My earliest memories of visiting Goa as a child include running out of the water, screaming, because I felt something brush against my leg. A short-lived fear of the sea was born. Susegad remained elusive.
So you’d understand why I’d be reluctant to admit my first hour back in the coastal state, after a decade, was not spent making amends — it was spent sleeping. One moment, I was sending my rain-soaked friends back in Mumbai pictures of the sunny Goan airport. An hour-long car ride (roughly equivalent to one very long nap) to Saligao later, I awoke to the sight of Brij Paraiso’s sun-speckled entrance. The boutique property’s arched gateway, painted white with delicate florals, dazzles in the daylight. There’s an immediate lull in the air: no traffic, no crowds, no BMC contractors drilling away to glory. Only gentle birdsong remains.
The 25-year-old Portuguese villa, complete with sprawling courtyards and laterite stone walls, has been collaboratively restored by Aditya Gupta and Brij Hotels. Encompassing only nine rooms, it positions itself as the ideal escape: a stone’s throw away from the beach and the buzz, and yet tucked away from the chaos in a quiet corner of Saligao. For those easily overstimulated by crowds, Brij Paraiso offers a picturesque middle ground. And I, armed with both a book and an itinerary, planned to make full use of it.
A yay-cation ensues!
The Goans and I — apart from a shared love for afternoon siestas — are also partial to tongue-numbing spice in our food. Luckily, both the menu and the four-poster bed in my room were aligned in my favour. Upon Chef Shivam Verma, the Senior Chef de Partie’s earnest suggestions, my lunch upon arrival featured fiery Prawns Balchao, paired with buttery Poee, a traditional multigrain Goan bread with a hollow centre. He suggested washing the spice down with traditional Goan red rice and creamy fish curry. I nervously countered this generous feast with one question — wouldn’t it be too much for just one person? He insisted it would be just enough. But I’m willing to forgive this overestimation of my appetite, because I still daydream about this rare moment of (over)indulgence quite fondly.








