The owner of this store is amazing person, very polite and if ask any question, responds good and informs about future prices too like on lentils he informed. It’s going to increase in December. He has always have been courteous. Although you don’t find much produce like other Indian stores however other all daily stuff you require you will get it here. This Bharat bazaar isn’t as big as in New Jersey however since it has massive produce section in New Jersey. The best part is there are 2 places in Phoenix — Bharat bazaar and Lotus international market where you can easily get Indian paneer(almost like local shop paneer) i. e Haldirams Panner and Amul Cheese. So give it a try Unilocalites. enjoy your visit.
Roopa S.
Évaluation du lieu : 5 Beverly Hills, CA
Supporting small businesses feels good, especially when their prices are competitive and selection thorough, if limited. Those are definite pluses about this place. A tucked away little spot to get henna enriched hair oil, frozen patra, daal, neem toothpaste($ 3.50), Swaad brand namkeen, incense/agarbaati for just 99 cents, you get the picture. I’ll be coming back for affordable basics and just to support. They are open till 9pm every night except Sunday(7pm).
Eilonwy W.
Évaluation du lieu : 3 Phoenix, AZ
This tiny market is tucked into the corner of the plaza that contains Delhi Palace, Juba, and a couple of other restaurants from east and southeast Asia. If you’ve been thinking about cooking East Indian food at home but aren’t ready to commit to a dozen spices you may not use often — or a big bag of rice flour — there is an entire aisle of simmering sauces, spice blends, and packaged mixes. I bought a couple spice blends to take to the office, where I don’t keep a full complement of spice jars, and on the next pass, I may go for the dosa mix after all. No doubt packaged mixes are about the quality of packaged mixes the world over, but I’m not a true connoisseur of this cuisine — I just want to be able to make something that tastes about right, as an intermediate step to maybe going more from scratch later. There’s another aisle of potato-chip-equivalents. Happiness! Junk food is much improved by being in a format where I’m not 100% sure what I’m eating. The store also carries about six vegetables, a small frozen section(which I didn’t check because Tempe’s too far to take frozen food on the train), a selection of Cadbury products that U.S. groceries don’t stock, and an entire aisle of some other thing that I don’t remember at all. The kind of candy that’s basically blocks of milk and sugar, with some cardamom and nuts, is also present and was on sale at my visit. Once I’m in the presence of that candy, all bets are off as far as my paying attention to anything else. Service is pleasant, and they take major credit cards.