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At Wandies, notes of foreign
currency, business cards of eminent personalities and signatures of tourists
adorn the walls. As you walk through the door, the inviting smell of mutton
curry fills your nostrils, and provokes your taste buds. The building is
an ordinary Soweto house, extended and converted into a restaurant. Inside,
three long tables, decorated with bright red, green and blue tablecloths,
are set up with chairs upholstered in matching colours. A fish tank and
a wine rack complete the décor. The tranquil atmosphere of the restaurant
offers a retreat from the din outside.
For those who seek a touch of the exotic, the establishment serves indigenous
cuisine in the form of dumplings, mogodu, ting (soft porridge), pap and
umqushu (samp).
Meals are in the form of a buffet. The dish includes mutton, lamb, beef
or chicken - roasted or cooked.
Vegetarians are spoilt for choice, if salads are what they want. There are
six on the menu, including coleslaw, French salad, beetroot, potato salad,
tuna fish salad and chakalaka - a local hot salad made of tomatoes, baked
beans, onion, chillies and green chillies.
Wandies has not always been a thriving restaurant patronised by the rich
and famous. Wandi Ndaba started operating an illegal shebeen from his house
in 1981. Without a licence and with constant fear of police raids, he struggled
through the next decade, relying on the loyalty of his regular clientele.
In 1991, the restaurant was licensed, ushering in a new, prosperous phase
for the joint. Whilst many shebeens stuck to the sale of liquor, Wandi carved
a niche for himself by selling prepared food, initially offering fish and
t-bone steak to his patrons. With time, the business developed into a proper
restaurant, complete with a menu and customer service - appealing to the
emergent local middle class. Impressed by the service offered at the venue,
regular clients started inviting curious whites, mainly their colleagues
from work who wanted some township experience.
Today, the restaurant has become one of the premier tourist attractions
of Soweto, with tourists by the busloads streaming in every day of the week
and at all hours of the day. The establishment opens seven days a week and
operates until about 10pm during week-days. It stays open until the wee
hours of the morning over weekends. The restaurant attracts an average of
100 visitors a day.
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