Inside Dubai’s newest culinary theatre where memory, art, and modern craft come together.
At Mann Marzi, dining is not just about flavour—it’s about feeling. Founded by Anju Gautam, a former teacher and homemaker turned restaurateur, and helmed by Chef Nimish Bhatia, the restaurant embodies a rare harmony of heart and haute cuisine. Together, they have crafted a space where Indian soul meets global sophistication, where every dish is a dialogue between nostalgia and innovation.
Anju Gautam: The Heart Behind Mann Marzi
Mann Marzi is deeply personal for you. How did your journey from teacher and homemaker to first-time restaurateur inspire the vision behind this space?
My journey has always been rooted in nurturing—whether it was shaping young minds as a teacher or creating a warm, welcoming home. Teaching taught me patience and curiosity; homemaking taught me care and creation. Mann Marzi is where those worlds converge. It’s not just a restaurant—it’s an emotion. Every detail, from design to dish, tells my story of rediscovery through flavour and feeling.

The name “Mann Marzi” translates to ‘do as your heart desires.’ What does that mean to you personally—and how do you want guests to feel when they walk in?
To me, it’s a philosophy of life. It represents the courage it took to turn a dream into reality. When guests walk in, I want them to feel they belong—to leave the world’s rush behind and connect with their senses. Mann Marzi invites them to feel, to remember, and to reconnect with themselves through food.
From Jalandhar to Dubai, your life experiences are woven into the restaurant. Which memories most influenced the concept?
So many. My grandmother grinding spices in Jalandhar, street vendors in Bangkok, quiet cafés in Paris, and Tuscan homes that defined true hospitality. The warmth of Indian kitchens, the elegance of Europe, and the theatre of Asian street food—all found their home here.
As a debut venture, how did you balance the emotional, cultural, and business sides of launching a restaurant at such a prestigious address?
It was a delicate dance—emotion gave it heart, culture gave it identity, business gave it structure. Dubai rewards authenticity and precision, so every creative idea had to meet operational excellence. I learned that true success in hospitality lies where emotion and efficiency coexist gracefully.
Mann Marzi is positioned as more than dining—a sensory theatre. How do you see it evolving in Dubai’s competitive hospitality landscape?
We’re not here to compete but to complete Dubai’s story of cultural expression through food. From our experiential degustation theatre ISHQ to collaborations across art and music, Mann Marzi will keep evolving. We’re not chasing trends; we’re creating a legacy of feeling and meaning.
Chef Nimish Bhatia: The Mind Behind the Menu
You’ve described food as a “living manuscript.” How does that philosophy come alive at Mann Marzi?
Cuisine, to me, isn’t a recipe—it’s a manuscript written daily by those who cook, serve, and taste. Each dish tells a story, evolving with every service. The plating is poetry, the aroma its rhythm, and the flavour its verse. Every diner adds a chapter.

The menu draws inspiration from Sindh to Samarkand. What was your process for reimagining Silk Route flavours with modern finesse?
The Silk Route was more than trade—it was taste, a dialogue of cultures. I wanted to preserve that essence but translate it for today’s palate. So, a Samarkandi kebab might meet a Deccan qorma. It’s not fusion; it’s evolution—respecting legacy while creating something new.
Much of your inspiration comes from heirloom recipes and oral traditions. Can you share one story or memory that shaped a signature dish here?
Our Cold Kebabs are that story. We age them for 48 hours, allowing the spices to rest and reveal their depth slowly. Served cold, they unfold gracefully, layer by layer—a reinterpretation of heritage with restraint and imagination.
Having led kitchens worldwide, how does Mann Marzi stand apart as a culinary canvas for you?
This is not a restaurant—it’s a dialogue between art, science, and sentiment. Here, emotion leads. I compose rather than construct, guided by instinct. It’s rare to find a space where the heart directs the hand.
For diners experiencing your menu for the first time, what dish captures the essence of Mann Marzi?
Chupa Rustam. It’s emotion meeting evolution. A humble Maharashtrian dish reimagined with truffle oil, five mushrooms, olives, and asparagus—Indian in soul, global in spirit. It represents what we stand for: memory meeting imagination.