Indian in Denver

  • Detail View
  • List View
  • Grid View

69 results

page 1 of 3

  • India's Restaurant

    8921 E. Hampden Ave. Southeast Denver

    303-755-4284

    When Krishan Kappor relocated India's, his terrific curry house, from its longtime home on the perimeter of Tamarac Square to Tiffany Plaza, he definitely traded up in space. But in February 2015, India's outgrew that space, too, and now occupies a building farther east on Hampden Avenue. The food is as good as ever and even with a Punjabi-tempered menu that features many of the same dishes that litter the boards of just about every other Indian restaurant in town, Kappor and his kitchen crew continue to do these dishes right, serving up sizzling cast-iron platters of tandoori meats and seafood, and turning out scintillating curries scented with beautifully balanced spices that perfume the spacious dining room.
    16 articles
  • Little India

    330 E. 6th Ave. Central Denver

    303-871-9777

    Little India's take on Indian food is an odd mix of regional specialties, all cooked in the tradition of northern Indian cuisine by a Punjabi chef. The menu is long and dignified, showcasing the curries and masalas that even casual Indian-food eaters would recognize, as well as five kinds of saag, specialties of Madras, Danshak, Bombay and Punjab, and even colonial dishes like the vindaloos from Goa. And everything from those complicated vindaloos to the simplest chutney has the potential to transport a diner to utter bliss.
    28 articles
  • Star of India

    3102 S. Parker Rd. Aurora

    303-755-1921

    Of the many Indian restaurants in town, Star of India is one of the best — and definitely boasts the best mango lassi. The dining room is comfortable; guests will enjoy the desert-colored walls and cultural artifacts, as well as the beautiful copper bowls in which the food arrives. The menu is broad, with all the traditional specialties, but the kitchen is at its best with the richest, spiciest plates, so try the decadent butter chicken or fiery lamb vindaloo.
    6 articles
  • Tibet's Restaurant & Bar

    321 McCaslin Blvd., Louisville Boulder

    303-665-2557

    Tibet's is owned by Kami Sherpa and Pasang Sherpa, and related through blood (not money) to another great Tibetan restaurant: Sherpa's Adventurers Restaurant in Boulder. It's staffed by some of Sherpa's former waiters, and Pasang himself works the floor while the cooking is done by chef Uttam Lama, who has major cred: He got his training at a Tibetan Buddhist monastery and once cooked for the Dalai Lama. The spacious dining room is lovely and comfortable, with the sounds of Tibetan music and the smells of Tibetan food filling the place.
    3 articles
  • Azafran

    535 Zang St. Broomfield

    303-465-4444

    This Broomfield spot opened in 2011 as Azitra, but after it was purchased by its longtime GM and chef, they dubbed it Azafran, the Urdu word for "saffron." The menu is filled with dishes predominantly from northern India, with scattered southern Indian touches like coconut, curry leaves and peppercorns. Certain preparations have been lightened, but there’s still enough cream that korma seems like itself, not a skinny, Photoshopped replica. Dough is brushed with ghee (clarified butter), then folded and flattened into paratha. Azafran saves its real innovation for the decor, with earth-toned booths and banquettes in a space that feels sleek and contemporary, even if the food is deliciously traditional.
    8 articles
  • Bawarchi Biryani Point

    11001 E. Arapahoe Place Centennial

    720-799-5666

    Don't be fooled by the name: There's much more than just biryani at this Tech Center restaurant. Guests are greeted by a powerful blast of spices as they enter, foretelling good things that await inside the pumpkin-and-gray dining room. That room is crowded (especially on weekends): Families with chubby toddlers and mothers wearing jewel-toned saris, groups of young men talking and gesturing wildly, servers who are always on the move, a constant stream of customers picking up takeout orders and couples who seem docile in comparison to the hubbub around them. They come for the classic rice dish, of course (our favorite of the dozen varieties on offer is the delectably mild ulavacharu goat biryani), but the menu boasts plenty of other options, some familiar to Western diners (dal, veggie korma, chicken tikka) and some less so (vada, idly, dosa). All are delicious and served with a smile, making any visit to Bawarchi satisfying to body and soul.
    2 articles
  • Biju's Little Curry Shop

