15 Best Restaurants in Mumbai, India

Apoorva

$$ | Fort Fodor's choice

If you're searching for an authentic seafood "lunch home"—which implies unpretentious, tasty, and cheap—this old-school Kala Ghoda mainstay is spot on: slightly dingy, full of locals, with a too-cold a/c section that smells faintly of mothballs. Whichever main dish you choose, order an accompaniment of neer dosa---they are a little like rotis, but much lighter and fluffier, and made of rice; most Konkan restaurants have them, but none do them better than Apoorva.

S.A. Brelvi Marg, Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400001, India
22-2287--0335
Known For
  • king prawn gassi (spicy gravied prawn dish)
  • prawn or fish rawa fry, an Apoorva specialty
  • local kane fish smothered in Mangalorean spices and deep-fried to a crisp

Neel- Tote on the Turf

$$ | Central Mumbai Fodor's choice

Hands down the best upscale North Indian food in town for meat eaters, this restaurant in a beautifully designed building at the track makes the journey to the city center utterly worthwhile. Portions are big—as are the prices—and the food is heavy but sophisticated.

Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400023, India
22-6157--7777
Known For
  • seekh kebab (minced chicken or mutton kebabs)
  • mutton shorba (bone marrow soup)
  • z
  • raan (tenderised mutton leg roasted in a tandoor)

Oh! Calcutta

$$ | Tardeo Fodor's choice

Rarely packed, even on Saturday night, because it's in an infrequently visited part of town, Oh! Calcutta serves the city's best (mustard-heavy) Bengali food in upscale surroundings of dark wood set off by simple black-and-white archival photos from the British Raj. The seafood is exquisite, and if it's all too unfamiliar, defer to the waiters—some of the best in the city—to choose something, based on your specifications.

Tulsi Wadi La., Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400034, India
22-2353–9114
Known For
  • smoked hilsa fish
  • daab chingri (prawns cooked in rich tender coconut served in a coconut shell)
  • tel koi (whole perch cooked in a bath of mustard oil)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted

Recommended Fodor's Video

Soam

$$ | Marine Drive Fodor's choice

This extremely popular restaurant is always likely to be packed with chattering families and friends, but the service is brisk and you'll soon get a seat amid the pale yellow walls, wooden benches, and loud aunties. Although most of the menu here is traditional Gujarati and Kathiawadi food, some dishes offer a modern take on the classics.

Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400006, India
22-2369–8080
Known For
  • panki (paper-thin pancakes folded into banana leaves and steamed)
  • fada ni khichdi (broken wheat saturated with ghee)
  • spinach and cheese samosas
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted

The Table

$$ | Colaba Fodor's choice

One of Mumbai's best restaurants, The Table was launched by a pair of Indian restaurateurs and a young American chef from San Francisco; suitably enough, the food is American fare but is inflected with flavors from around the world. The lofted upper floor is perfect for romantic dinners; below is a more lively and sociable setting, with a large, eponymous, communal table extending from the bar. The delicious breads are made at The Table's sister space in central Mumbai, Mag Street Kitchen, and it also uses ingredients from its own organic farm.

Woodside Inn

$$ | Colaba Fodor's choice

The only real bar in town (in the American sense, at least) is modeled on an English pub, plays decent music (though sometimes too loud), has great snack food, and free Wi-Fi (that can sometimes be spotty), and some of the best-priced alcohol in town. Try the soy burgers, the pizzas—the four cheese is excellent, and the margarita’s no slouch—or Franco's meatballs (a lamb and pork mix in a tangy tomato sauce).

Wodehouse Rd., Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400005, India
22-2287–5752
Known For
  • location, location, location---right at the head of Colaba Causeway
  • variety of local beers on tap
  • unusual burgers offered during Burger Festival

Burma Burma

$$ | Kala Ghoda

A trip to India can represent an opportunity for travelers to test the ropes at living vegetarian for a while (veg options constitute literally half of every menu here), but few major restaurants in the city have mastered all the possibilities of vegetarian like the charming Burma Burma. Ankit Gupta, the owner, is half Burmese, and demands authenticity, so short of a separate flight to Myanmar itself, you're not likely to find dishes as skillful as these in many other places; the restaurant also serves excellent teas (but no alcohol).

