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Soul Pantry - Andaz Delhi

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629 votes
Pizza, Healthy food, Vegetarian options
ClosedOpens at 11AM
Updated 12 days ago
$$$$ Price range per person INR 1,200 - INR 3,000
Soul Pantry - Andaz Delhi on map
© OpenStreetMaps contributors
Gate No. 5, Andaz Delhi, Asset, Street Number 1
New Delhi, Delhi, India
Delhi Aerocity
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At Soul Pantry - Andaz Delhi, you can enjoy pizza
Pizza is the world's favourite fast food
Soul Pantry - Andaz Delhi provides a variety of sweet dishes
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Nothing can be better than eating good Bbq pizza, spicy chicken and pizza salads. Most guests recommend trying tasty chocolate cakes, blueberry dessert and yogurt. It's time to degustate delicious cold coffee, tea or cold brew coffee.

This cafe is well known for its great service and friendly staff, that is always ready to help you. Prices are found affordable here. There is an enjoyable atmosphere and fancy decor at Soul Pantry - Andaz Delhi. Google users who visited this place state that the most suitable mark is 4.6.

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Ratings of Soul Pantry - Andaz Delhi

Zomato

(4.6/5)
273

Foursquare

Not rated yet

Google

(4.6/5)
201

Trip

(4.9/5)
155

Visitors' reviews on Soul Pantry - Andaz Delhi

/ 280
Rahul Prabhakar Request content removal
The Most Radical Thing a Delhi Restaurant Has Done in Years: Nothing. Just Dinner. There is a peculiar modern affliction that has crept into our dining rooms, our living rooms, and eventually into every restaurant worth its salt in this city. You will have noticed it. You are seated across from someone you presumably like — a spouse, a parent, an old friend — and within minutes, without quite realising how it happened, both of you are staring into the blue glow of a rectangle, scrolling through lives that are not your own, while a perfectly good meal goes cold in front of you. The statistics, when you encounter them, are almost comic in their bleakness. Seventy-two per cent of people, according to research, check their phones while dining with family and friends. I suspect the other twenty-eight per cent are simply lying. Which is why what Andaz Delhi has done at their Soul Pantry restaurant is, in the most understated way possible, quite revolutionary. They've asked you to put your phone in a box. A wooden box, to be precise. The programme is called Switch Off, a collaboration between Andaz Delhi and Vivo, and the premise is almost embarrassingly simple: when you are seated, the staff — with that particular warmth Andaz has always done well — politely invites you to deposit your mobile device into a wooden box at the table. The box stays shut. Your phone stays silent. And for the duration of your meal, you are, rather radically, just a person having dinner. I visited Soul Pantry on a quiet evening with my family, with no great expectations beyond a decent meal and some relative calm. What I did not anticipate was how disorienting the first few minutes would feel. There is a kind of phantom itch that sets in when you cannot reach for your device — a reflex so deeply conditioned that you notice its absence the way you notice a missing step on a staircase. And then, quite suddenly, it passes. The format at Soul Pantry lends itself beautifully to this experiment. Diners are invited to build their own meals at a live food station — an inherently social activity, the kind that requires actual conversation and occasional negotiation over what goes on whose plate. Without the dopamine drip of notifications to compete with, you find yourself doing something almost forgotten: paying attention to the people in front of you. The conversations, I noticed, became longer. More textured. The silences, when they came, were comfortable rather than anxious. My family and I ended up playing Uno — the card game, not an app version of it — and I cannot tell you the last time an evening felt so unforced, so genuinely light. Soul Pantry sweetens this proposition further with a rather clever incentive. Tables that manage to stay completely offline for thirty minutes are rewarded with a complimentary dessert. It is, I thought, a masterstroke of behavioural design — turning abstinence into achievement, and then celebrating it with sugar. The food, for what it is worth, holds its own. But I found myself less focused on cataloguing every dish and more focused on the act of eating itself — which is, when you think about it, rather the point. Andaz Delhi has always understood hospitality in a way that goes beyond the transactional. But Switch Off feels like something more than a clever marketing initiative. It feels like a small, earnest argument for the idea that dinner still matters. That the people across the table from you are worth your undivided attention. That a meal shared in genuine presence is worth infinitely more than the same meal documented for strangers. In a city as perpetually distracted as Delhi, that argument needed making. Soul Pantry has made it rather well. Food: 3 Service: 3 Atmosphere: 3 Meal type: Dinner Price per person: ₹2,000+ Recommended dishes: Cake, Pulled Chicken Burger, Red Velvet Eggless Cake, Spicy Chicken Pizza Recommendation for vegetarians: Highly recommend Vegetarian offerings: Clearly labelled vegetarian dishes Parking space: Plenty of parking Parking options: Valet
