clock menu more-arrow no yes mobile
Two people rest at the edge of an infinity pool admiring a picturesque bay.
Visitors enjoying the view from Nerul in North Goa.
Ahilya by the Sea

Filed under:

An Eater’s Guide to Goa, India’s Sunshine State

Layers of Hindu, Muslim, and Portuguese culture blend with seafood and coconut on Goan plates, making it worth seeking out local specialties among the sunny destination’s sea of tourist traps

Goa is one of India’s most popular tourist destinations. The southwestern Indian state, which is split into northern and southern districts along the Konkan coast, welcomes millions of visitors from other parts of India who party the night away with affordable booze. Known as India’s Sunshine State, the area is also a favorite for foreign tourists, who frequent resorts, guesthouses, and beach cabanas, lured by the state’s sun, sand, and susegado, the Goan version of the laid-back life. Local food businesses have responded in kind. Walk along the famous stretch of beaches between Candolim and Baga, and you’ll encounter North Indian dishes like palak paneer or dal makhani, restaurant brands imported from major Indian cities, and Western burgers. Goa’s incredibly diverse, flavorful cuisine rarely makes appearances in the buzzier areas.

But Goans nurture a deep love for their food, evident in everyday meals (like little touches of pickled fruits) and special occasions (like the 16-layer egg-and-coconut cakes that appear around Christmas). Locals tie together recipes, ingredients, and kitchen know-how from Portugal, South India, and other parts of the world, creating a culinary legacy that often goes overlooked by tourists. Across Goa, you’ll find a vivid mix of breakfast joints, roadside carts, generations-old taverns, and contemporary resto bars, all proudly contributing to Goa’s culinary narrative.

There are opportunities to escape the tourist circuit in the capital, Panjim (also known as Panaji), as well as the coastal towns, islands, and inland villages. After just a few meals, you’ll know why Goa is one of India’s most underrated food destinations.

A hand holds up a dish, consisting of rice with various curries and other items, in front of a tropical background.
A dish composed in the forest on a Soul Travelling tour.
Soul Travelling

What’s the food in Goa like?

Although small in size, the state has a layered cuisine from centuries of power shifts. Hindu royal families and Muslim dynasties ruled Goa before the Portuguese arrived in 1510. The Portuguese colonized the area for about 450 years and heavily influenced culinary traditions in the process; many dishes and desserts still have Portuguese-derived names. Goa also acted as a center of trade with Arab merchants and other territories of the Portuguese empire, like Japan, Indonesia, and Mozambique, bringing in spices along with textiles, horses, and other goods.

Goan food largely relies on locally grown rice and seafood like Bombay duck, mackerel, kingfish, pomfret, mussels, and prawns. The coconut palm is especially important; it’s used to produce palm jaggery, scraped coconut meat, vinegar (commonly used to add sour notes to dishes or pickle produce), and coconut milk that thickens stewy vegetable curries like khatkhatem.

In terms of meat, chicken, lamb, and beef appear often at Goan celebrations, but pork is king. Although there’s a common stereotype that pork carries a stigma across India, the pig is integral to many Indian cuisines, including Goan, where every part of the fattened animal is put to precise use. The state’s cuisine also makes use of abundant spring and summer produce, like cashews, mangoes, jackfruit, and kokum.

A diner uses a piece of a bread roll to scoop up a saucy dish.
Digging in with pao.
Soul Travelling

Key terms for food lovers

Pao and poee

Ask any Goan and they’ll tell you that local life is deeply tied to pao (Portuguese for bread): puffy, square-shaped, golden-crusted rolls. Baking has a long, nuanced history in Goa running back to the mid-16th century. In her book Cozinha de Goa: History and Tradition of Goan Food, Fátima da Silva Gracias explains that Portuguese missionaries taught European techniques to one of the communities in coastal Majorda in southern Goa; from there the knowledge spread across the state and up the northwestern coast of India.

Traditionally, dough was fermented with sur (palm wine), adding a fluffy texture, though most bakers use yeast today. Freshly baked pao makes a great pairing with curry or an omelet. There are also other types of bread, like the popular poee, a hollow discus of leavened whole-wheat bread. Across Goan villages, you’ll still find a poder (breadman) on his bicycle delivering freshly baked pao and poee to every house.

