RESTAURANTS IN BRADFORD

Akbar’s Balti Restaurant, 01274 773311, 1276-1278 Leeds Road, Bradford BD38LF

 

Al-Asia Balti House, 01274 678150, 160 Woodside Road, Wyke, Bradford BD128DB

Amano`s, 01274 510555, 61 Main Street, Bingley BD16
 

Bengal Brasserie, 01274 543350, 198-200 Keighley Road, Bradford BD94JZ

 

Blue Sky Cantonese Restaurant, 01274 788333, 18 East Parade, Bradford BD15EE

 

Burger King, 01274 392641, Rooley Lane, Bradford BD58JR

 

Burger King, 01274 734707, 20 Broadway, Bradford BD11EY

Cafe Regal, 01274 737999, Regal Complex, White Abbey Road, Bradford BD8 8AE
Caspian Charcoal Cuisine, 01274 728600, 94-96 Morley Street, Bradford BD7
 

Clarks, 01274 499890, 46-50 Highgate, Heaton, Bradford BD94BE

 

Clifton Restaurant, 01274 546127, 81 Carlisle Road, Bradford BD88BE

 

Commonwealth Restaurant, 01274 731794, 51 Cheapside, Bradford BD14HP

 

Evergreen, 01274 723306, 370 Leeds Road, Bradford BD39QX

Faustinos Restaurant & Tapas Bar, 01274 720902, 7 Stone Street, Bradford BD8 9TG
 

Fryer Tuck Fish Restaurant, 01274 723773, 1060 Manchester Road, Bradford BD58NN

 

Gable End Restaurant, 01274 663040, 14-18 Woodhall Avenue, Bradford BD37BU

 

K 2 Restaurant, 01274 723704, 116 Lumb Lane, Bradford BD87RS

 

Kashmir, 01274 724947, 25 Morley Street, Bradford BD71AG

 

Kashmir Curry Centre, 01274 667513, 858 Leeds Road, Bradford BD38EZ

 

Kashmir, 01274 726513, 27 Morley Street, Bradford BD71AG

 

Kez’s Diner, 01274 502521, 586 Great Horton Road, Bradford BD73EU

 

KFC, 01274 720039, Tyrrel Street, Bradford BD11RU

 

KFC, 01274 493661, 35-37 Duckworth Lane, Bradford BD95ET

 

Khyber Palace Restaurant, 01274 636084, 441 Otley Road, Undercliffe, Bradford BD24QF

 

Khyber Restaurant, 01274 613518, 6 The Green, Bradford BD109PR

Kiplings Restaurant, 01274 622332, 836 Harrogate Road, Bradford BD100RA

 

Little Chef, 01274 392641, Rooley Lane, Bradford BD58JR

 

Main Event Diner, 01274 604806, Huddersfield Road, Low Moor, Bradford BD120TQ

 

McDonald’s Restaurants Ltd, 01274 668366, 1003 Leeds Road, Bradford BD37NH

 

McDonald’s Restaurants Ltd, 01274 622793, 285 Bradford Road, Idle, Bradford BD108EG

 

McDonald’s Restaurants Ltd, 01274 734224, 67-69 Kirkgate, Bradford BD11PZ

 

McDonald’s Restaurants Ltd, 01274 305337, Rooley Lane, Bradford BD58JY

 

McDonald’s Restaurants Ltd, 01274 541827, 45 Ingleby Road, Bradford BD89AP

 

McDonald’s Restaurants Ltd, 01274 740495, Foster Square Retail Park, Bradford BD14RU

 

Mehraan Restaurant, 01274 492124, 61 Duckworth Lane, Bradford BD95EU

 

Mother Hubbards Fish & Chip Restaurant, 01274 541694, Ingleby Road, Bradford BD89AN

 

Mughal’s, 01274 733324, 790 Leeds Road, Bradford BD39TY

Nawaab Restaurant, 01274 720371, 32 Manor Row, Bradford BD14QE

Omar Khan’s, 01274 390777, 20 Little Horton Lane, Bradford BD50AL

 