Rahul Prabhakar Request content removal
The Most Radical Thing a Delhi Restaurant Has Done in Years: Nothing. Just Dinner.There is a peculiar modern affliction that has crept into our dining rooms, our living rooms, and eventually into every restaurant worth its salt in this city. You will have noticed it. You are seated across from someone you presumably like — a spouse, a parent, an old friend — and within minutes, without quite realising how it happened, both of you are staring into the blue glow of a rectangle, scrolling through lives that are not your own, while a perfectly good meal goes cold in front of you.The statistics, when you encounter them, are almost comic in their bleakness. Seventy-two per cent of people, according to research, check their phones while dining with family and friends. I suspect the other twenty-eight per cent are simply lying.Which is why what Andaz Delhi has done at their Soul Pantry restaurant is, in the most understated way possible, quite revolutionary.They've asked you to put your phone in a box.A wooden box, to be precise. The programme is called Switch Off, a collaboration between Andaz Delhi and Vivo, and the premise is almost embarrassingly simple: when you are seated, the staff — with that particular warmth Andaz has always done well — politely invites you to deposit your mobile device into a wooden box at the table. The box stays shut. Your phone stays silent. And for the duration of your meal, you are, rather radically, just a person having dinner.I visited Soul Pantry on a quiet evening with my family, with no great expectations beyond a decent meal and some relative calm. What I did not anticipate was how disorienting the first few minutes would feel. There is a kind of phantom itch that sets in when you cannot reach for your device — a reflex so deeply conditioned that you notice its absence the way you notice a missing step on a staircase.And then, quite suddenly, it passes.The format at Soul Pantry lends itself beautifully to this experiment. Diners are invited to build their own meals at a live food station — an inherently social activity, the kind that requires actual conversation and occasional negotiation over what goes on whose plate. Without the dopamine drip of notifications to compete with, you find yourself doing something almost forgotten: paying attention to the people in front of you.The conversations, I noticed, became longer. More textured. The silences, when they came, were comfortable rather than anxious. My family and I ended up playing Uno — the card game, not an app version of it — and I cannot tell you the last time an evening felt so unforced, so genuinely light.Soul Pantry sweetens this proposition further with a rather clever incentive. Tables that manage to stay completely offline for thirty minutes are rewarded with a complimentary dessert. It is, I thought, a masterstroke of behavioural design — turning abstinence into achievement, and then celebrating it with sugar.The food, for what it is worth, holds its own. But I found myself less focused on cataloguing every dish and more focused on the act of eating itself — which is, when you think about it, rather the point.Andaz Delhi has always understood hospitality in a way that goes beyond the transactional. But Switch Off feels like something more than a clever marketing initiative. It feels like a small, earnest argument for the idea that dinner still matters. That the people across the table from you are worth your undivided attention. That a meal shared in genuine presence is worth infinitely more than the same meal documented for strangers.In a city as perpetually distracted as Delhi, that argument needed making.Soul Pantry has made it rather well.
Gillian Hill Request content removal
After reading good reviews we were looking forward to a pizza from here. How disappointed we were. It was so small, maybe 8" in size and had hardly any topping on it. It was Margherita, couldn't taste any tomato sauce, there was a minute amount of cheese and about 3 small leaves of basil. No fresh tomato slices. Worst pizza ever and an absolute waste of money. Staff were miserable and disinterested too. Food: 2 Service: 2 Atmosphere: 2 Meal type: Dinner Price per person: ₹800–1,000
Pizza, Healthy food, Vegetarian options
ClosedOpens at 11AM
Updated 12 days ago
$$$$ Price range per person INR 1,200 - INR 3,000
Soul Pantry - Andaz Delhi on map
© OpenStreetMaps contributors
Gate No. 5, Andaz Delhi, Asset, Street Number 1
New Delhi, Delhi, India
Delhi Aerocity
Address
Delhi Aerocity
Gate No. 5, Andaz Delhi, Asset, Street Number 1, New Delhi, Delhi, India
Features
Сredit cards accepted Delivery Outdoor seating Takeaway Booking Wheelchair accessible Wi-Fi Parking
Opening hours
SundaySun 11AM-11PM
MondayMon 11AM-11PM
TuesdayTue 11AM-11PM
WednesdayWed 11AM-11PM
ThursdayThu 11AM-11PM
FridayFri 11AM-11PM
SaturdaySat 11AM-11PM
Instagram
@hyatt
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