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April 26th, 2025

The Dum Battersea Story

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WITH EACH NEW CAFÉ that we open, we write a story deeply rooted in Bombay history or culture. In Carnaby, the setting is Bombay’s rock scene, which flared up briefly in the 60s and 70s. In King’s Cross, the setting is a notional godown near Victoria Terminus, the struggle for Indian Independence the historical backdrop. Our story informs all aspects of the restaurant’s design. We spend months researching the Bombay of the period and combing the city for the right furniture, both vintage and new. In a way, you walk across our thresholds into our stories.

In Battersea, our story is of Choti Dum, a girl who lives in Bombay in 1953 and is transported to an imagined 2023, where she discovers she has superpowers. Her story – at least the beginning of it – is on the pages that follow.

I grew up reading all the comics I could get my hands on, from the Amar Chitra Kathas often from Indian railway kiosks, telling stories of Indian history and mythology, to Tintin and Asterix, to DC and Marvel comics. I still hoard most of the originals in my attic. It was inevitable that we would one day tell a story as a comic. 

Our stories (perhaps like immigrants) are rooted twice; once in Bombay and once in the locale of the restaurant. Battersea has been a place where the future was imagined. The bold architecture inside the power station speaks of the dreams of a brave electric metropolis. In the meantime in newly independent Bombay, architects, town planners and writers had grand futuristic visions of their own. 

We’ve loved creating Choti Dum and may one day continue her story. In the meantime, she has helped us – light-heartedly – to bring past and future, Bombay and London, together for the retro-futurist design of Dum Battersea. 

And while you’re here, her story – at least the beginning of it – is below for you to read.






A note on the artist

Shazleen Khan is an east London-based rising star in the indie comics scene, renowned for the webcomic “BUUZA!!”, a story of found family, diaspora and religion. Khan has won the prestigious Broken Frontier Award for Best Colourist and Best Webcomic. We are honoured to be collaborating with them to bring the world of Choti Dum to life.


Join us at our newest café

Dum Battersea will formally throw open its doors on 6th December. We’ll mostly be a walk-in café. All are welcome (canines included), any time, no reservations needed. However, if you’d like to make a reservation, we hold a handful of tables back for groups of all sizes every day until 5.45pm. After 6pm, a small number of tables are available to be reserved by parties of six or more, at specific times. To make a reservation, kindly click here.

The Dum Newsletter

Occasional emails to keep you informed of our goings-on.

Celebrate Iftar with Dum

The holy month of Ramadan is upon us, when Muslims around the world fast daily from dawn till dusk. It is a time of private worship and spiritual discipline, but also of shared joy and abundant feasting. Families and communities come together at suhoor, the pre-dawn meal, and at iftar, the evening meal, to break their fasts with copious, delicious dishes. Join us on 7th April for our own Iftar celebration – for an evening of feasting and live music.

RAMADAN

We often find it too easy to hurtle through the days, in an attempt to outpace the bustling city – be it London or Bombay – which always seems to be running away like a steam-engine train on a rickety track. Occasionally, it does us good to pause for thought, to disembark the carriage and sit on the platform awhile.

DUM'S CHEESE & MASALA STICKS RECIPE

The month of Ramadan may be a period of fasting but it’s equally synonymous with feasting. Iftar – the evening meal with which Muslims break their fast – is an occasion for eating favourite dishes and indulging in the naughtiness of moreish snacks after a day of abstaining, and these cheese-and-pastry twirls make the perfect snack.

THE RITUAL OF ZAKAT

Compassion. Generosity. Discipline. Honesty. Selflessness. Tolerance. These principles lie at the heart of Islam. Our Muslim brothers and sisters are bound to give, share and take care of others.