"Good long day," he replied.
He looked out the window. The Burj Khalifa glittered in the distance, a needle of human ambition stabbing the desert sky. But here, in this small corner of Karama, among the chipped tiles and the jasmine garlands and the smell of filter coffee, was a different kind of Dubai. Not the city of gold and glass. But the city of curd rice and kindness.
And Arun Restaurant and Cafe would be waiting.
Arun approached her. "Ma'am, first time?" arun restaurant and cafe dubai
By 8:00 PM, the cafe transformed again. The lights dimmed slightly. A young Emirati couple sat on the outdoor patio, sharing a ghee roast dosa that was nearly as long as their table. Two Filipino nurses laughed over plates of egg appam and beef curry . A British expat, homesick for his own childhood, discovered that the tea here—strong, sweet, spiced with ginger—was nothing like the bagged stuff he drank in London.
Arun, the owner, stood at the entrance, adjusting a string of jasmine garlands that hung by the register. He had built this place over twelve years, brick by brick, loan by loan. To the outside world, it was just another South Indian spot in Karama. But to those who knew, it was a lifeline.
At 7:00 AM, the cafe belonged to the early birds. Taxi drivers, just finishing their night shifts, slumped into the plastic chairs. They didn't look at the menu. They just grunted, "Podil" or "Set dosa." Arun’s wife, Meera, who ran the kitchen with an iron fist, would have the batter ready. The dosas came out lace-thin and the color of old gold, with three kinds of chutney: coconut the color of cream, tomato that sang with spice, and a mint one so green it seemed to glow. "Good long day," he replied
And as Arun turned off the last light, he knew that tomorrow, the heat would return, the dosa batter would be ready at dawn, and someone—a lost mother, a tired driver, a lonely expat—would walk through that door, looking for something they couldn't name.
Today, a woman walked in. She was in her fifties, dressed in a crisp cotton salwar kameez, her gray hair pulled back. She looked at the menu board for a long time, her lips moving silently.
Arun locked the door. Meera came out, exhausted, and slumped into a chair. He brought her a small cup of her own coffee. But here, in this small corner of Karama,
At the corner table, an old Tamil grandfather taught his grandson how to eat idiyappam —string hoppers—without breaking the delicate noodles. "Slowly," he whispered. "Like you are combing your grandmother's hair."
He didn't bring her the menu. Instead, he went to the kitchen and spoke to Meera in rapid Tamil. Ten minutes later, he returned with a stainless steel plate. On it: a mound of steaming curd rice with a bright red pickle on the side, a small banana, and a glass of neer moru (spiced buttermilk).
By noon, the crowd shifted. The smell of sambar—tamarind-sharp and lentil-sweet—mixed with the click of laptop keyboards. Freelancers, trapped in sterile high-rise apartments, came here for the unlimited filter coffee. A young woman in a Nike cap and a kandysaree argued on a video call about a marketing budget, while absently dipping a piece of pazham pori (banana fritters) into her chai.
At 11:30 PM, the last customers left. Faisal the driver, on his way to start another night shift, slapped a 5-dirham coin on the counter. "For the chai tomorrow, Arun. Keep it hot."