A tray of raw squid.
Squid is just one of many types of local seafood.
Ahilya by the Sea

Kokum

A member of the mangosteen family, kokum is a tropical fruit that grows wild in the forests along the Konkan coast. A common souring agent in the region, the sun-dried outer flesh of the fruit is also boiled to prepare drinks and cooling condiments.

Thali

The assortment of dishes in a lunch thali varies across India according to region, community, and class. In Goa, a thali typically comes with rice, coconutty and tangy fish curry, vegetables, solkadhi (a cooling coconut milk and kokum drink), and a choice of spicy, fried fish or prawns. Some Goan thalis also include kismur (a condiment combining coconut with fish or dried prawns), pickles, and traditional desserts like bebinca (layered cake).

Rava fry

You’ll often see fish rava fry or prawns rava fry on restaurant menus. A common way to prepare seafood, this involves marinating fish with chile powder, turmeric, and salt before coating items in a thin layer of rava (semolina) and shallow frying them for a delightful, subtle crunch. Rava is also used for frying potatoes, okra, and eggplant.

A bowl of pickled green mangos beside the jar they came from.
Pickled mango.
Shubhra Shankhwalker

Feni

Long before the Portuguese arrived in Goa, locals were making feni, a colorless, aromatic spirit originally derived from the sap of the coconut flower. When the Portuguese introduced cashews to the state, many distillers switched to cashew apples for their base. Today, feni is so strongly associated with Goa, the state received a geographical indication (GI) tag for the drink, a mark of quality. Feni is usually enjoyed neat or with Limca (lemon-lime soda), but you’ll also find bars making creative cocktails with this heritage spirit. Homegrown brands like Aani Ek also sell artisanal feni infused with chile, lime, or honey and cinnamon.

Xacuti

Chicken, beef, lamb, crabs, and chickpeas all get slow-cooked in xacuti-style curry. A labor of love, this dish combines ingredients like dried Kashmiri red chiles, poppy seeds, peppercorns, and coconut meat, along with other herbs and spices, all sauteed and pounded to make a spicy, aromatic gravy. Xacuti is usually served with rice, but leftovers are also great drizzled over an egg omelet.

Recheado

Much like the ubiquitous rava fry, recheado fish fry or recheado masala shows up on a lot of Goan menus. Recheado is a red spice blend prepared with Kashmiri red chiles and herbs. This marinade is usually stuffed inside or coated on a fish before it’s shallow-fried.

Sorpotel

A hot, sour, vinegary curry commonly made by those living along the Konkan coast, sorpotel traditionally features pork meat and offal including heart, liver, tongue, and blood. It’s mostly a ceremonial dish, prepared for special days like Christmas and weddings, when it’s served alongside sanna (soft, steamed, rice-flour discs).

A tour group talks with a store owner in front of his shop.
Chatting with the locals.
Soul Travelling

Where to eat in Panjim, North Goa, and South Goa

Panjim

Confeitaria 31 de Janeiro

This 1930 Goan Portuguese bakery is located in a tiny alley in the Fontainhas neighborhood of Panjim’s Latin Quarter, tucked among the vibrant houses sporting red tiled roofs and picturesque porches. Grab one of the outdoor tables — covered with azulejo ceramic tiles depicting scenes of Goan life — to people-watch with one of the bakery’s prawn rissois (cheesy, prawn-stuffed, half-moon patties) and other classics like Swiss rolls and chocolate-rum balls. Come early for the bebinca, Goa’s famous, pudding-like layered cake (believed to have been first made by a nun in the 17th century), which is golden brown, eggy, and sweet.

Cafe Tato

Since 1913, Goans have made the multiple locations of Tato synonymous with a quick snack, tea, and breakfast. Staples include a range of vegetarian bhaji, like the sukhi (a dry potato dish), onion and tomato salad, mushrooms, or cowpeas. Each dish comes with a choice of puri (deep-fried whole wheat bread), pao, or fluffy, deep-fried banana-wheat buns dusted with cumin (like you might find in Mangalore down the coast).

