Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
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.
Bu hikaye THE WEEK India dergisinin April 27, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
THE WEEK India'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

THE WEEK India
Trump and the C word
Dr Christine Fair, a prominent American political scientist and Georgetown University professor specialising in South Asian security and counter-terrorism, recently called President Donald Trump a ch***ya-several times-during an interview with Pakistani-origin British journalist Moeed Pirzada, a man who himself is no stranger to the word on air.
2 mins
September 07, 2025

THE WEEK India
India will have its own space station by 2035
DR JITENDRA SINGH, Union minister of state, science and technology
4 mins
September 07, 2025

THE WEEK India
BEST EXERCISE TO FIGHT INSOMNIA
New research published in BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine suggests that yoga, Tai Chi, walking and jogging may be the most effective forms of exercise for improving sleep quality and easing symptoms of insomnia. Insomnia affects about 22 per cent of adults and is associated with an increased risk of numerous mental and physical health conditions, including dementia and cardiovascular disease.
7 mins
September 07, 2025

THE WEEK India
Space to grow
From designing satellites to starting space companies, young Indians have joined the space revolution
4 mins
September 07, 2025

THE WEEK India
ALL BETS ARE OFF
The ban on real-money gaming apps has forced companies to pivot
6 mins
September 07, 2025

THE WEEK India
Home is where the art is
Taba Chake had to leave Arunachal Pradesh to find success, but through his music, he takes a piece of home wherever he goes
4 mins
September 07, 2025

THE WEEK India
A future pregnant with promise
Chinese researchers have announced that they are developing a humanoid robot with an artificial womb designed to replicate the entire process of human pregnancy—from conception to birth. Led by Dr Zhang Qifeng of Kaiwa Technology, the project was unveiled at the 2025 World Robot Conference in Beijing. The artificial womb, filled with synthetic amniotic fluid and connected to a nutrient delivery system, is intended to support foetal growth through a full-term gestation. A prototype is expected by 2026, with an estimated cost of about 1,00,000 yuan (around ₹12 lakh).
2 mins
September 07, 2025

THE WEEK India
The problem with being too rich
Norway has a new complaint. It's too rich. Economist Martin Bech Holte titled his cautionary bestseller: The Country That Became Too Rich. On book tours across the nation, he has been warning citizens about the side-effects of oil wealth. With a per capita GDP of ₹87 lakh ($100,000), Norway is richer than the US, China, Japan, Britain, France and other developed nations. Besides, in theory, the per capita share in its booming $2 trillion oil fund, the world's largest sovereign wealth fund, is an additional ₹3 crore.
2 mins
September 07, 2025

THE WEEK India
THE STORM RIDER
ARUNDHATI ROY, IN HER LATEST BOOK, BRINGS OUT THE MANY SHADES OF HER MOTHER—HER COURAGE AND HER COQUETRY, HER WARMTH AND HER VENOM. AFTER ALL, SHE WRITES, SHE IS CONSTRUCTED FROM THE DEBRIS OF HER MOTHER'S FURY
11 mins
September 07, 2025

THE WEEK India
The taboo tax
India's abortion laws recognise a woman's right to choose, but stigma and inflated costs often make that choice hard
5 mins
September 07, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size