Try GOLD - Free
The taste of paradise
THE WEEK India
|April 27, 2025
Goa has added a new must-do to its list

Goa is no longer a vacation,” says restaurateur Tarun Sibal. “It is a plan.” That plan now features a new destination: Premium restaurants.
Chilled beer and shisha at a beach shack, partying at Tito’s in Baga, parasailing at Calangute, flea market shopping at Anjuna, and a whole lot of people-watching and bike riding. This was what a vacay in India’s favourite leisure destination meant to the one crore tourists who land up in Goa every year. Not any longer.
Going ‘beachless’ is the new trend, as a spate of new restaurants and activities that do not involve the beach pops up across the sunshine state. Rough estimates are that some 150 premium restaurants/ cafe bars have opened up in just the past two years or so. Their combination of world class menus, signature cocktails and craft spirits, all in the stunning backdrop, have spurred a veritable restaurant boom in Goa.

And everybody is. Rohit Khattar, who runs Indian Accent as well as the culture and hospitality sections of the India Habitat Centre, chose Goa to open his first original restaurant outside of Delhi NCR. Hosa in Bardez serves a unique blend of traditional and modern south Indian food, and Fireback has a Thai menu. “We had been looking at Goa; it is slowly emerging as one of the major food destinations of the country,” says Nitin Mather, COO of Khattar's holding firm EHV International.
This story is from the April 27, 2025 edition of THE WEEK India.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India
The dura
The dura mater is the brain's personal bodyguard. Tough, fibrous, and uncomplaining, it cover of a treasured book. It doesn't get much limelight, but when something threatens it, the consequences can be swift and unforgiving.
2 mins
September 28, 2025

THE WEEK India
Cinema with spine
Anuparna Roy-the first Indian woman to win the Orizzonti Award for best director at Venice-is not afraid of making the personal political
3 mins
September 28, 2025

THE WEEK India
The Diwali bonanza!
You paid how much for this dhania patta?\" I screamed when I saw those limp sprigs of coriander on the kitchen counter.
3 mins
September 28, 2025

THE WEEK India
HOUSE OF WORDS
A new anthology celebrates Parliament's most powerful speeches and reminds us of its rhetorical decline
8 mins
September 28, 2025

THE WEEK India
Past forward
THE WEEK Heritage Awards is an initiative to transform India's glorious history into a living experience
3 mins
September 28, 2025

THE WEEK India
Message not received
How a communication failure precipitated a political crisis
2 mins
September 28, 2025

THE WEEK India
The cultivation of chaos
Nepal's recurring political upheavals are rooted in a deeper, structural problem
3 mins
September 28, 2025

THE WEEK India
A discovery of India
Coimbatore, often referred to as the ‘Manchester of South India’, is a city I have visited several times for market assessments. However, this time, I found myself stepping into a distinctly new role and in a new avatar. I was invited to address a gathering of students and teachers at the ‘Transformation India Conclave’ organised by SVVM School. Having rarely addressed school students in the past, this was a new experience, and the thought was slightly daunting as I stood before a sea of eager faces—students from Class V to 12—ready to engage, dialogue, and question! They represented a combination of Gen Z and Gen Alpha—tech-fluent, sharp, confident, and curious, with a heightened sense of global awareness.
2 mins
September 28, 2025

THE WEEK India
Allying interests
In its ties with Nepal and Bhutan, India faces a challenge-preserve partnerships without suffocating them
3 mins
September 28, 2025
THE WEEK India
The dura
The dura mater is the brain’s personal bodyguard. Tough, fibrous, and uncomplaining, it lines the inside of the skull like the protective cover of a treasured book. It doesn’t get much limelight, but when something threatens it, the consequences can be swift and unforgiving.
3 mins
September 28, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size