The Vibe
The moment you walk into Bunman, you feel the 50-year weight of the place. Marble-top tables slightly uneven from years of use, wooden chairs that creak just right, a menu board in both English and Urdu. Ceiling fans work harder than the AC. The light is warm. People read newspapers here. Nobody is on a laptop. It's the most peaceful 45 minutes you'll spend in Mulund.
🗺️ How to Reach
Take the Central Line to Mulund Station. Exit from the west side. The café is about 5–7 minutes on foot — ask any local for 'Bunman Café' and they'll point you in the right direction.
From the Eastern Express Highway take the Mulund exit and head west. The café is near the main market area — Google Maps has the exact location. Side street parking available.
🍽️ What to Eat
The non-negotiable. A soft sweet bun split open, slathered with white butter (maska), served with a glass of strong milky Irani chai. The bread is baked fresh every morning. The chai has a sweetness that isn't cloying — the kind you keep sipping even after the bun is finished.
Ask for it specifically — not always on the displayed menu. Minced mutton cooked with onions, tomatoes, and spices, served with fresh-baked pav. A more substantial option for a heavier breakfast.
Dense, slightly crumbly, faintly sweet — Irani café signature cake made with khoya (mawa). Best eaten warm, briefly dunked into the chai. A dying recipe in most of Mumbai. Here it's still made the right way.
📝 The Full Experience
Irani cafés are disappearing from Mumbai. There used to be hundreds — now perhaps a few dozen remain across the city. Bunman is one of the ones that hasn't changed, and that's exactly why it matters.
I went on a Wednesday morning at 9am. Half full — retired men with newspapers, two college students, a family who seemed like regulars. I ordered the bun maska and chai without looking at anything else.
The bun arrived warm. The maska was real butter — white, slightly salty, applied without restraint. The chai in a glass, not a cup. Strong, sweet, with a layer of cream on top.
I sat there for 45 minutes. No one rushed me. That alone is worth the trip.
💡 Pro Tips
- Go before 11am for the freshest bun — they bake in the morning
- Ask for 'cutting chai' if you want a smaller, stronger glass
- Mawa cake is best eaten warm — ask them to heat it
- Sit at a marble table by the window if one is free
- Take cash — old Irani cafés rarely have UPI or card terminals
⭐ What Others Are Saying
"My grandfather used to bring me here as a kid. 25 years later, nothing has changed. That's the best review I can give."
"The mawa cake here is the real deal. Came specifically for it after the reel and it didn't disappoint."
"If you've never had authentic Irani chai, come here. The bun maska combo is comfort food at its finest."
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