Where to find the best street food in Bohri Mohalla during Ramzan

As a foodie, every year I look forward to Ramzan. Four years after my last visit to Mumbai’s Mohammad Ali road to explore the food scene in the Minara Masjid area, I was back for a part II. But this time I was here to discover the best street food in Bohri Mohalla during Ramzan.

I learnt from the mistakes of my past and turned up empty stomach to make room to eat all the best possible food here. I also made sure that this time I tried food from multiple stalls instead of eating everything in one place. It is impossible to cover all the food joints in Bohri Mohalla in one go, so in this post I’m going to suggest the best places to eat in Bohri Mohalla.

Best street food in Bohri Mohalla during Ramzan

Jilani Fast Food

Jilani Fast Food aka JFC was our first stop on this food trail. Barely 50 meters once you step inside Bohri Mohalla, this joint can become your base to begin the culinary expedition. Start with a Baida Roti and Kasturi Chicken Naan sandwich – both are great starters to satiate your taste buds before you move on to bigger, heavier meals. We also ordered the cheese Baida Roti but I’d suggest to skip this as the cheese overpowers everything else about the snack. Brave hearts can also sample the Bheja Masala and Gurda Masala with naan bread that has its own fan following here.

Best street food in Bohri Mohalla during Ramzan

Surti 12 Handi

If you’re a hardcore non-vegetarian, Surti 12 Handi is a bucket-list kind of place. Introduced by a Muslim family from Surat in Gujarat, the cooking style here is a pure labour of love with meats of all kinds prepared in 12 handis or vessels over 48 hours.

Best street food in Bohri Mohalla during Ramzan
Surti 12 Handi

We ordered the Nalli Nihari, a slow cooked broth of special spices with bone marrow, topped with a layer of fried oil and fat and garnished with coriander. It came with an Iranian Khameeri roti. The meat was so tender it came off the bone. We shed our inhibitions and started beating the bone to suck the soft marrow. The flavours are bold, and might I say not every one’s cup of tea, but definitely worth a shot. They also serve other outrageous dishes like Pichota (rump and tail), Paya (trotters) and a special Bhel which is a mixture of all the gravies and meat.

Best street food in Bohri Mohalla during Ramzan

Idris Cold Drinks

Flush all that heavy duty food with a chilled glass of sherbet at Idris Cold Drinks, one of the oldest cold drinks’ house in Bohri Mohalla. The aerated drinks here come for as cheap as Rs. 20 per glass and they have flavours like Shikanji, Rimzim, Aqua blue, Kesar, Elaichi, Strawberry, Mango, Variyali and (hold your breath) even Cadbury. I stuck to what they make best, the Idris Special which was a chilled rose sherbet with some masala powder sprinkled over the top. It was a refreshing way to beat the May Summer heat.

Haji Tikka

One of the most crowded stalls in Bohri Mohalla is Haji Tikka. It’s crowded with people all the time and the wait for your food can easily slip into 25-30 minutes. You’ll get meats of all kinds and colours here from seekh kebab to kheeri, kaleji, boti kebab and chicken in various styles like tikka, achari, pahadi and tangdi. Club these with that tangy super awesome green chutney they serve along with some raw onions and a lightly toasted naan bread, and you will surely not be able to resist another bite.

Haji Tikka

Tawakkal Sweets

This is a landmark in itself and easily one of the most popular sweet shops this side of town. During Ramzan, Tawakkal Sweets is bustling with people. Employees stand outside the shop shouting on top of their voices to grab customer attention which I find absolutely unnecessary because trust me, I’d anyway go there for their amazing phirnis, sweet samosas, mawa jalebis, doodhi halwa, rabdi and malpuas.

Tawakkal Sweets

Taj Ice Cream

End your food trail with a visit to this legendary ice cream parlour, established in 1887. The Sancha ice creams at Taj are still hand churned like olden style. Go for their signature sitaphal flavour or the alphonso mango ice cream which has real mango pieces in it. We also bought the anjeer flavour home, which the owner very kindly packed for us in a dry ice box, so it wouldn’t melt on the way back.

So which place is better – Minara Masjid or Bohri Mohalla?

The food is far better at Minara Masjid in terms of variety, but if you’d like to sit down and eat peacefully without customers standing over your head, go to Bohri Mohalla which is the quieter brother among the two.

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If you liked this post on best street food in Bohri Mohalla, also read: Part 1: Minara Masjid food trail, Mohammad Ali Road

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My other posts on offbeat experiences in Mumbai 

Top 5 things to do in Navi Mumbai

In search of the Nagla Bunder fort and an unexpected discovery

The last bungalow of Seven Bungalows survives

Bassein fort in Vasai is seeped in history
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