For over a century, the rhythmic clatter of the Grant Road railway station was harmonized by the early morning bustle at B Merwan & Co. Since its establishment in 1914, this sentinel of Mumbai’s Irani culture has served as a sanctuary for commuters, students, and connoisseurs alike. However, the air around Grant Road East feels decidedly heavier this week as a simple, heartbreaking sign now hangs upon its historic wooden doors: “We are closed.” With those three words, one of the city’s most cherished culinary legacies has drawn its curtains, leaving a void in the local heritage that no modern patisserie can hope to fill.
Known globally for its legendary mawa cakes—which were famously sold out before most of the city had even fully stirred—B Merwan was more than just a bakery; it was a living time capsule. Its weathered marble-topped tables and bentwood chairs bore silent witness to over a hundred years of stories shared over steaming cups of Irani chai and plates of perfectly softened bun maska. To step inside was to escape the frenetic pace of 21st-century Mumbai and retreat into a world defined by Zoroastrian hospitality and old-school charm. The closure marks a poignant milestone in the city’s evolution, highlighting the precarious state of the few remaining Irani cafes that once defined the social fabric of Bombay.
While the cafe had flirted with closure once before in 2014, only to be saved by an overwhelming outpouring of public affection, this finality feels different. The loss of B Merwan is not merely about the disappearance of a breakfast institution; it is the fading of a specific Mumbai “mood” that valued tradition over trend. As the shutters remain down, the sweet, buttery aroma of freshly baked mawa will linger only in the collective memory of a city that is rapidly losing its vintage soul.
