Koto City, Tokyo, Japan|アジアンダイニング LUMBINI 東陽町店
Indian restaurant, Japanese curry restaurant at Japan, 〒135-0015 Tokyo, Koto City, Sengoku, 2 Chome−11−7 千石Nビル
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Rating
3.9 (152 comments)
🕙Opening Time
Closing Time: 23:00
💲Price Range
¥1-2000
☎️Phone Number
+813-3644-0467
📞📞📞📍Location
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Reviews
More Comments at Google MapOne of our favorite places to come and the staff knows us well. Great for large groups. There is also a karaoke room upstairs for large parties. Good selection of menu items and good prices. Food is prepared very quickly and it's tasty. I like the atmosphere is more himilayan than religious. It feels comfortable to be there.
Quick lunch... extremely authentic great tasting food. Really enjoyed the curries. 390yen for big beer too.
It's an Indian curry restaurant located between Toyocho station and Sumiyoshi station, but it has a lineup of Nepalese, Thai, and Vietnamese dishes besides Indian curry. is. The biggest point of this shop is that there is a parking lot! It is very valuable at restaurants in Koto Ward that are not so-called capital stores. However, since there is only space for two cars, it is better not to visit the store assuming it is vacant. And the next point is that "Take-out bento is cheap!" You can buy a daily curry lunch box for takeout for 500 yen, but this is cheap and delicious. At lunchtime, you can see people from neighboring companies coming to buy without a break. From the above points, we often travel by car, so if there is a parking lot available, we will go and have lunch slowly in the store, and if the parking lot is not available, we will buy a take-out bento and go home. That is the flow of use of this shop. The inside of the store is very clean and has a calm atmosphere, and of course the curry is the most delicious. I like this dal curry (bean curry) and go there often. I have never used it, but it seems that there is a karaoke room on the second floor! ========== *Hereafter, flaunting knowledge and chatting "Lumbini" of the store name is the birthplace of Buddha in Nepal and one of the sacred places of Buddhism. When "Japanese" open a store "for Japanese people" in "Japan", I feel that there are many store names that have some kind of connotation or try to bring out a sense of fashion, but overseas When I open a store in Japan, I feel that the store name is often straight. I've been to sushi restaurants overseas like "SUSHI TOKYO", but the staff isn't Japanese (laughs). I wonder if it's a Japanese characteristic to want to give a twisted store name.
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