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Dhurandhar Fame Ayesha Khan Has A Zero Oil Food Truck In Mumbai Named ‘Bhaap Re Bhaap’

Ayesha Khan’s Bhaap Re Bhaap brings oil-free, steamed street food to Versova, Mumbai. Protein-rich plates, clean flavours, and a fresh take on local food culture.

by Mahi Adlakha
Dhurandhar Fame Ayesha Khan Has A Zero Oil Food Truck In Mumbai Named ‘Bhaap Re Bhaap’

On a stretch of Versova that usually smells of frying oil and traffic exhaust, something different has been quietly taking shape. A compact food cart, steam fogging the air instead of smoke, has been drawing a steady trickle of curious locals, and the occasional double take when they realise who’s behind it. Ayesha Khan, better known for her screen presence in Dhurandhar, has entered Mumbai’s street-food ecosystem. Just food, heat, and a very deliberate absence of oil – that’s the Bhaap Re Bhaap food truck for you!

Fresh From Dhurandhar’s Success: Ayesha Khan’s Food Truck

This pivot gains attention at a moment when Ayesha’s visibility is already peaking. She was recently seen in Dhurandhar, featuring in the song ‘Shararat’, a track that travelled fast across social media feeds and music playlists. The film’s commercial success and pop reach sharpened her persona, especially among younger audiences who track both cinema and culture closely. 

Ayesha chose a route that feels almost counterintuitive, stepping off the screen for a moment and onto the street, quite literally.

The food cart opened in May 2025 in Versova, and its central idea is non-negotiable: zero oil, no exceptions. That single rule shapes everything else. In a city where street food is defined by crackle and crunch, this cart operates differently. Steam (bhaap) does the heavy lifting here.

Also Read: Laughter Chefs Cooked 1-Ft Long Parathas With Ayesha Khan; 3 Places For Large Parathas

The Menu: ‘Bhaap Re Bhaap’ Food Truck In Mumbai

The menu leans heavily into protein-forward comfort without feeling too heavy on the stomach. Chicken appears in multiple avatars, like peri-peri thighs and drumsticks. There are lemon pepper-seasoned pieces, classic steamed drumsticks, and a zero-oil steamed chicken thigh that’s become a repeat order for regulars. 

Lighter plates run alongside these, including steamed chicken salad, boiled egg salad, steamed egg salad, and combinations featuring steamed omelettes. Vegetarian diners aren’t treated as an afterthought either, with paneer salad and steamed vegetable options holding their own.

The cart’s appeal hasn’t stayed limited to everyday customers. Familiar faces have dropped in quietly, Gauahar Khan, Parul Gulati, and Manjot Singh among them, as the kind of casual stops that suggest genuine curiosity. 

Where: Opposite Third Wave Coffee, Versova, Mumbai
When: 7:30 PM to 11:30 PM
Cost: ₹400 for two

Also Read: Foodies Rejoice! Gordon Ramsay Street Pizza Lands At Mumbai Airport’s T2 Offering Classics

The cart reflects just a steady argument made plate by plate. It reiterates that flavour doesn’t need oil, and street food doesn’t have to leave you heavy. In Mumbai, that’s a quietly radical stance.

Cover Image Courtesy: bhaaprebhaap/instagram

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First Published: January 16, 2026 3:40 PM