Two spongy dosas served on a wooden board with a small clump of orange chutney, presented with a split coconut.
Adsarache pole at Aayi’s.
Shubhra Shankhwalker

Kokni Kanteen

Indian tourists from other states flock to this little restaurant, which continuously hums with Konkani songs. You’ll definitely have to line up for the lunchtime fish thali, the restaurant’s most famous dish, which includes fried kingfish, mussels, dry prawns, and a lightly spiced fish curry, served alongside rice and other items like solkadhi.

Bombil

Smack dab at the heart of Panjim, Bombil is a love letter to the small joints that once dotted Goa. The no-frills restaurant with vivid, yellow walls serves food inspired by owner Joseph Dias’s upbringing, especially the simple food cooked by his grandparents. Look for favorite bites like semolina-coated fried lepo (sole) or go for the daily lunch, which includes white rice with mango pickles, bombil (dried Bombay duck), and sorak (spiced, tangy coconut gravy known as “spinster curry” since it doesn’t include meat or fish). The menu also features kalchi kodi (day-old sorak eaten with hot pao and a fried egg) and more elaborate dishes, like a thali with kingfish that was part of the Sunday feasts of Dias’s childhood.

North Goa

The Local Table

Dining at the Local Table feels like visiting old friends. The casual atmosphere adds to the warm welcome from chef Gaurish Madgaonkar and his wife, who run the place with help from their young daughter. The restaurant’s menu is a world apart from the North Indian style dhabas (roadside food stalls) catering to tourists along the busy Candolim Beach Road. Try the rava-coated silver pomfret, which is shallow-fried on a low flame, or the crab xacuti. Wash down your meal with a refreshing glass of kokum soda.

Sabor Cafe

Once a sleepy little village with colonial-era residences, Assagao is now nicknamed the Beverly Hills of Goa for its fancy cafes, luxe boutique hotels, and fine dining venues. For a pocket-friendly option in the area, head to Sabor. Goan co-owner Jack Gerald opened the charming cafe in 2022, serving local snacks with modern twists (like roasted pork sandwiches on poee). With paned windows and indigo walls, it almost feels like a slice of Portugal in Goa.

A large hunk of crab meat attached to legs, served in a bowl with a light sauce.
Crab sukhi at Aayi’s.
Shubhra Shankhwalker

Aayi’s

While Brahmins across India are generally known to be strictly vegetarian, the coastal influences are evident in the fish dishes of Goa’s Saraswat Brahmin. Though the cuisine is rarely seen outside private homes, Shubhra Shankhwalker wants to promote the cuisine to a wider audience while honoring century-old recipes from her community. Set in a farmhouse in North Goa, Aayi’s — meaning “mother’s” — serves an experiential, hyperlocal, multicourse menu. Shankhwalker uses handpicked ingredients from local markets and fishmongers to make dishes like kalundarche hooman (pearl spot fish curry) and adsarache pole (tender coconut dosa with garlic chutney).

Susegad Anjuna

This incredible, little food truck in Mazal Waddo is just a 30-minute walk from the famous Anjuna beach. Everything here is home-cooked and perfect for a quick, affordable evening snack. While there are several meat-stuffed poee on offer, the winner is clearly the truck’s choris pao: poee stuffed with Goan pork sausage (originally influenced by Portuguese chouriço) that’s spicy and tangy with vinegar.

Home-Made Goan Fish Curry

Tucked away in a small dirt road far away from Anjuna’s buzz, this small, confusingly named restaurant gets busy at lunchtime, when people pile in for the fish thali. Order the rava fry prawns, grab a chair beneath the tin roof, and dig in with locals who prefer to keep this place a secret.

South Goa

Monte Carlo

If you want to go where the locals eat, head to Monte Carlo. The family-run place in the village of Betalbatim offers Goan classics like pork jeerem meerem, a spicy, tangy gravy made with herbs like cumin, peppercorn, turmeric, and green chile, flavored with tamarind syrup, tomatoes, and vinegar. Look out for the tora shiro, pickled mango slices served alongside mains.

