Tales Behind the Tadka: How a startup is enabling home cooks to create their space in the limelight.

Conosh

Whether you admit it or not, the lockdown has made all of us chance our hand in the kitchen, hoping we could unearth some hidden MasterChef capabilities as we desperately missed being able to eat out with friends and family. Community through food or food through community is a chicken and egg question for a young startup in Bengaluru that is empowering home chefs to build their culinary business based on ingenious food stories. Juveria Tabassum chats with the team of Conosh…

Vaibhav Bahl and Neha Malik live through food as an experience. Each recipe, they believe, has behind it a fascinating origin story. And it is the stories behind these recipes and their creators that they wished to provide a platform to through their Bengaluru-based startup Conosh. Vaibhav, who completed his MBA in Paris always enjoyed a good pop-up, meeting and jamming with strangers over good food. When he met Neha in 2018, it didn’t take too long for the idea of Conosh to materialise—a platform where homecooks can bring the best of their recipes to a diverse group of people to bond over. 

“We look for a home chef with a story to tell. An interesting heirloom recipe, a modern take on an old classic, chefs who have overcome all odds to pursue their love for food, moms who’ve turned their modest kitchens into a masterclass workshop; these are the stories we have been getting our hands on, and are waiting to be told,” says Vaibhav. Once a home chef is on board, the Conosh team works towards background and location checks, to assess the seating capacity, ambience and hygiene of the homes. The team also coordinates the menu for the meet, helps with the costing structure, and most importantly, comes up with a narrative that best tells the chef’s story, which then shines through with the help of the food and the decor. The home chefs earn an income from the events, but the owners believe that there is more to it than just money.

“The attendees at these events give them an audience for their story and their food. That brings them the validation that they don’t get when they are alone toiling away in the kitchen day after day. That appreciation is the biggest plus that we provide,” believes Neha. One such story is of home chef and grandma Nazneen, who makes Syrian Christian cuisine. Traditional delicacies such as Pathri aren’t found everywhere, and from her mother’s cookbook, Nazneen manages to recreate the magic of these dishes for a very different community of people. 

The lockdown in 2020 put an effective stop to the pop-up events, but even from that adversary, the team managed to find a ray of hope, both for their home chefs, and for lovers of food in Bengaluru and Delhi. “When COVID struck, we pivoted and something great happened for us. Families were all at home, and they wanted to learn how to cook. We started having workshops, with our home chefs as the trainers. We also called upon some professional chefs from India and abroad to contribute. In fact, to celebrate our two-year anniversary, we had MasterChefs Gary Mehigan and George Columbaris join us all the way from Australia for a special which was attended by over 400 happy, overwhelmed people,” shares Vaibhav. The initiative began in May last year, and they have already conducted 200+ workshops, with an average attendance of 70-80 people. 

Ideas continued to blossom, and soon people began requesting home deliveries from these chefs. In times where safety and hygiene were priorities, the customers had faith in these home chefs, and were reassured at the thought of a familiar face behind their food. “Eid ki Biryani and Haleem were one of the first meals we delivered. The chefs provide food from different cuisines at two to three slots per day, and they truly are foodpreneurs now,” the founders exult. 

Vaibhav believes that people who have a story behind the food they cook, are important nodal points in history. “They add to and create a great sense of community. What we want to do with Conosh is empower people who want to learn. When you attend a Conosh workshop, you will be able to sell, host and teach. Conosh is an ecosystem,” believes Vaibhav. 

“A Conosh workshop is built on community teaching and interaction. Upscaling the community will eventually upscale each home cook,” says Neha.

  • A food affair at the farm: 

Diwali 2019, Delhi: We had just started in October, and we  decided to host a huge pop-up in December, European style, at a cool farm house. We had Pavlovas and grilled chicken. We had all our home chefs in, doing their thing. We wanted to sell 30 seats, but we had to finally stop at 70. There was singing, chatter, eating; a piece of community came alive. Strangers came together, interacted and had fun. We finally saw what we had first envisioned.

  • Believing in Food: Our community in Bengaluru got a memorable start. We got a home chef, Bobby, who had just moved from Goa with his wife, and was looking to sell his food. They were uptight about a pop-up, but we said we’d take care of everything. We met a French expat soon after, and tolf him about this pop-up, and gathered eight other people from different walks of life just by word of mouth. These people came. That was special. They shared stories, and bonded over some amazing food. By the time we finished, it was 3.00am. The joy of eating together is Conosh.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Getting Sassiest: The Brand Making Sexual Wellness More Inclusive In India

In a country where conversations about sex are still low-key at dinner tables and turn school classrooms awkwardly silent, brands like Sassiest are changing the script, one meme, conversation, and pleasure-positive post at a time. From cheeky Instagram content and relatable humour to refreshingly honest takes on intimacy, confidence, and self-exploration, the brand is helping young Indians approach sexual wellness with far less awkwardness and a lot more openness. Mehak Walia gets sassy with Aishwarya Dua and Karishma Chavan, the co-founders of Sassiest. And honestly, that shift feels long overdue. For years, discussions around pleasure and desire in India have either been buried under shame or treated like something too scandalous to say out loud, especially when women are leading the conversation. Founded by Aishwarya Dua and Karishma Chavan, Sassiest is pushing back against that discomfort with a voice that feels warm, inclusive, funny, and unapologetically real. Instead of sounding clinical or preachy, the brand creates space for conversations around boundaries, body confidence, emotional well-being, and modern relationships in a way that actually feels relatable to today’s generation. For Karishma, the inspiration behind the brand came from noticing just how disconnected many women grow up feeling from their own bodies. “Most conversations around intimacy here are either hidden, judged, or purely medical,” she says. “Nobody was really talking about pleasure, confidence, self-exploration, or emotional wellness in a way that felt normal, safe, and relatable.” That silence, she explains, extends far beyond intimacy itself. Shame and conditioning often shape confidence, relationships, and even the way women exist in the world. “I wanted Sassiest to feel less clinical and more like a movement,” Chavan shares. “A space where women and queer people could feel seen without embarrassment.” Of course, building a sexual wellness brand in India came with its fair share of

