New Delhi: Indian Parliament's much-publicised canteen will not prepare mouth-watering dishes inside the premises in the Monsoon Session beginning on Monday, with only packed breakfast, sweets, lunch, combo meals and other items to be served.
Except for non-vegetarian dishes, other dishes and snacks to be served in the Parliament during the session will be outsourced by the Northern Railway through its Bengal Sweets vendor in the national capital.
Northern Railway has been providing catering services in the Parliament since 1968. Due to the stringent Covid-19 protocols, three of the current operational canteens -- the Snacks Bar in the Central Hall, and those in the Parliament Annexe and the Library Building -- in the Parliament complex will only make tea, coffee and kahva.
Breakfast, snacks or sweets will have a cheese roll for Rs 28, kachori khasta for Rs 10, samosa for Rs 10.90, a vegetable sandwich for Rs 19.75, a vegetable patty for Rs 25, paneer pakoda for Rs 15.90, vegetable kabab for Rs 75, dhokla (two pieces) for Rs 16.80, and a gulab jamun for Rs 15.40.
For non-vegetarians, there will be chicken biryani with raita for Rs 100 and dry-packed lunch, comprising a chicken cutlet or fried fish, croissant or vegetable sandwich, boiled vegetables, tomato sachet and butter chiplet for Rs 150.
Both these will be prepared at the North Avenue canteen outside the Parliament.
North Indian and South Indian meals will be available for purchase in Parliament for lunch at Rs 105 and Rs 110, respectively.
A paneer dish, yellow dal tadka or pachmela, zeera rice or mattar pulao, pickle, raita or curd, two tava rotis, and a small sweet will be served in the North Indian lunch, while one idli, one vada, one mini dosa, one mini uthapam with sambhar and chutney will form its South Indian counterpart.
Vegetarian biryani for Rs 75, poha/upma with chutney for Rs 55 and idli/vada (2 pieces each) with chutney for Rs 50 will be served as 'Combo Meals' during the session which will continue till October 1.
The Snacks Bar canteen in Central Hall will serve these packed dishes to Parliamentarians and the MPs can have their foods in Room No 70 and 73.
For the first time, there is an arrangement for the lawmakers to maintain social distancing while having their lunch, with only two-three MPs sitting on one table.