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Himalayan spread awaits Barack Obama

A Himalayan spread awaits President Barack Obama, who is already a convert to Indian food, on 14 May in New York City, as he prepares to launch his re-election campaign in earnest.

Obama and other dignitaries will partake the Himalayan delicacies at a fund-raiser event at the Rubin Museum of Art, with the food prepared by Michelin-starred Indian-origin chef Vikas Khanna.

Much of the spread being laid out at the dinner, where getting a chair costs USD 35,800, is being kept under wraps, but Khanna said the signature dish would be Ema Dashi, the national delicacy of Bhutan.

'I am looking forward to serve Ema Dashi, which is a national delicacy in Bhutan. But I'm going to be preparing it in my signature style. The rest of the menu is going to remain a surprise,' says Khanna.

The Amritsar-born Master Chef said: 'I've carefully researched and selected each dish to ensure that it is a tribute to the beauty, culture, arts and people of the Himalayas.'

Khanna has written a series of books on Indian food and serves fusion cuisine at his New York restaurant Junoon. 'During my travels to the mountains, I discovered varied spectacular cuisines ranging from Kashmiri to Nepalese and Bhutanese to Tibetan,' he said.

'The menu is a tribute to the cuisine of the Himalayan region, and its beauty, culture and people,' said the star chef, whose book has a foreword by a famous British chef Gordon Ramsay, adding, 'good food is all about the perfect flavour, and that's the essence of the book.'

'The entire Himalayan stretch has some wonderful cuisines. Besides, The Rubin Museum of Art, where the dinner is being hosted, houses some of the most beautiful collections from that region, so I thought why not!' he said, adding that he will however give his signature twist to the regional cuisine.

Meanwhile, President Barack Obama has lauded the contribution of the Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in building up America, citing the example of Dalip Singh Saund, the first Indian American elected to the US Congress. 'They were trailblazers like Dalip Singh Saund - a young man from India who, in 1920, came to study agriculture, stayed to become a farmer, and took on the cause of citizenship for all people of South Asian descent,' he said at the 18th Annual Gala for the Asian Pacific American Institute for Congressional Studies on Tuesday in Washington. 'And once Dalip earned his citizenship, he stepped up to serve the country and became the first Asian American elected to the Congress,' he said.
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