The Restaurant
Souk occupies the twenty-first floor of the Taj Mahal Palace Tower at Apollo Bunder — the South Mumbai harbourfront address that has anchored the city's hotel-dining map since the property opened in 1903 — and has held its seat as the city's reference Mediterranean rooftop since the tower wing's renovation. The dining room runs floor-to-ceiling glass plate windows on two sides facing the Gateway of India and the Arabian Sea, Turkish lanterns cast latticed shadows across the wood-panelled walls, and a small Casablanca private corner with a single table for two and its own butler service holds the room's most-requested seat. The format reads as a hotel signature room rather than a corporate concession — the staff has the kind of long-haul tenure (career captains, multilingual sommeliers, line cooks who trained under chef Simoun Chakour for years) that the South Asian hotel-dining map increasingly rarely shows.
The kitchen, run by Syrian-born executive chef Simoun Chakour, serves a refined Eastern-Mediterranean menu drawn from Morocco, Lebanon, Syria, Greece, Turkey and Egypt. Signature plates include the hot and cold mezze platters (warm hummus with toasted pine nuts, smoked baba ghanoush, muhammara with pomegranate molasses, kibbeh nayyeh with bulgur and lamb tartare); the slow-cooked Moroccan lamb tagine with preserved lemons and harissa-roasted vegetables; the chargrilled Mediterranean sea bass with za'atar and lemon-tahini; the saffron-rice mansaf with yoghurt and crisp pine nuts; and a Sunday champagne brunch buffet with shawarma, falafel, and a live mezze station that draws South Mumbai's Sunday-brunch regulars. The dessert programme — knafeh with rose syrup, baklava with pistachio honey, and a Turkish-coffee mousse — has held its place since the room opened.
Service is at the upper tier of South Mumbai fine dining: career captains, table-side preparations for the lamb tagine and the dessert programme, and a sommelier who walks the room every evening with a list that runs to about two hundred and forty labels with deliberate Lebanese, Israeli, French Rhône and Australian depth. The Casablanca private corner at golden hour, with the Gateway of India lit below and the Arabian Sea darkening into the lights of the harbour ferries, is one of Asia's most quietly photographed dining rooms. For a Mumbai evening that wants a real Mediterranean format with the city's most photographed harbour view, Souk is the answer the Taj has held for nearly two decades.
Why This Is Mumbai’s Impress Clients Pick
Souk is the Mumbai impress-clients room because the geography does the credential the menu cannot. The twenty-first-floor view of the Gateway of India and the Arabian Sea is a working signal — it tells a visiting client that the host understood the city's geography matters as much as the cuisine. The Mediterranean format gives a working alternative to the hotel-Indian default that visitors expect, which reads as a deliberate, considered choice rather than the safe one. The Taj Mahal Palace's 1903 history reads as continuity that the modern South Asian hospitality-group map cannot manufacture — the property has not changed hands, the dining-room format has been refined rather than re-engineered. The Casablanca private corner solves the problem of a sensitive conversation in a crowded room. And the post-dinner walk down through the Taj's historic Sea Lounge lobby to the Apollo Bunder waterfront is the closing image that converts a transactional evening into a memorable one. For a Mumbai client dinner that needs to register as the city's serious rooftop signature, Souk is the address.
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