough to ban beef of westerners.
Despite a ban in many of the country's states and cities – in deference to the religious sensibilities of high caste Hindus who worship cows – it is widely enjoyed by Muslims, untouchable and low caste Hindus, Christians and secular gourmands throughout India. .
Eating and drinking body waste of cow, suggest something evil is behind this veg. diet.
BJP don't have balls big enough to ban beef of westerners.
Morals? Boy, this has nothing to do with morals.Pakistan-a nation which cannot save its minorities and advices India and morals.
Well, there was a previous event where a BJP member of parliament said he would put an idol in every mosque if given the chance.????
How did you relate ban of beef to putting hindu idols in churches and mosques???
Btw I as a HINDU oppose ban on beef.
lol, why to be defensive about this. Two wrongs don't make a right, besides, you're taking a moral stance while I am not.How can we compete with Pakistan on a secular front. We are trying to stop the slaughter of cows. You are not even trying to stop the slaughter of your minorities. Your society has nothing but contempt for them. The ones that slaughter are hailed as heroes and processions are taken to protect them.
Shias, Hindus, Christians, Ahmadis not to mention ethnic targeting like in Balochistan.
So you should not count on India to make Pakistan's evils look the lesser.
Pakistan was created for Muslims who feared that they would not be allowed to follow all the tenants of Islam to the T.
If a Indian Muslim were to come seeking refuge in Pakistan on these grounds, please do not refuse. And India will not stop them.
That's what we call circumventing the laws and getting what is still illegal.........Good do it..
if any one mulsim .. chirtin .. parsis.. who love beef eat it.. i think ban is on cutting beef not eating..or retail sale legally
if you get beef legally (pakced ,, imported .. came from state where it aloowed no issue )
till it under rule of law.. no issue ..
indian costituin gave you right to be free in some aspect so enjoy
but when you cross the rule of law line .. then auhorites will not listen any crap.. any
Mumbai British Raj club vows to keep serving steak pies despite Indian state ban on beef - Telegraph
Mumbai British Raj club vows to keep serving steak pies despite Indian state ban on beef - Telegraph
The Royal Bombay Yacht Club, one of India's oldest British Raj clubs, has announced it will continue serving its famous steak and kidney pie after the government announced a ban on the sale of beef.
The Maharashtra state government's decision to enforce a ban on the slaughter of cows and possession of beef has sent a wave of panic through India's commercial capital where it has never been off the menu. Some of the city's leading restaurants have reported a hungry surge in demand from diners who fear it could be their last real steak meal.
Despite a ban in many of the country's states and cities – in deference to the religious sensibilities of high caste Hindus who worship cows – it is widely enjoyed by Muslims, untouchable and low caste Hindus, Christians and secular gourmands throughout India. It is often served under the guise of synonyms like 'tenderloin' or 'undercut' to avoid giving offence. For many 'untouchable' dalits it is one of their main sources of protein.
The ban was first passed by the state government around twenty years ago but never implemented. Now a new Hindu nationalist-led administration is set to publish the law in its official gazette and remove beef from Mumbai's menus for good. Those who defy it could face five years in jail.
R.N Renjen, chief executive of the Bombay Gymkhana Club, where beef has been on the menu since it opened in 1875, said its 'Steak Manecki' in barbecue sauce, named in honour of a Parsi member, would no longer be served. "I will comply legally, I have no choice", he said, sadly.
Ardhendu Bose, Royal Bombay Yacht Club president, said both steak and kidney and steak and onion pies were prepared last night with parsley potatoes and sauted cauliflower. He had arrived at work on Wednesday ready to scrape 170 years of club history into the bin to remain within the new law.
But when he discussed it with a colleague, he remembered the 'steak' in their pies are from buffalo – similar but leaner and sometimes tougher – rather than cow and that the law could be defied for as long as they are sure their meat is 'buff' rather than beef.
"I spoke to my vice president and said 'we should do something, we don't want to get into trouble'. But he said buffalo is allowed, so we'll carry on as usual", he said today.
Vikram Doctor, one of India's leading authorities on food, said he doubted beef will be entirely banished from Mumbai and that beef lovers will continue to pass it off as buffalo to avoid arrest.