A dish of rice and torn papad (wafers), smoking from some kind of coal in the middle.
Papadachi kismoor, a side dish made of local spicy papad, at Aayi’s.
Shubhra Shankhwalker

Mon Petit Frère

A tiny, open-air bakery, coffee shop, and brunch spot with rustic interiors in Colva, one of South Goa’s famous beach areas, Mon Petit Frère is one of those unexpected gems you find during a Goan holiday. Famous for breakfasts and Sunday brunches of Western-style eggs, crepes, pancakes, and falafel burgers, the cafe also serves house-made sourdough loaves, chocolate almond banana muffins, cinnamon buns, and handmade pasta dishes. Go for coffee and stay for the basque cheesecake that’s developed a cult following.

Ulhas

Ulhas is a gaddo (street stall) specializing in ros omelet. Your choice of spicy chickpeas or chicken xacuti curry is drizzled over a fluffy omelet, topped with chopped onions and coriander leaves, and served with fresh pao and a lime wedge.

Kausar’s Biryani

Perhaps the best place for biryani in all of Goa, Kausar’s offers homestyle chicken and mutton dum biryani (layers of rice and meat slow-cooked in a large pot). There are also other popular Indian dishes like butter chicken; Mangalorean chicken ghee roast marinated with spices, curry leaves, ghee, and jaggery; and desserts like sheer khurma (sweet vermicelli pudding) prepared by Muslims during Eid.

Cavatina by Avinash Martins

At his Benaulim restaurant, renowned chef Avinash Martins serves Goan food with a contemporary twist, including a modern take on Indigenous Goan food and highly seasonal produce. Check out the spanakopita made with Goan tambdi bhaji (red amaranth) and cashew butter; or go for Martins’s toranja starter, a local pomelo tossed with onions, cilantro, cucumber, mint, dried Bombay duck, and a tangy, spicy dressing of chiles, tamarind, and jaggery.

A tall red cocktail accented with spice mixture striped horizontally down the outside of the glass.
A cocktail at the Flying Goat.
The Flying Goat

The best places to drink in Goa

Panjim

For The Record

India’s first vinyl bar, founded by audio engineer and jazz musician Buland Shukla, this Panjim hangout has a curated list of craft cocktails made with native spirits like feni and seasonal ingredients like amaranth. The bar’s impressive food menu focuses on different types of fermentation.

Joseph Bar

No guide to Goa is complete without this iconic space, where time has little meaning. Frequented by locals, Joseph is an old bar with rustic decor and space for about 15 people. Grab a draught beer and sit down for a chat with Prabhakar Azagaokar — known simply as Gundu — Joseph’s iconic, always-smiling barman, who’ll whip up anything you like.

North Goa

Villa 259 Taproom & Cocktail Bar

This tap room is fancy, like everything else in Assagao. Set in a charming old, renovated Portuguese house with plenty of private nooks, the restaurant and bar serves modern European food and great cocktails named after Goa’s iconic tourist spots. There’s live music on the weekends.

The Flying Goat

The Flying Goat not only does great coffee and cocktails using local ingredients, but it’s also an incredibly peaceful spot to while away the time with an extensive book collection. Full of houseplants, friendly dogs, and soulful music, it’s dreamy and intimate, particularly during monsoons.

South Goa

Patnem Chai Shop

One of South Goa’s oldest shops for chao (the Konkani term for chai), Patnem is a go-to place for samosas (deep-fried patties stuffed with spicy potatoes, peas, and meat). With images of Hindu goddesses flanking the vintage pink walls, this iconic place is run by friendly folks who welcome a mix of foreigners and locals.

Feli Goa

A cute little bar reviving the tavern culture in Goa with a contemporary twist, Feli occupies a spot in the beautiful village of Benaulim. The cocktails pay homage to Goan traditions, incorporating ingredients like coconut feni and mango. The watering hole also pours craft beers from Susegado, Goa’s first microbrewery.

A woman uses a large mortar and pestle to crush a white ingredient, while sitting in a forest scene.
Behind the wheel of a large mortar and pestle.
Soul Travelling

The best food tours and experiences in Goa

Make It Happen

Homegrown tour organization Make It Happen conducts whisky distillery tours, feni and tapas hours, and food trails through Goan towns, all of which make ideal introductions to local cuisine. Go for the Margao Food Trail, which explores local markets, breadmaking, and dining at a heritage restaurant. Tours start at $30 per person.