    950 Broadway Downtown Denver

    The third outpost of Biju Thomas's popular curry house opened in Broadway Marketplace in February 2019 serving its crowd-pleasing South Indian curries and chapati wraps. Housemade sauces with tamarind, toasted coconut and fiery bird's-eye chiles add screamingly fresh bursts of flavor to the already complex and layered vindaloo, Kerala garlic beef, coconut curry chicken and other house specialties. Colors and flavors collide in the food, with biryani boasting rich saffron yellows and deep browns. "This is the stuff me and my brothers grew up eating," says Thomas, and now he's sharing it with Denver.
  • Biryani Pot

    3157 W. 38th Ave. Northwest Denver

    303-455-3127

  • Bombay Clay Oven

    165 Steele St. Central Denver

    303-377-4454

    All of the northern Indian classics are represented on Bombay Clay Oven's menu, but you'll also find dishes from all over the subcontinent, including a tangy, tamarind-laden Goan seafood curry. The chef-owner is also a tandoor specialist who has a particularly deft hand with chicken. You'll find a couple of standout mango treats here, as well: the mango kulfi (an Indian-style ice cream) and a creamy mango lassi (though the yogurt beverage is also available in rose and, surprisingly, strawberry).
    10 articles
  • The British Bulldog

    2052 Stout St. Downtown Denver

    303-295-7974

    The Bulldog’s dark and shadowy space actually looks and feels like an Old English pub — not a nightclub or a cocktail lounge or a fern bar or even the Punch Bowl, which once occupied this spot. It’s a double-barreled shotgun of a room, with the long oak bar on one side and rickety, high-backed wooden booths on the other that are devilishly uncomfortable until you get a couple of drinks in you. Out front, there’s a covered patio just big enough for six smokers to stand without bumping elbows. From the kitchen comes a variety of simple pub dishes, livened up here and there with hints of Indian and Pakistani cuisine.
    22 articles
  • Chai & Chai

    12501 E. 17th Ave. Aurora

    720-588-0343

    Chai & Chai opened in the fall of 2013 in an unlikely stretch of fast-food restaurants at the heart of the Anschutz Medical Campus. Owner Venu Alla, an Indian architect and tech consultant, was inspired to start a restaurant by Chez Panisse -- but his place is very different from that legendary spot. Chai & Chai is a dual-concept restaurant, serving both Indian and Arabian food. But rather than offering fusion, the two kitchens operate separately under one roof, serving a limited menu of fast-casual options at lunch and a broader selection at dinner. Consistency varies, but the dosa is so good, you could live on bread alone.
    8 articles
  • Cherry Creek Harbor

    13740 E Quincy Ave, Unit 9 Aurora

    720-870-0255

    1 article
  • Chutney

    2740 S. Havana St. Aurora

    720-644-6677

    4 articles
  • Coriander

    4968 Tower Rd. East Denver

    720-216-0301

    1 article
  • Coriander

    14799 W. 6th Ave. Golden

    720-287-0095

    The menu at Coriander reads like a greatest hits of Indian cuisine: samosas, daal, chicken tikka masala, saag paneer, malai kofta and more, all of which are satisfyingly well seasoned and executed. Of note is the garlic naan — often a throwaway side dish — which here comes loaded with garlic and perfectly charred, as are the tangy tamarind chicken wings. The cocktail list is a step up from many a strip-mall restaurant, with drinks utilizing ingredients like lavender-infused gin, mezcal and Indian rum.
  • Cumin Express