Kothari House, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
22-4003–6600
Known For
  • nanji kaukswe (delicious noodles served in dry coconut powder)
  • nanpeebya (Burmese bread served with creamy white peas)
  • shway aye, chilled coconut milk served in a glass with sweet bread

Café Zoe

$$ | Lower Parel

One of the city's most popular dining and drinking spots, the roomy, open, yet strangely utilitarian Café Zoe serves European and continental breakfasts, brunches, lunches, dinners, and drinks. Depending on what time you arrive at this converted industrial compound, the crowd may include young parents feeding their one-year-old daughter sweet bites of Belgian waffles, local journalists shoveling down hot minestrone soup while using the free Wi-Fi, dating couples sharing a romantic dinner of seafood and pasta, or young partygoers drinking cocktails in a dim but sensuous atmosphere after midnight.

Gajalee

$$ | Central Mumbai
Senapati Bapat Marg, Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400012, India
22-2495–0667
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner, Credit cards accepted

Le Pain Quotidien

$$ | Colaba

This Belgian bakery, a stone's throw from the Gateway of India, offers great breads, fresh ingredients, and a giant communal table. There's a wine selection, too, and evening specials might include grilled salmon or seared lamb chops. It's a good option when you're sweating it out in South Mumbai, or for those who need a break from Indian food and want to check email on the free Wi-Fi.

Madhuban

$$

At one of Aurangabad's top restaurants, dark furniture, large paintings of Indian scenes, an abundance of green granite, crisp white tablecloths, and a chandelier composed of multiple diyas (traditional Indian lamps) set a regal tone, while a wall of windows opens onto a garden of lovely tropical trees and flowers. The menu might include butter chicken and dal makhani, a rich black lentil dish; tasty Indo-Chinese food—the chilli chicken, a spicy concoction, is recommended; and some Mexican and Italian food.

R--3 Chikalthana, Aurangabad, Maharashtra, 431210, India
240-265–3095
Known For
  • buffet lunch
  • open-air dining under the stars
  • North Indian specialties
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted

Mahesh Lunch Home

$$ | Fort

Somewhere between Apoorva and Trishna—geographically as well as atmospherically—Mahesh is a legendary Fort seafood restaurant (but can't compare with Ankur) that attracts the office-lunch crowd as well as packing them in during the evenings. Some of the character was stripped out of the place after it decided to go upscale, and the floor-to-ceiling marble might be a bit much, but the traditional Mangalorean seafood dishes are reliably good.

8--B Cawasji Patel St., Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400001, India
22-6695–5559
Known For
  • clam and squid sukha (dry masala)
  • fish gassi, made with local fish of your choice
  • neer dosa (paper-fine flatbreads)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted

Salt Water Café

$$ | Bandra

This unpretentious restaurant in Bandra Reclamation—a scenic, walkable section of Bandra—has a classic nouvelle cuisine menu and a simple rooftop terrace. It gets crowded on weekends, so be sure to make a reservation, preferably for the terrace, where the cover of giant palm trees somehow blocks out the cacophony from noisy Chapel Road below.

87 Chapel Rd., Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400050, India
22-2643–4441
Known For
  • great breakfasts
  • pretty sweet meaty dishes, especially the lamb shanks
  • great happy-hour deals
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted

Tandoor

$$

The hospitality manager Syed Liakhat Hussain is one good reason to visit this brightly lit, busy, and cheerful restaurant that stays open late; the other is the authentic and well-made tandoori food. Shoot for lunch instead of dinner if you're coming by auto-rickshaw, because in the evening it's difficult to find transportation (it's far from the main hotels).

Station Rd., Aurangabad, Maharashtra, 431001, India
98909--58466
Known For
  • tandoori chicken
  • paneer tikka
  • biryani
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted

Trishna

$$ | Fort

Although most of the items on Trishna's seafood menu are of respectable quality, you'd be remiss not to order the much-vaunted butter garlic crab---even if that was all this legendary Kala Ghoda restaurant served, it'd be full year-round. The succulent crab is available in myriad treatments—with Indian and Western spices, green hariyali masala, black (spicier) Hyderabadi masala—and Trishna maintains the quality that's made it a favorite with tourists for more than 30 years.

7 Rope Walk La., Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400001, India
22-2261–4991
Known For
  • the butter garlic crab and its brethren the squid and prawn
  • one of the few seafood restaurants that has an alcohol menu
  • prawns koliwada
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential