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Mumbai, India

Papa’s

Executive ChefHussain Shahzad
LocationMumbai, India
The Best Chef
La Liste
World's 50 Best

Papa's in Mumbai delivers a Modern Indian tasting experience led by Chef Hussain Shahzad. The 13-course tasting menu highlights Thayir saadam, a binka tart with truffle and chenna pora with caviar. In a 12-seat setting above Veronica's Sandwich shop in Bandra's Ranwar village, Papa's blends homegrown Mumbai flavors with global technique, honoring Floyd Cardoz. Recognized on TIME's World's Greatest Places 2025, the restaurant pairs lively service with carefully prepared textures and bold spice notes, a welcome shot at the bar, and precise, ingredient-forward courses that shift from comforting curd rice to luxurious caviar finishes.

Papa’s restaurant in Mumbai, India
About

Bandra's Most Talked-About Address

Waroda Road in Ranwar runs through one of Bandra West's older residential pockets, a neighbourhood where Portuguese-era bungalows sit alongside kirana stores and the kind of lane-side chai stalls that have served the same families for decades. It is not the obvious setting for a restaurant that scores 92 points on the 2026 La Liste global ranking, placing it among a small cohort of Indian restaurants that register at that tier internationally. The physical contrast between the street and what happens inside is part of what makes Papa's worth understanding on its own terms.

At a time when Mumbai's premium dining scene has bifurcated sharply between large-format restaurant groups and tightly controlled, high-intention smaller operations, Papa's sits in the latter category. The broader shift in Indian fine dining over the past decade has moved away from hotel-anchored prestige toward chef-led independents, and Bandra West has become one of the primary addresses for that transition. Masque and The Table helped establish the template; Papa's operates within that same current but with a distinct register.

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The Physical Container

The editorial angle on Papa's that most rewards attention is the space itself. Mumbai's premium dining rooms have historically defaulted to one of two visual languages: the colonial-heritage restoration, with its teak beams and rattan furniture, or the sleek international minimalism that could be dropped into any global city without much contextual adjustment. Neither of those frameworks describes Ranwar's character, which is compressed, domestic, and textured in ways that resist easy categorisation.

Papa's occupies a space that reads less like a constructed restaurant interior and more like a deliberate extension of the neighbourhood's domestic scale. In a city where table counts at ambitious restaurants often push toward maximising covers per square metre, the intimacy here is a considered choice. Seating arrangements at this type of operation function as editorial statements: fewer seats mean higher attention per guest, and they also signal clearly where the restaurant positions itself relative to the volume-focused end of the market. The room operates at a human scale that larger Bandra West operations like The Bombay Canteen do not attempt to replicate.

Natural light and the ambient noise of the surrounding lane are both present in ways that a sealed, acoustically controlled dining room would filter out. This is not an oversight. The physical permeability of the space to its street context is consistent with the broader design philosophy of neighbourhood-embedded restaurants that have emerged across Asian cities over the past decade. Comparable operations in Seoul, Bangkok, and Tokyo have demonstrated that controlled intimacy at street level, rather than elevation above it, is a credible high-end positioning choice. Papa's executes this in a Mumbai context where the street itself is dense with social texture.

Chef Hussain Shahzad and the Contemporary Indian Conversation

The contemporary Indian cooking conversation in Mumbai has become increasingly sophisticated, and the names attached to it carry genuine weight internationally. Hussain Shahzad's presence at Papa's places the restaurant inside a peer set that includes some of the more intellectually rigorous operations in the country. For comparative reference, the La Liste 92-point score positions Papa's alongside restaurants in India that are tracked internationally, a category that remains small relative to the volume of serious cooking happening across the country. Farmlore in Bangalore and Naar in Kasauli are examples of properties at comparable recognition tiers, each operating at low capacity with high intentionality.

What distinguishes the current generation of Mumbai chef-driven independents from their predecessors is the explicit rejection of the hotel dining model. Properties like Dakshin and Ziya built their reputations within hotel infrastructure, which provided operational scale and a built-in international guest base but also constrained the kind of spatial and culinary experimentation that Shahzad's work represents. The independent format at Papa's carries different risks and different freedoms.

Shahzad's profile extends beyond Papa's. He is associated with The Bombay Canteen, one of the restaurants that helped shift Mumbai's contemporary Indian narrative, which gives Papa's a credentialed lineage without requiring the venue itself to be understood primarily through that origin. The relevant point is not biographical but structural: his presence at this address signals a serious kitchen operating in a small, neighbourhood-scaled space, which is a specific and deliberate positioning in a city that has historically associated culinary ambition with larger, more visible formats.

Mumbai's Independent Fine Dining Scene in 2025

The competitive set Papa's sits within is worth mapping clearly. Americano represents the more fusion-forward end of the Bandra dining spectrum. Masque, now consistently referenced in international rankings, has established a tasting-menu format that anchors one end of the serious-cooking market. The Table has held a strong position at the accessible-premium tier for well over a decade. Papa's does not occupy exactly the same niche as any of these; it operates at a more compressed scale and with a sensibility that is more explicitly rooted in the specific geography of Ranwar than any restaurant with a multi-city or international aspirational framing.

Internationally, the model of a chef operating a small, neighbourhood-embedded room with serious culinary intent and a domestic-scale physical space has strong precedents. Atomix in New York City demonstrated that a Korean fine dining format could earn global recognition while maintaining strict capacity limits and a design language that resisted both spectacle and minimalist sterility. Le Bernardin has shown for decades that serious cooking and a considered dining room can coexist without the room requiring architectural statement-making. Papa's is operating in a different register and a different price context, but the underlying logic of the space-as-container-for-intent connects to the same tradition.

For those building an itinerary across India's serious dining scene, the comparative reference points are useful. Dum Pukht in New Delhi and Adaa at Falaknuma Palace in Hyderabad anchor the heritage-hotel end of the spectrum. Bomras in Anjuna and Baan Thai in Kolkata represent the regional specialist format at smaller scale. Papa's sits in a different category from all of them: a chef-driven urban independent with international recognition, operating at neighbourhood scale in one of Mumbai's most characterful residential districts.

Planning Your Visit

Papa's is located on Waroda Road in Ranwar, Bandra West, an address that Google Plus Code resolves to 3R3G+JMX. Bandra West is well connected by the Western line at Bandra station, and the neighbourhood is navigable on foot once you reach the broader area, though the specific lanes around Ranwar reward some advance orientation. Given the La Liste recognition and the small-scale format, reservations should be made as far in advance as the booking system permits; this category of restaurant in Mumbai books out on weekends well ahead of time. No website or phone number is available in current data, so booking through aggregator platforms or direct inquiry via in-person or social channel contact is the practical route. Dress is not formally specified in available data, but the neighbourhood setting and the domestic scale of the room both suggest that the register is informed rather than formal.

For a broader orientation to what Mumbai offers across dining categories, our full Mumbai restaurants guide covers the city's range at length. Supplementary guides to hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences complete the picture for visitors spending time in the city.

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