    12501E. 17th Ave. Aurora

    303-551-2789

  • Delhi Darbar

    100 E. 20th Ave. Downtown Denver

    303-993-5013

    2 articles
  • DJ's Watering Hole

    988 W. Dillon Rd. Louisville

    303-604-6000

    1 article
  • Gaia Masala & Burger

    609 Grant St. Central Denver

    720-532-0417

    A fast-casual restaurant that started in Boulder and now has two Denver outposts, Gaia Masala is a savior for anyone seeking late-night eats. It offers straight-up Indian dishes, a smattering of Mediterranean entrees like falafel and shawarma, and a handful of burgers. But dig deeper into the menu and you'll find the really exciting stuff: neon-orange tikka masala cheesesteaks; a burger topped with mint, cucumber and tikka masala sauce; and (our fave!) cheesy masala fries served plain or loaded up with a choice of chicken, lamb or cheesesteak. While others in the area have tried to follow suit with similar offerings, Gaia Masala does them best.
    2 articles
  • Gaia Masala & Burger

    1530 Blake St., Denver LoDo/Ballpark/Commons Park

    303-993-2976

    This is the second Denver outpost of Gaia Masala & Burger, a fast-casual restaurant offering straight-up Indian dishes, a smattering of Mediterranean entrees like falafel and shawarma, and a handful of burgers. But dig deeper into the menu and you'll find the really exciting stuff : neon-orange tikka masala cheesesteaks (made with beef at the restaurant's original Boulder location and chicken in Denver); a burger topped with mint, cucumber and tikka masala sauce; and (our fave!) cheesy masala fries served plain or loaded up with a choice of chicken, lamb or cheesesteak. The restaurant also offers three different burger variations for both vegetarians and vegans, as well as a vegetarian jackfruit cheesesteak — and you can get them all until 2 a.m., as Gaia is one of the few Denver eateries open ’til the wee hours.
    1 article
  • Himalayan Spice

    4279 Tennyson St., Denver Berkeley/Sunnyside

  • Himchuli

    3490 Larimer St., Denver Five Points/RiNo

    720-456-6894

  • Himchuli Highlands Indian & Nepali Cuisine

    3489 W. 32nd Ave. Northwest Denver

    303-728-9957

    1 article
  • Hyderabad House

    7605 E. Arapahoe Rd., Centennial Southeast Denver Suburbs

    720-370-5556

    1 article
  • India House

    1514 Blake St. Downtown Denver

    303-595-0680

    Many of Denver's Indian restaurants seem content to keep to the low end of the food chain; they're little strip-mall spaces where you can get excellent grub, but not necessarily the feeling of being in a fine-dining environment. India House goes in the other direction, offering a truly fine-dining environment with a menu that goes far beyond the traditional saags, kormas and tandoori entrees.
  • India's Best

    1500 W. Littleton Blvd., Littleton Southwest Denver Suburbs

    303-484-9535

    A former bar in a Littleton small mall is now home to India's Best Restaurant & Bar. There's still a bar -- along with a few TVs, friendly servers, and a lengthy syllabus of curries, samosas, naan and tandoori dishes that also includes a chile-intensive, searingly hot lamb vindaloo. -
    3 articles
  • Jai Ho Indian Kitchen, Bar & Lounge

