From waiting tables to catering fine cuisine at the most talked-about social events, this man's journey is one of unwavering self-belief and talent. Meet Sanjay Vazirani of Foodlink
Sanjay Vazirani’s grit and determination is a story that changed the face of an industry. With his catering giant enterprise Foodlink, he has changed the Indian catering scene and redefined luxury dining in India and overseas. Today, the biggest celebrity weddings across the globe have experienced Sanjay’s stellar culinary offerings.
A square peg in a round hole
Sanjay’s life today is a far cry from his childhood. Born to a forest officer father who was transferred from one remote wooded location to another every two years, Sanjay’s first brush with the city happened when he came to Baroda (today Vadodara) after completing tenth grade. Working as a night receptionist in a small hotel ‘Kaviraj’, he not only made ends meet but also put himself through pre-university.
Soon after, he enrolled in the Institute of Hotel Management, Ahmedabad. Conversations with elite classmates from Delhi and Mumbai about the catering industry in those megacities and the standard of life made him restless; he was missing out. So, he put in for a transfer to Mumbai for his second year and won it on sheer merit. Mumbai, rightfully regarded as the ‘city of dreams’ gave Sanjay the pedestal to his dreams. With the steep rent for his room, 250 rupees being paid by his family, money was tight, and so he would wait tables at luxury hotels like the Oberoi that got him a free meal from the five-star instead of buying his own dinner.
After finishing his Diploma in Hotel Management & Catering Technology & Applied Nutrition, he received an offer from Oberoi Hotel to be their management trainee, a great opportunity to lap ahead. This was Sanjay’s first step towards charting his course in life, but he opted for the simpler Holiday Inn Hotel. Even at the time, he knew he would want to set off on his own eventually, so joined a place where there would be more to learn rather than be lost in the weeds in a large establishment. His performance in the management program raised him to the position of a maître d'hôtel easily enough - but the challenge was lost to him.