A single menu in downtown Lindsay now runs from butter chicken to Thai green curry, with a stretch of Indo-Chinese plates sitting in between. Masala Kraft was built around that reach — Indian, Indo-Chinese, and Thai sections on one menu, on Lindsay Street South in the heart of the Kawartha Lakes — in a city that hadn't had a kitchen putting all three inside a single order. The breadth is the practical kind. It answers the group that can't settle on one cuisine, the family splitting a vegetarian curry and a goat one, the diner who wants momos one week and a tandoori platter the next. It serves a town and the travellers who pass through it — a local standby that can just as easily catch a visitor looking for dinner.
The familiar anchors are there and handled properly — butter chicken, chicken biryani, a paneer makhani that reappears, improbably, as a poutine. The kitchen's real signature is the tandoor. Methi Malai chicken tikka is marinated in fenugreek, cream, and spice before it meets the clay oven; chicken seekh kabab, achari wings, and a non-veg lover platter come off the same fire. Kadhai chicken arrives loud with sliced peppers, onions, and tomato; smokey baigan bhartha is eggplant charred over an open flame and folded back into a curry. The curries run deep on protein — lamb korma, goat curry, prawn korma, butter lamb, paneer two or three ways — so a single order can swing from something mild to something built for heat.
Past the Indian core, the menu keeps widening. The Indo-Chinese side brings momos, spring rolls, and a garlicky gobhi; the Thai end carries its own curries; the chaat list runs to samosa chaat for a table that wants to graze before the mains. There's a streak of fun in it, too — butter chicken laid over fries and called a poutine, paneer makhani given the same treatment — the kind of crossover a kitchen only tries when it is sure of the originals. Midday, the lunch service leans on thali: a meat or vegetarian tray that lands a curry, raita, an appetizer, rice, naan, and a finish of gulab jamun in one go, with a tandoori tikka box set out for the lunch crowd. To drink, it keeps the standards close — masala chai, mango lassi, and nimbu pani.
Underneath the range is a made-to-order kitchen — sauces built in house, naan pulled fresh, plates cooked on the order rather than held warm under a lamp. Carrying three cuisines well is harder than carrying one, and the spread is the case the menu keeps making: a weeknight curry, a tandoor dinner, and a plate of momos can come off the same line without any one of them reading as a sideline. The heat is a real choice, too, climbing from mild up to a top step the menu calls Kali's Revenge. Masala Kraft opened in 2024 as a family-run operation, and local reporting at the time read it as a from-scratch effort.
The restaurant works the full day — lunch through evening, seven days a week — and in every direction a small-city kitchen needs to: dine-in for the people who want to sit, takeout and delivery for the ones who don't, catering for the night a crowd has to be fed. Inside, the service runs attentive and the plates come generous, the sort of meal a table lingers over rather than rushes. For a downtown that had been short on Indian options, it covers a lot of ground from one storefront — a quick thali at noon, a tandoor spread after dark, a Thai curry for whoever at the table didn't want either. The range was the plan, and the range is what ends up on the table.
What’s on right now
Three things this kitchen does the rest don’t
- 01
Menu Range Without Losing the Curry Anchor
Masala Kraft covers Indian, Indo-Chinese, and Thai dishes, but Butter Chicken, Chicken Biryani, tandoor items, and thalis keep the strongest order rooted in familiar Indian anchors.
- 02
Tandoor, Thali, and Takeout Logic
The menu gives diners several practical formats: grilled tandoor plates, complete lunch thalis, online-orderable curries, and group-friendly combinations.
- 03
Downtown Lindsay Convenience
The Kent Street location, direct phone contact, official menu, and active online ordering make Masala Kraft easy to use for local dining and takeout decisions.