Soul Travelling

One of Goa’s leading tour organizations, Soul Travelling stands out by offering curated culinary tours that explore various aspects of Goan cuisine, like home-cooked Saraswat Brahmin meals. Go for the Chorao Island tour, which gives you a chance to explore Goa’s largest island and cook dishes with local families. Tours start at $23 per person.

The Local Beat

Founded by Goan Mackinlay Barreto, Local Beat goes beyond typical tourist experiences to explore Goa’s charming villages. All tours include food experiences, dipping into what Goans eat on a typical day depending on the season, like kelyachyo fodi (spicy, rava-fried banana) and urrak, the first distillation of the cashew apple extract (a second distillation produces feni). Contact Local Beat for curated tours and prices.

The best hotels in Goa for food lovers

Ahilya by the Sea

With only nine tastefully designed rooms set across three villas, Ahilya by the Sea sits on a secluded spot by a bay in Nerul, a picturesque village in North Goa. Known for his table d’hote fine dining, chef Jason Pereira serves Indian and Goan dishes, like a rava fry prawn thali, in a charming setting. Aside from two pools shaded by frangipani, the Arjun’s Tree House room, nested in a 200-year-old banyan tree, is particularly stunning. Rooms start at $744 in the peak season.

A small coffee table with a few chairs, set on a porch by a pool with a view of a bay beyond.
A picturesque spot at Ahilya by the Sea.
Ahilya by the Sea

MansionHaus

This 300-year-old luxury hotel in North Goa’s Anjuna sports chic, white interiors, a communal courtyard, and a veranda dimmed with moon lighting. It’s also particularly great for hungry guests, as it hosts suppers with traveling chefs from across the world. Though the menu changes often, it always features fresh, organic ingredients from the Goan coast and nearby farms. Visitors can join curated cooking classes or private food and wine pairings hosted by the chefs. Doubles start at $230 during the high season.

Casa Menezes

Located in Batim, a village outside Panjim that retains the charm of old Goa, this 300-year-old home of the de Menezes family comes with four suites. Consider dining on-site at the country-style restro bar, which is tastefully decorated with teak furniture and serves home-cooked, traditional Goan Portuguese dishes like sorpotel and spicy Konkani-style prawns, all paired with feni. Suites start at $85 during the high season.

Alila Diwa Goa

High-ceilinged corridors, reflective pools, and charming courtyards full of mango trees effortlessly blend in with the surrounding lush rice paddies at this 118-room luxe Hyatt resort in South Goa. The hotel restaurant, Spice Studio, encircles a majestic banyan tree and serves homey dishes from India’s southwestern coast, like the Thalassery Kozhi Biryani from northern Kerala, in which rice and chicken are cooked separately and later layered in a large pot. Be sure to sip one of the Courtyard Bar’s kokum-infused martinis. Rooms start at $200 during the high season.

Cabo Serai

Hugging a rocky clifftop in Cabo de Rama, one of South Goa’s more dramatic seascapes featuring crags and coconut palms, this 14-acre eco-resort by the Arabian Sea is ideal for a relaxing getaway with daily yoga and meditation. The resort sources some ingredients from its own organic garden, while fish and grains are sourced locally for seasonal menus. Dine alfresco at the restaurant, join a wellness cooking experience, or ask for private dining in the garden. Goan and other Indian cuisines are on offer, including tisane (tea) made from garden herbs. Rooms start at $230 during the high season.

Zinara Rathnayake is a writer based in India and Sri Lanka with bylines in New York Times, BBC, CNN, Atlas Obscura, and others. Her work largely focuses on travel, food, and culture, among others.

Tour guests sit on the ground in a forest with meals served on leaves.
A crash course in Goan cuisine.
Soul Travelling
Eater Travel

The Bahamas Fish Fry Is the Ultimate Caribbean Feast

Eater Travel

The Definitive Guide to Classic British Foods

Eater Travel

Singapore Street Food Guide: What and Where to Eat

View all stories in Eater Travel