From Dam to Dish: How Dam Good Fish Is Transforming India’s Seafood Industry

With rising awareness around clean eating and traceable food sources, Dam Good Fish is rethinking how fresh seafood reaches urban consumers. Co-founders Shobhit Gaur and Shailesh Patel share how their unlikely partnership, built on complementary strengths in branding and aquaculture, led to a venture that prioritises natural sourcing, transparency, and freshness in India’s rapidly growing seafood market. Tell us a little about yourselves, your backgrounds, and personalities. Shobhit Gaur (Co-Founder & CEO):With a Master’s in Business Management and several years as National Head at a leading advertising agency, my career has always combined creativity with strategy. I see myself as a big-picture thinker who enjoys building disruptive ideas in traditionally unorganised markets. I’m naturally outgoing and enjoy exploring new concepts, whether in business or food culture. When I’m not working, I’m usually tracking food trends or spending time working out. Shailesh Patel (Co-Founder):My background is rooted in science, followed by a Master’s degree in business. Over the past decade, I’ve worked with multinational organisations and helped build ventures centred around sustainable solutions. I’m very hands-on and detail-oriented, someone who thrives on execution. For me, strategy must always be backed by strong ethics and measurable results. How did two people from different professional worlds come together to build a venture centred around fresh, natural seafood? Our paths crossed through shared sporting networks, where casual conversations gradually shifted toward food, health, and sustainability. Shobhit’s expertise in media and branding combined naturally with my background in aquaculture. As we discussed clean-label foods and the gaps in India’s seafood ecosystem, it became clear there was a real opportunity. In 2023, we decided to bootstrap Dam Good Fish. The idea was simple: combine strong storytelling and consumer awareness with operational expertise that ensures traceability and quality. Our complementary skill sets helped turn that idea into

Sujata & Taniya Biswas: Redefining the Everyday Indian Sari

A homegrown Indian fashion brand redefining the sari as an everyday, breathable, and expressive garment. Combining Sujata’s structured, systems-driven approach with Taniya’s creative vision, they work closely with artisan communities across India to create clothing rooted in comfort, honesty, and human connection. Their journey blends entrepreneurship with sisterhood, building a brand that values trust, craftsmanship, and mindful fashion. Taniya, you left a stable career with the Tata group and IBM after IIM Lucknow, and Sujata, you pivoted from IIFT Delhi and corporate life. What was the exact moment when both of you realised that the corporate path wasn’t enough and that Suta was waiting to happen? Taniya: It wasn’t a rebellion. It was recognition. I had done everything “right”: engineering, IIM, a Consulting role that looked perfect on paper. But somewhere between late-night presentations and early morning meetings, I realised I was living life from the neck up. My hands missed fabric. My heart missed stories. I kept returning mentally to memories of wet saris drying on clotheslines, of Maa moving through the house with her pallu tucked in. One evening, over chai, I said it aloud to Sujata: I don’t think this is it. The moment I spoke it, Suta was born. Sujata: For me, it came as the discomfort of becoming someone I wasn’t. The corporate world had given me growth, but it had also hardened me. I remember thinking: If success requires me to lose softness, I don’t want it. My PhD was an attempt to find meaning, but even that felt academic, distant. What we really wanted was to build something with our hands, our intuition, and our values. Suta didn’t arrive as planned. It arrived as relief. From travelling through remote weaving clusters in Meghalaya, Varanasi, MP, and Odisha to working directly with artisan families,

Blood, Bond & Business: The Real Equations behind Family-Driven Startups

February is the month of relationships, and at Hashtag, we’re celebrating the bonds that shape not just personal lives, but powerful businesses. This special edition explores entrepreneurs who share more than a company; they share roots. From siblings turning into strategic partnerships to spouses balancing love and leadership, we dive into the real dynamics behind relationship-driven ventures. This month, discover how strong relationships can become a business’s most valuable asset. Vijayaraghavan Venugopal is the Co-founder at Fast&Up and has been instrumental in building the brand in India. He has over 26 years of business experience in diverse fields, which includes pharmaceuticals, Healthcare and Information Technology. He has been responsible for business development in multiple geographies, including the Triad (USA, Europe and Japan). He has worked with TekFriday, Dr Reddy’s, Lupin and Emcure in different senior management roles. He was Lupin’s country head in China for three years between 2007 and 2010. He is a mechanical engineer and an MBA in International Business from the Indian Institute of Foreign Trade, Delhi. He is one of the fastest amateur marathoners in the country, having run in sub-3-hour marathons 12 times in major cities throughout the world, including Paris, Boston, Chicago, Berlin, London, Tokyo and New York, all while leading the growth of India’s fastest-growing nutrition brand, Fast&Up. He also has the distinction of being the first Indian to do all six world marathon majors under 3 hours, and is the winner of the recently held Tata Mumbai Marathon in his age group. Varun Khanna is the CEO of Fullife Healthcare Pvt. Ltd., a company he started at the age of 23 with the sole purpose to focus on healthy living. A relentless passion to do something innovative for the millennial need for an active life drove him to launch India’s first effervescent

You May Also Like

Connect with us