Tag Archives: Rasa Burlingame

Amara Debuts in Belmont

Octopus atop papas bravas at Amara.
Octopus atop papas bravas at Amara.

Husband and wife, Ajay Walia and Reena Miglani may have had successful careers in tech and finance. But ever since earning MBAs in Chicago, they always knew that some day they would open their own restaurant after growing disenchanted by the Indian food they found then in the Windy City.

In 2003, they made good on that, opening Saffron in San Carlos in 2003. That was followed by the fine-dining Indian restaurant, Rasa in Burlingame in 2016, which held a Michelin star for 10 years. Although Rasa morphed for two years into another outpost of Saffron, it returned in force in October 2024.

Now, the couple has broken from the mode of Indian cuisine to open their first non-Indian restaurant: Amara in Belmont, which serves Mediterranean fare.

The restaurant had a soft opening in late-December, when I was invited in as a guest during a “Friends & Family” night to try some of the menu offerings and to offer feedback. The restaurant, located in the Carlmont Village Shopping Center for easy parking, will have its grand opening on Jan. 21.

The bar.
The bar.
The dining room.
The dining room.

The dining room, done up in serene teal and white, evokes the seaside. Come late-spring, the restaurant will open its garden with seating overlooking a man-made stream with a footbridge. In total, Amara boasts 220 seats — more than Rasa and Saffron combined.

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Dining Outside at Saffron in Burlingame, Ne Rasa

India meets China in General Tso's cauliflower at Saffron in Burlingame.
India meets China in General Tso’s cauliflower at Saffron in Burlingame.

At this Burlingame spot, you will find a refashioned brighter interior, an added parklet, a new menu and name change, and owner Ajay Walia no longer greeting you in a sharp suit, but casual shirt and slacks.

In June, Walia closed his former Michelin-starred, fine-dining Rasa on this property, and morphed it into the second outpost of his Saffron (the original is in San Carlos). It was a difficult decision, he says, but one necessitated by the challenges of the pandemic.

Yet despite the transformation, Walia doesn’t believe anything is radically different.

“We’re still buying the same ingredients, and cooking with the same standards,” he says. “The only thing that has changed is people’s expectations.”

A feast al fresco.
A feast al fresco.

Indeed, when I was invited in as a guest of the restaurant last week to dine outside, I found the food as delightful as ever.

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