For Aradhana Seth, food is both an inventive and revealing way to explore a character’s narrative arc. The filmmaker, production designer, visual artist and producer is a prolific storyteller with an ability to effortlessly plug into different cultures across her Indian and international projects—she was art director for Wes Anderson’s 'The Darjeeling Limited' (2007) and producer for Netflix series 'A Suitable Boy' (2020)—loves using food to tell a story. Seth’s interpretation of the intersection of food and cinema over the years has utilised Indian kitchens, and all the objects and rituals associated with them, as a means of shaping a particular kind of onscreen semiotics. From flying down specially cooked suckling pigs at Imperial Hotel in New Delhi, to ordering silver thalis from the royal kitchen at Umaid Bhawan, to sourcing almost 200 food platters from countless vendors across Jodhpur… it was all Seth’s doing to pull off a big, fat authentic feast for the American period epic One Night With The King (2006). “If you are what you eat, then who gets to eat what, and how?”, she asks, explaining how each and every detail of who gets haldi with their milk, who gets the badaam, or whether a lota is being used by someone to serve water or hold flowers is planned out to the T.