Pakeezah Restaurant, 01274 664943, 1362 Leeds Road, Bradford BD38ND

 

Red Lion, 01274 676309, Whitehall Road, Wyke, Bradford BD128LL

 

Restaurant Nineteen, 01274 492559, 19 North Park Road, Bradford BD94NT

 

Ridings Restaurant, 01274 679067, 508 Halifax Road, Bradford BD62LH

Ring O’Bells, 01274 832296, 212 Hill Top Road, Thornton, Bradford BD133QL

 

Sahibs, 01274 736969, 5 Manchester Road, Bradford BD50TG

 

Sanam Restaurant, 01274 571875, 50 Beckside Road, Bradford BD72LS

 

Sandal Farm Restaurant, 01274 832241, Sandal Farm Denholme Road, Thornton, Bradford

 

Shah Jehan, 01274 724813, 726 Manchester Road, Bradford BD57QS

  Sorrentos Italian Ristorante, 01274 604806, Huddersfield Road, Low Moor, Bradford

Stansfield Arms, 0113-250 2659, Apperley Lane, Bradford BD100NP

 

Suhana Restaurant, 01274 663600, 918 Leeds Road, Bradford BD38EZ

 

Tariq Of Bradford, 01274 410429, 256 Great Horton Road, Bradford BD71PU

Yo Yo Cafe Bar and Restaurant, 01274 599880, Rosse Street, Shipley BD18 3SW
 

Taste Of Bengal, 01274 618308, 79 Bradford Road, Idle, Bradford BD109LB


Oregano

Often confused with sweet marjoram, but herbalists believe that oregano is better medicinally. The generic name is said by some to be an amalgam of the two Greek words, óros and gános, meaning ‘mountain brightness’ or ‘shining mountain’.

An eastern Mediterranean native, the plant has a long history of use in medicine and it was used by the ancient Greeks in poultices for sores, aching muscles and rheumatic pains in limb joints. The herb was taken to the New World by the early colonists largely for the same medicinal uses. They also used it, infused, as a tea to treat bronchitis and asthma and its digestive properties were employed in treating gastro-intestinal disorders. The dried herb is very popular in Italian cooking.

Chinese
Indian Curry

What is Dal?

Dal is a preparation of pulses (dried lentils, peas or beans) which have been stripped of their outer hulls and split.

It also refers to the thick stew prepared from these, an important part of Indian, Nepali, Pakistani, Sri Lankan, and Bangladeshi cuisine.
It is regularly eaten with rice and vegetables in Southern India, and with both rice and roti (wheat-based flat bread) throughout Northern India & Pakistan.

Dal is a ready source of proteins for a balanced diet containing little or no meat. Sri Lankan cooking of dal resembles that of southern Indian dishes.


Mint Sauce

Mint sauce is a sauce made from finely chopped mint leaves, soaked in vinegar, and a small amount of sugar. Occasionally, the juice from a squeezed lime is added. The sauce should have the consistency of double cream. In UK and Irish cuisine it is traditionally used as a complement to roast lamb (but usually not other roast meats) or, in some areas, mushy peas.

Mint sauce can sometimes be used in recipes in place of fresh mint. Also you could try it on toast or bread. Mint sauce can be added to yoghurt to make a mint raita. "Sweet and sour" sauces such as Mint sauce were common throughout Medieval Europe, (with the use of mint being more common in French and Italian cuisine of the period than that of the English), however they became less common and mostly died out as Europe entered the Modern Era.

Pizza


Indian Curry


BASIL

Basil (ocimum sanctum) is the only member of the mint family which is native to India, where it was called arjaka in the ancient language, Sanskrit. Its Latin botanical names are derived from the Greek okimon, ‘fragrant lipped’ and basilikan, ‘Royal’.

Feelings about Basil have mixed throughout history, the herb having been variously associated with death, religious ritual, medicine, fertility, erotica and even as being responsible for the breeding of scorpions. It is probably for this reason, following a homeopathic logic that it was recommended at one time for the treatment of scorpion stings and snakebites. The ancients, although holding mixed feelings about the herbs, even swore oaths on it in courts of law.


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