Deepti Kapoor 

10 of the best restaurants and street food snacks in Goa

Goan cuisine has been influenced by an exotic blend of sea, spices and foreign invaders – first the Portuguese, then the hippies and lately food-savvy travellers – which means delicious Indian snacks, fantastic fish and modern fusion are all on offer
  
  

Pousada restaurant, Goa
Gotta get Goan … Pousada on the Beach restaurant offers rare sophisticated seaside cuisine. Photograph: Matthew Parker

Goan food falls into the rich tradition of the Konkan coast, happily complicated and enriched over the years by two very different invasions: first the colonial Portuguese and then the hippies. For all that, it’s not one blended cuisine: Konkan Hindu and Goan Catholic have their distinct dishes, the former typified by the heavy use of coconut and fish, the latter by vinegar, pork and beef. Then there’s the international cuisine, sometimes a fusion, and sometimes the legacy of foreign immigrants holding onto their old cuisine. Often, the big-name restaurants on the beach belt get all the attention, but smaller places also deserve praise and attention. As ever look for those with fast turnover and local customers. On the liquid side of things, try the caju feni, made from fermented cashew apples – it’s an acquired taste, sometimes compared to nail varnish, but the quality stuff (usually in the local bars, from jungle distilleries) can be complex and rewarding – and get you very drunk. Tourists drink it with Limca (a fizzy lemon and lime-flavoured drink), those in the know with water and lime.

Pousada on the Beach, Calangute

Believe it or not, it’s hard to get refined Goan food on the beach. This is where Pousada comes in. In a secluded garden setting set back from Calangute’s crowded sands, this place uses quality local ingredients and has great respect for traditional technique, and it shows – only certain mature coconuts from its own trees go into the curries, fresh toddy vinegar is used in the balchão (a spicy seafood or meat dish) and spices are ground by hand. Beef and prawn dishes are uniformly exceptional, and the vegetable caldin (stew) is a delight.
Meal for two £10-£30, Holiday Street, Calangute, +91 992 227 9265, pousada-tauma.com

La Plage, Ashwem beach

In 2007, my crazy Gallic landlord in south Goa told us, when heading north, to check out a “small French beach shack called La Plage”. Almost a decade later, that shack has grown into an institution favoured by travellers, tycoons, ladies-who-lunch and – crucially – the hard-to-please expat community. Yes, it’s that rare beast – a restaurant that’s changed with Goa, become famous yet remained true to its laid-back origins and chic, rugged cooking. The sesame-grilled tuna and beef carpaccio are outstanding, the chocolate thali legendary. Also try the saffron risotto with grilled prawns and house special mussels.
• Meal for two £20-£30, Ashwem beach, +91 982 212 1712, open Nov-May, reservation advised

Noronha’s Corner, Anjuna

My favourite fast food in Goa. Brothers Charles, Lazarus and Joseph Noronha have been parking their food truck at the Anjuna Circle almost every night since 2009, serving up hearty Goan-Catholic snacks, including the three beefs (cutlet, chilly-fry and roast), a particularly fine and spicy Goan-sausage burger, fish cutlet and chicken cafreal (spicy grilled chicken). The brothers learned their trade from their parents, particularly their father who used to cater for weddings, and working in beach shacks and bars. These guys know what they’re good at and stick to it, and they’re open well into the night.
• Meal for two £1.50-£3, Anjuna Circle (junction of the Anjuna-Mapusa and Calangute-Siolim roads), no phone

Surya Beach Cafe, Galgibag beach

Much of Galgibag beach’s long pine-crested sweep of sand is deserted on account of it being a turtle nesting ground. It was our secret getaway in the south, and Surya our hangout. The premise is simple: Surya and other family members fish and, while you doze in a hammock, his mother cooks whatever is caught – mussels, oysters, prawns, mackerel, crab, pomfret, white and red snapper – in the little kitchen on their ancestral land. There have been innovations over the years: Russians demonstrated their way of treating oysters, an Australian taught line fishing, and the crowds (and prices) have increased, but the shack, at heart, remains the same. And those oysters!
• Meal for two £5-£12, Galgibag beach south end (follow the small lane left of the chapel), on Facebook

Fish thali (fish with curry and rice)

