How Walking Away from CA Led to a Life in the Kitchen

How Walking Away from CA Led to a Life in the Kitchen

Natasha Gandhi’s journey into food was anything but predictable. Once on the path to becoming a Chartered Accountant, she attempted the exams five times before confronting a difficult truth: her heart wasn’t in it. “Walking away from CA was terrifying,” she admits, but that leap of faith led her back to her kitchen, where she began experimenting with healthy, gluten-free, vegan desserts.

What started as curiosity soon deepened into a calling. A defining moment came when she stepped onto MasterChef India, finishing as a top finalist. The platform sharpened her confidence and creative voice, introducing her to a national audience. From there, she began sharing recipes online, building a community around wholesome, hearty food rooted in story. Today, many know her as the ‘Biryani Queen,’ a title born from her ability to honour tradition while reimagining comfort food in nourishing, accessible ways.

Food as Memory and Medicine

Natasha describes her work as culinary storytelling. She documents traditions, reinterprets classics, and brings regional and community-driven recipes into modern kitchens. “Food, for me, is both memory and medicine,” she says. Her philosophy challenges the idea that healthy eating must feel restrictive. Instead, she champions balance, dishes that are satisfying, flavourful, and mindful without sacrificing soul.

Heritage with a Modern Lens

What distinguishes her voice is her focus on lesser-known regional dishes, from diverse biryanis to India’s pasta-like traditions, presented in ways that feel approachable for home cooks. She avoids chasing fleeting trends, choosing instead to create from curiosity and passion. Her signature strength lies in transforming indulgent favourites into healthier versions without compromising on depth. That blend of heritage, innovation, and mindful cooking defines her identity.

Breakthrough Moments

Growing up in a Punjabi household where food was celebration and identity, Natasha was surrounded by rich flavours and vibrant conversations. Influenced by chefs like Nigella Lawson, she often imagined herself cooking on camera, storytelling through food. Today, that childhood vision feels vividly real.

MasterChef India marked her first major turning point, instilling discipline under pressure and amplifying her reach. The second came with the “Biryanis from India” series, conceptualised with her husband. What began as a passion project quickly resonated online, solidifying her reputation as the “biryani queen.”

Mindset and Message

Natasha believes comparison is counterproductive. “Every journey unfolds differently,” she reflects. Growth, for her, is about discipline, adaptability, and staying aligned with purpose. Her advice to women is clear: self-doubt is natural, not fatal. Take risks when instinct calls. Build financial independence early. And embrace support systems.  Collaboration, she believes, is a strength.

For Natasha, success is not just about recognition. It is about creating a life and a table that feels authentically her own.

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