    3055 S. Parker Rd. Aurora

    303-751-5151

    Before they opened Jai Ho in the spring of 2010, Sathya and Sujatha Narayan, an architect and a realtor, respectively, had never owned a restaurant. But when they moved to Denver eight years ago from Vancouver, they noticed a gap in the Indian offerings on the local dining scene. Since they'd always dreamed of owning their own place, when this spot in an Aurora strip mall became available, they picked up the lease and got to work, outfitting the large space with ornate wooden partitions that divide the dining room into two booth-lined sections and a front-and-center lounge. That's where Bollywood now plays on the mounted flat-screens and drinkers sit on padded ottomans around low tables; the colored candles, twangy Indian music and spice-riddled air combine to create a heady atmosphere all through Jai Ho. And then there"s the mind-addling menu, which is rooted in the southern portion of the continent with specialties from Kerala, Hyderabad and Tamil Nadu (specifically Chettinad) that highlight such ingredients as coconut, pickled gongura (a native sorrel leaf) and mango, all stewed and combined with lentils, chicken, mutton or fish and packed with enough heat to make you break into a sweat. Those dishes are supplemented with a handful of northern Indian preparations -- paneers, samosas and tandoori chicken -- as well as a few Indo-Chinese offerings. While you may have trouble deciphering the menu's cryptic descriptions -- which aren't very helpful but are very amusing -- once your meal arrives, you'll have no trouble recognizing the overall excellence of Jai Ho's food.
    8 articles
  • Jewel Of India Restaurant

    10343 Federal Blvd., Unit P, Westminster Northwest Denver Suburbs

    303-469-7779

    Opened in 2001 by Jujhar Singh -- a twenty-year veteran of the Colorado restaurant scene -- Jewel of India specializes in regal Punjabi service and northern Indian Mughlai cuisine, originally the food of raiders and interlopers. While the menu looks like the menu of every other strip-mall Indian restaurant in the country, the food that arrives on your plate is something very special. One bite and you'll know that you're tasting a lifetime of experience and a deep love of home translated through food.
    2 articles
  • Khazana

    9234 Parkmeadows Dr., Lone Tree Southeast Denver Suburbs

    303-993-8335

    The best time to visit Khazana is not for lunch, when the buffet at this off-the-eaten-path Lone Tree Indian restaurant looks all too familiar. But if you come for dinner, you'll find delicate, bronze-tinged dosas paved with a beguiling mix of curried potatoes and onions; Indo-Chinese dishes like cauliflower slicked with infernal chiles; intensely spiced curries served in shiny, V-shaped copper vessels; and Indian street-style chicken with scrambled eggs, tomatoes and boom-boom spices — tastes that manage to be both refined and bracing. The animated menu phrases that accompany the dishes — "Are you crazy??? Every Table's got to have one," exclaims the ode to the chicken-wing lollipops — might seem like overkill, except that every single dish here is absolutely killer.
    6 articles
  • Little India

    1533 Champa St. Downtown Denver

    303-629-5777

    Little India's take on Indian food is an odd mix of regional specialties, all cooked in the tradition of northern Indian cuisine by a Punjabi chef. The menu is long and dignified, showcasing the curries and masalas that even casual Indian-food eaters would recognize, as well as five kinds of saag, specialties of Madras, Danshak, Bombay and Punjab, and even colonial dishes like the vindaloos from Goa. And everything from those complicated vindaloos to the simplest chutney has the potential to transport a diner to utter bliss.
    7 articles
  • Little India

    3496 W. 32nd Ave. Northwest Denver

  • Little India

    2390 S. Downing St. South Denver

    303-298-1939

    Little India's take on Indian food is an odd mix of regional specialties, all cooked in the tradition of northern Indian cuisine by a Punjabi chef. The menu is long and dignified, showcasing the curries and masalas that even casual Indian-food eaters would recognize, as well as five kinds of saag, specialties of Madras, Danshak, Bombay and Punjab, and even colonial dishes like the vindaloos from Goa. And everything from those complicated vindaloos to the simplest chutney has the potential to transport a diner to utter bliss.
    10 articles
  • Little India

    425 S. Teller St., Lakewood West Denver Suburbs

    303-937-9777

    Little India's take on Indian food is an odd mix of regional specialties, all cooked in the tradition of northern Indian cuisine by a Punjabi chef. The menu is long and dignified, showcasing the curries and masalas that even casual Indian-food eaters would recognize, as well as five kinds of saag, specialties of Madras, Danshak, Bombay and Punjab, and even colonial dishes like the vindaloos from Goa. And everything from those complicated vindaloos to the simplest chutney has the potential to transport a diner to utter bliss.
    5 articles