A few vestiges remain of what was once the utopian getaway that was Goa. Conversations held by twilight on your neighbour’s porch (that still are commonplace in some villages), the local baker cycling to your door despite the weather suggesting that he should rethink his course and, of course, a common draw to both tourists as well as locals, the little pockets that mark the Latin Quarters of the state. In one such locale, just beyond the reach of the chaotic life that the city brims with, flanked by cottages and larger structures in various hues, lies an establishment with much culinary promise. There is an age-old Konkani adage, which states, ‘te poder gele, te unde gele’. Popular with those familiar with Goa’s colonial era, the vernacular expression aims at humanising a statement that implies, ‘those bakers are gone, taking with them the bread that they made’. However, in an attempt to be the last bastion of bygone bakery classics, one ‘landmark’ in Panjim, popular purely with those who know of the little alleyway that leads to it, is Confeitaria 31 de Janeiro.