Islamabad welcomes Spring with food, music after two-year hiatus

ISLAMABAD: Islamabad Eat, a famous food festival, returned to the city in its true spirit, after a two-year absence induced by the outbreak of Covid-19, which halted many other excursions and sports activities in the country besides the festival.

The two-day event was on over the weekend in the famous F-9 park with around 70 stalls of mainly local food, and scores of foodies are thronging to the venue to celebrate the festival of food and music and take a sigh of relief.

The festival is an indication that life is slowly getting back to normal despite the pandemic.

Amal Mubeen, a 21-year-old student, and her group of friends are some of the many visitors to the festival. They came to the event not only to enjoy food but also to formally restart normal life activities after the recent social curbs amid a fifth wave of the crisis driven by the Omicron variant.

“The best way to welcome the spring is to have a get-together with friends at a scenic place, enjoying good food and listening to good music, and Islamabad Eat is an opportunity to have it all,” Mubeen told Xinhua.

“I hope that more such events will keep on taking place this whole spring not only to mark the beginning of spring but also to celebrate the success against the pandemic,” she said.

The festival’s organisers believed the event is more than just a celebration of food, as it also gives a chance to home-based chefs especially women to display their cooking skills and expand their business.

“The idea of the festival came to us nine years ago when we started it in the southern port city of Karachi, then over the next three years, we expanded it to other cities including Islamabad,” Aslam Khan, one of the organisers, told Xinhua.

“We are proud to say that over the last few years, 60 to 70 big restaurants of the home-based cooks who started off with the eat festival have been opened in the country and are doing successful business,” Khan added.

He said the basic concept of the festival is to promote home-based food business and celebrate local chefs who are good at making local or foreign food that is famous in the country.

Talking about the impact of the pandemic on the festival, he said that despite a two-year break, the crowd is back and more and more people are thronging the park to attend the festival.

“We are also ensuring to comply with the Covid-19 guidelines as the pandemic is not over yet, and we are also making sure that only vaccinated people are allowed to buy tickets and enter the venue,” Khan said.

A few food stalls with Chinese food prepared and sold by locals, were also a part of the festival, and a number of visitors were savouring it.

Abdul Samad Ameen, a young owner of Capital Delights, a stall serving Chinese food at the festival, told Xinhua that Sichuan chicken, beef chilli dry, Kung Pao Chicken, chow mein, and dumplings are the favourites of locals in Chinese cuisine.

“I am offering Chinese food in my homemade food business because Chinese food is getting very famous in Pakistan because of its good taste. It is the first time when I brought my business to Islamabad Eat, and I am getting an overwhelming response,” said Ameen.

“In the future, I will add more Chinese dishes to the menu,” he added.

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