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Edison's Indian Dining Scene Keeps Growing, From Oak Tree Road to a Transformed Diner

An original summary by the Desi.Net Newsroom, written from the verified local sources linked below and reviewed before publishing. How we report. Details can change — spotted an error? Tell us.

Edison has long been a culinary destination for the Desi community, and two recent stories show that the township's Indian food scene is not just holding steady — it is actively expanding and reinventing itself.

🍛 A Foodie's Roadmap to Edison's 50+ Indian Restaurants

New Jersey Monthly has published a guide shining a spotlight on Edison's remarkable concentration of more than fifty Indian restaurants, cementing the township's reputation as one of the premier destinations for South Asian cuisine in the entire state. The guide invites readers to explore the diverse range of regional Indian cooking available within Edison's borders, from street-food staples to elaborate regional specialties. For Desi residents and visitors alike, the guide serves as both a celebration of how far the community's culinary footprint has grown and a practical resource for discovering something new. It is a reminder that Edison's dining corridor is not merely a convenience — it is a cultural institution recognized well beyond Middlesex County. [1]

🏠 House of Bombay Opens Where a Classic Diner Once Stood

A familiar Edison landmark has taken on a new identity, as the former Menlo Park Diner has been transformed into House of Bombay, an Indian restaurant now welcoming diners in Edison Township. The conversion of a classic American diner space into an Indian eatery is a vivid illustration of how the township's demographic and culinary character continues to evolve. House of Bombay adds yet another option to an already robust Indian dining corridor, bringing the flavors of Mumbai-inspired cooking to a location with deep roots in the local community. The changeover has drawn attention from local media, with TAPinto Edison capturing the restaurant's new interior and signage as it opens its doors. [4]

Sources: [1] New Jersey Monthly Magazine · [4] TAPinto

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Edison's Indian Dining Scene Keeps Growing, From Oak Tree Road to a Transformed Diner