Nadoo, GK-3: The South Indian Restaurant Delhi Has Been Quietly Waiting For

A new opening in the suddenly happening GK-3, where restaurateur Sahil Sambhi and Chef Shri Bala are quietly serving up the regional South Indian food Delhi has been overdue for. Andhra, Chettinad, Karnataka, Thalassery — all on one table, none of it dumbed down for the North Indian palate. The dosa is officially taking a backseat.

May 26, 2026 - 15:38
May 26, 2026 - 16:11
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Nadoo, GK-3: The South Indian Restaurant Delhi Has Been Quietly Waiting For

Address: Ground Floor, VIIPS Centre / E-5, Masjid Moth LSC, Greater Kailash Part 3, New Delhi 110048

Timing:  Lunch 12:00 PM – 5:00 PM | Dinner 7:00 PM – Midnight | All days

Cuisine: Regional South Indian — Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Kerala

Average Cost:  Meal for Two: ₹4,000 approx (with alcohol)


Nadoo, a newly opened South Indian restaurant in GK-3. And yes, GK-3 — the one half of South Delhi didn't even know existed until very recently because for the longest time, "GK" in our heads only meant M-Block and N-Block markets. Anything beyond was just a name on a Google Maps pin. But quietly, GK-3 has been collecting reasons for us to drive in and it's earning its place on the map.

Now, before you even think of going there, let me say this: reservation is a MUST. And I mean a must. Because we South Delhi people do not take "Sorry ma'am, we're fully booked for the evening" well. It comes for our Burj Khalifa-sized ego. So save yourself the heartbreak, my south delhi lovies — pick up the phone, book the table, then show up.

The Space: Concept-First, Cliché-Free

The place is genuinely beautiful. Designed by Sambhi in collaboration with Orphic Designs, the space refuses every South Indian restaurant cliché in the book. No painted kolams creeping up the walls. No giant murti at the entrance. No dosa flipper as the welcoming visual. Instead — rammed-earth walls, oxidised finishes, rust tones, framed glass windows canopied in soft greenery.

And here's the part I genuinely loved: the sectioned floor plan is loosely organised into three zones — Sun, Land, and Sea with the last one marked by a brass Nandi installation that you will absolutely photograph. Because let's be honest we South Delhi people need a concept to show up. A solid 10/10 for the concept from your fellow SODO girl.

The Food: Familiar Flavours, Completely Unfamiliar Forms

You're welcomed with panakam — an amber digestive drink of jaggery, tamarind, dry ginger, lemon, cardamom, and a hint of edible camphor. Refreshing, slightly unusual, and a welcome change from the standard rasam shot we get handed at every other South Indian restaurant in town.

What followed quietly ruined other South Indian restaurants for me and would surely do for you as well:

  • Mini Podi Idli topped with beluga caviar
  • Kala Ghoda Hummus: Chennai beach sundal reimagined as hummus, served with crisp parotta shards
  • Green Chilli Chicken with Bao: the Bengaluru Nagarjuna classic, hand-pulled and stuffed into pillowy baos
  • Madras Nineteen 65: a homage to Buhari Hotel's original 1965 "military snack" Chicken 65
  • Coca-Cola Pork Chops: glazed with Coke and coffee, finished with the bitter edge of kachampuli
  • Russell Market Raan: A dish so good, you’ll find yourself coming back again and again. a whole leg of goat slow-roasted in Chettinad spice, served with coin-sized crisp parottas. 
  • Thalassery Biryani: If there’s one thing to order here, it’s this. a stone kalchatti, served with salna (a brothy curry once made for lorry drivers in Namakkal)
  • Malabar Drift (COCKTAIL): Pair these dishes with this cocktail which has tequila, mezcal, fermented raw mango brine, red rice and your evening is essentially decided.
  • Crispy Pongal Pouches (DESSERT): skip the slightly sticky Forbidden Rice Pudding and order two Crispy Pongal Pouches — dumpling-style sweets stuffed with chakkra pongal.
  • Kapi Bar: curated in collaboration with Bili Hu — might be the most thoughtful coffee menu in any non-cafe restaurant in Delhi right now. First Dose Kaapi. Chill Maadi (a jaggery-sweetened cold coffee). Cheru Kaapi, shaken with single-origin cacao and 82% dark chocolate.

The Verdict

Nadoo isn't trying to reinvent South Indian food. It is doing something far harder — curating it. Putting Andhra, Mangalorean, Chettinad, and Thalassery dishes on a Delhi table with the depth and confidence they deserve, without dumbing anything down for our North Indian palates. It is well-researched without being preachy. It is luxurious without being precious. It is regional without being inaccessible.

Go hungry. Go with people who don't say "I don't eat too much rice." Share the raan. And for once, let South Indian food in Delhi be the main event — not the breakfast warm-up.

The dosa is officially taking a backseat. And we are absolutely here for it. South Delhi approved.

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Shyamli Shyamli Chugh is a talented content creator and storyteller based in Delhi, India, known for her creative vision and passion for impactful storytelling. She began her academic journey at Modern School, Barakhamba Road, and later earned a degree in Humanities from Jesus and Mary College, University of Delhi, combining intellectual depth with artistic flair. Shyamli is a co-founder of the YouTube channel Honestly Talking, which she manages alongside her sister, Deepali Chugh—an MS graduate in Computer Science from New York University, now based in New York. Through Honestly Talking, Shyamli creates compelling content on travel, food, lifestyle, and culture, with a special emphasis on the vibrant life of Delhi. From uncovering the best local cuisines to curating unique experiences, her work reflects a deep love for storytelling and a keen attention to detail. In addition to Honestly Talking, Shyamli is also the co-founder of SouthDelhi.com, a platform dedicated to capturing the contemporary, urban lifestyle of South Delhi. By showcasing the area's dynamic culture, luxury, and innovation, Shyamli has crafted a space that resonates with the affluent class and young audiences, offering fresh insights and exclusive content about this iconic part of the city. Shyamli excels in scripting, filming, and editing, ensuring her projects are engaging and of the highest quality. Her vision for both Honestly Talking and SouthDelhi.com is to connect audiences across borders and create content that inspires and entertains viewers worldwide. With her dedication and creative approach, Shyamli continues to make a significant mark in the digital content space.