A bowl lands on the table. Its contents are smooth, pale, and creamy, crowned with pickled kalamata and onions. It looks like hummus. But it tastes pure Telugu. The swirl is mudapappu, the region’s thick, lightly seasoned dal. Here it’s retextured and topped with olive urugaya (an oil-based achaar) and tangy gongura-pickled onions. It’s paired not with the usual rice but with jonna (jowar) roti for scooping. The structure of the food may look somewhat familiar, encountered elsewhere in the world, but the flavours are unmistakably local. And this theme runs through the menu at Theta Theta Telugu in Hyderabad.
Up in Jubilee Hills, Hyderabad’s buzzy dining hub, the restaurant sits above sibling brand Coffee Sangam. The space is large, high-ceilinged, and airy, and its design reflects this rooted-and-reimagined philosophy. Local materials feature in laterite brick walls and dark kadappa stone flooring inlaid with brass leaf-shaped accents. This minimal leaf pattern repeats along the walls. Brass ghungroos hang on black metal jaali frames. All of these blend with clean lines, soaring panelled-glass walls, sunlight and trees beyond them, all in a modern layout.
Restaurateur Sampath Tummala and chef and co-founder Vignesh Ramachandran built T3 (as regulars call it) around a single, delicious question: What if Telugu food spoke the language of modern, globetrotting dining? The flavours stay true, but the look, textures, and even the way you eat them get a fresh spin. “The soul of a dish is never altered or played around with,” Ramachandran says. “A rasam or a pappu will always encompass all the classic ingredients that go into one. The form, shape or texture might change.” In T3’s kitchen, rasam becomes a clarified consommé, light but bursting with flavour, instantly recognisable at first sip. The croutons in it are, in fact, crunchy minapa pindi vadiyalu, wee sun-dried lentil dumplings.
“Traditional techniques such as slow braising and letting curries mature with tamarind are still used,” he says. “Newer techniques, like using a siphon to make batters lighter, help enhance the flavours further.” The aim is only to refine the already existing flavours.