Goa’s one-plate meal, eaten at lunch, generally consists of a fish or baby prawn curry, fried fish, rice, veg, baby clams and a side of pickle and sol kadhi (kokum-infused water). You can find this everywhere, each variant has its virtues, and often the small, family-run joints serve the best. Two in Mapusa are busy Kamlabai (+91 985 070 3343), which adds a pungent, salted-dried prawn kismor to theirs, and Balgo, around for 50 years (+91 982 216 7004), still has its owner in the kitchen; Sabina’s thali (behind South Palolem beach) has a lemony, peppery flavour; Hotel Satpurush (+91 976 381 8044) is the go-to when you’re Pernem side; and Panaji’s Ritz Classic (+91 832 242 6417) serves a monster, a huge quantity of seafood at an unbeatable price.
• Meals for two £1-£3, served at lunch

Goan snacks

Like the rest of India, Goa has lots of great snacks. Ros omelette (ros is Konkani for gravy, in this case chicken, coconut and lime juice) is a local delicacy, served after 7pm. Sandeep Gaddo, by Singbal bookshop in Panaji, serves one of the best. Wedged between the Mapusa bread and flower markets, there’s a small, nameless corner full of hardy market women wolfing down mirchi pakora (batter-fried green chilli) and chai. For the late, late snack, Ajit tea stall, outside the Mapusa bus stand, serves up a famous clam xacuti (curry) from 4am to 6am. And also in Mapusa, there’s an unnamed shop near the Rashtroli temple (opposite the Amul Milk Shop) serving incredible beetroot samosas.
• Snacks cost between 10p and £1

Ciao Bella, Assagao

Mario and Simona, both old India hands, have created a cosy corner of Italy in Goa. For several seasons it was a preferred haunt of expats and long-term visitors, but as its reputation has grown, discerning domestic diners have cottoned on to the fact that it might serve some of the best pasta and pizza in India. The regular menu has starters, salads, pastas and a handful of seafood and meat mains, but it’s on the daily specials board that creativity plays out. Coccoli, porcini and truffle oil pasta, salmon squid ink tagliolini, beef pepper stew and anchovy and artichoke pizza are standouts.
Meal for two £20-£30, 569 Assagao Badem Road, Assagao, +91 976 755 7673, on Facebook

Sakana, Vagator

Designed and built by Israeli-Japanese couple Eliko and Mali in the style of an industrial-psychedelic izakaya (Japanese inn), there’s a real buzz to Sakana. On the Japanese menu there’s heavenly tuna teriyaki, sushi of various shades, chicken katsu, beef yakiniku, udon and ramen, gyoza and tofu dishes, and a great wakame salad. Most mains come as set meals, accompanied by rice, salad and miso soup. Portions are massive, and its wasabi vodka, made locally by a Russian vodka master, is rocket-fuel.
Meal for two £15-£30, Chapora Road, Vagator, +91 989 013 5502, on Facebook

Palácio do Deâo, Quepem

A restored 18th-century Portuguese nobleman’s mansion that is now home to (restorer) Reuben and Celia Vasco da Gama and their two children, Palácio offers a unique culinary experience. After a tour of the property, Celia puts on an extraordinary five-course Indo-Portuguese feast. Expect dishes such pumpkin pie, rissóis de camarão (prawn croquettes), chouriço, prawn curry with local red rice, various fish, beef or veg mains, plus dessert, wine or cocktails, all served on the gorgeous verandah. Booking is essential, as is arriving on an empty stomach.
Meals about £10pp, opposite Holy Cross Church, Quepem, +91 832 266 4029 booking essential, palaciododeao.com

Café Real, Panaji

For an authentic Goan (all-day) breakfast, you can’t beat Café Real in the state capital, which opened in the late 1940s. This is heaven for bhajis – small, richly flavoured plates of veg curry eaten with bread or piping hot puris. There’s a wide variety on offer, including potato, tomato, cauliflower, mushroom, special and mixed, along with samosas, pakoras, sugary tea and coffee, and soft drinks. Seating is canteen style, service is quick and sometimes brusque, but smile and ask what’s good and you’ll be well treated. Also look up nearby cafés Tato and Bhonsle. Both are equally wonderful.
• Meal for two £1-£5, Mahatma Gandhi Road, Panaji, +91 832 242 2264

 

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