Order Royal Butter Chicken First
Build the first round around Royal Butter Chicken because it gives the meal a familiar anchor with enough sauce for rice and breads. Add Garlic Naan or another bread if the group wants the curry to stretch naturally.
For an Uptown Waterloo table that cannot agree on North Indian curry or a Hakka-style chilli chicken, Empress of India settles the question by cooking both, on the same menu, at the same hour. The card runs from Royal Butter Chicken in mild makhani sauce through tandoori clay-oven dishes, a seafood-curry section, vegetarian thalis, and a Hakka and Indo-Chinese page that gets the same kitchen attention as the curries. The restaurant has held its King Street South storefront in Uptown Waterloo since 2008, and the menu has been shaped to fit the way that corner actually eats — lunch hours that fit a downtown break, a late close that fits a shift or a film, and a weekday discount that turns a Tuesday into a reason.
The first move is usually the makhani lane. Royal Butter Chicken is chicken tikka in a mild tomato-cream sauce — the default for first-time tables — and the same gravy logic carries Butter Paneer for the table's vegetarian. The clay oven runs the next section: Tandoori Chicken, Lamb Seekh Kebab, naan pulled to order. Daal Makhani simmers down to the heavy end of the dal lineup; Bhoona Chicken comes out drier and more aromatic than the cream-sauce stack; Lamb Vindaloo holds the spicier end of the curry book; Chicken Tikka Masala and Lamb Korma sit in the cream-sauce middle, less spice-forward than the vindaloo, more savoury than the makhani; a Kerala Fish Curry built on coconut milk anchors the seafood section against Shrimp Korma and Goat Curry. The Hakka page balances the same evening — Hot & Garlic Cauliflower Wings, the starred opener on the Indo-Chinese page, alongside Chilli Chicken, Dragon Chicken, and Chicken Chilli Momos. Start with Vegetable Samosas or a plate of Chaat Papri. Finish with Mango Lassi and Rasmalai.
The menu covers butter chicken, tandoori dishes, dal, paneer, biryani, breads, thalis, seafood, and Indo-Chinese choices while still keeping Indian curries at the centre.
The thali format gives lunch diners a direct way into the menu without turning a weekday meal into a large shared order.
The Monday-to-Thursday dine-in offer gives planners a reason to choose a weekday meal when the order is built around curries, breads, and shareable starters.
Share the nuances of your visit to Empress Of India in Waterloo — the standout dishes, the room, the service.
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