Katha, an acclaimed modern Indian fine-dining restaurant in Ottawa, is to close soon

Toronto-based restaurateur Hemant Bhagwani, who has eateries in Toronto and New York, is take over the Preston Street space.

Katha, a trailblazing fine-dining restaurant on Preston Street that served innovative Indian-inspired dishes on its tasting menus, is to close at the end of January, about 16 months after it opened.

“I’m proud of what I’ve achieved,” chef-owner Teegavarapu Sarath Mohan said Sunday in an interview. Katha opened with a splash and “we felt really accepted,” he said.

But he continued: “2024 was extremely slow for us. We had a really difficult time just surviving. I should have closed six months ago.”

Mohan, a 34-year-old, self-taught chef who has owned restaurants in Ottawa for the last six years, even competed last fall in the Ottawa regional qualifier for the 2025 Canadian Culinary Championship, to be held in Ottawa at the end of January.

Chef Sarath Teegavarapu of the restaurant Katha prepares his dish for guests of. Canada's Great Kitchen Party held at the Chateau Laurier in Ottawa September 25, 2024. Photo by Jean Levac/Ottawa Citizen
Chef Teegavarapu Sarath Mohan of the restaurant Katha prepares his dish for guests of Canada’s Great Kitchen Party, held at the Château Laurier Sept. 25, 2024.Photo by Jean Levac /Postmedia

He did not win the qualifier. “I knew if I was not going to win it, I was going to close very soon,” Mohan said.

dish
Miso, turmeric and saffron sothi, branzino, fennel salad and fish roe, by Kath’s chef-owner Teegavarapu Sarath Mohan.Photo by Jean Levac /Postmedia

He said that Katha’s space is to be taken over by the Toronto-based Indo-Canadian chef and restaurateur Hemant Bhagwani, who has restaurants in Toronto and New York. Mohan hopes he and his staff at Katha will be able to work at Bhagwani’s new Ottawa venture when it opens later in 2025.

Chefs
Chef-owner Teegavarapu Sarath Mohan (front) of Kathā, with chefs (from left) Romil Chhetri, Shantunu Katakam and Hari Srinivasa Kumar in their open kitchen.Photo by Julie Oliver /Postmedia

But Mohan said that he, like many restaurateurs, was saddled with debt incurred during the pandemic, and that he did not want his staff to suffer further due to Katha’s financial woes. “It’s not fair for them to be a part of what I’m going through,” he said.

“The city has seen a particular (Indian) food for 30 to 35 years. I’m not sure if they can move on from butter chicken or curries,” said Mohan. “Maybe I’m too ahead of what the city wants.”

two plates
The first two plates served as part of the tasting menu at Katha on Preston Street: pork 65 on a betel leaf with yogurt pearls and mint chutney, and tapioca papadam with thecha, Tamil Nadu chutney and summer chutney.Photo by Peter Hum /POSTMEDIA

He said that, for its final month, Katha would offer, in addition to its elevated tasting menu, some of Mohan’s “greatest hits” from his previous restaurants and takeout dinners for two.

After an Instagram post announced Katha’s upcoming closure, well-wishers expressed their dismay.

“So sad to hear this. You have the most spirited kitchen brigade in the city,” wrote Jennifer Campbell, who was a judge at the Ottawa qualifying event last fall.

“Extremely talented and passionate team,” responded Ottawa chef Phil Cameron.

Mohan wrote that he hopes the Katha team can still come together in the future to flex its creative muscles at pop-up events and collaborations with other Ottawa eateries. Justin Champagne-Lagarde, chef-owner of the fine-dining restaurant Perch, wrote on Instagram that he would be happy to have such an event at his own Preston Street restaurant.

Would Mohan like to own another restaurant down the road? He did not discount the possibility. “But not any time soon,” he said.

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