Mumbai’s 110-Year-Old Parsi Dairy Farm Loses Food Licence After FDA Hygiene Crackdown

Date

July 18, 2026

Post by

arZan

Category

News

The Maharashtra Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has suspended the food business licence of Parsi Dairy Farm Pvt Ltd, the 110-year-old Mumbai institution, after an inspection found serious hygiene and food safety violations at the outlet.

What the FDA found

Inspectors cited fungal growth and the presence of flies at the premises, along with other hygiene lapses, as grounds for suspending the FSSAI licence. News reports indicate the FDA also seized goods worth roughly ₹1.90 lakh from the shop during the raid. Parsi Dairy Farm has halted operations following the action.

Part of a wider drive

The move against Parsi Dairy Farm was one part of a broader, statewide FDA crackdown on food adulteration and hygiene violations across Mumbai and Palghar, led by FDA commissioner Tukaram Mundhe. Inspection teams targeted dairy establishments, hotels, restaurants, and sweet manufacturers as part of the drive. Other well-known names caught up in the same operation include Shalimar and K Rustoms.

A 110-year run, told through Parsi Khabar's own coverage

Parsi Khabar has followed Parsi Dairy Farm's story for over a decade, and that archive gives useful context for how the brand got here.

The dairy was founded in 1916 by an 18-year-old Nariman Ardeshir, who began with a single can of milk sold on Princess Street in Marine Lines, then went on to pioneer home delivery of milk in pre-Independence Bombay. The business grew into a 300-acre production operation at Talasari on the Maharashtra-Gujarat border, and later diversified from milk into ghee, curd, paneer, kulfi, mithai and the brand's well-known Great Indian Toffee (Parsi Khabar, September 2025: "How Mumbai-based Parsi Dairy Farm built a 109-year legacy of trust and purity").

The dairy has not always looked this secure. In 2015, Parsi Khabar reported that the Nariman family was considering selling its Talasari land and potentially the brand itself, as daily milk supply had fallen from 15,000 litres to around 2,000 litres following a 2006 labour strike ("Will Mumbai's 99-year-old iconic Parsi Dairy Farm shut shop?"). In 2018, a dispute among family partners over the same 300-acre Talasari land ended up in the Bombay High Court, with the family accusing one partner of fraud over a forged power of attorney ("Parsi Dairy Farm owners accuse partner of fraud").

The brand rebounded since: in 2023, the fourth generation of the family — siblings Sarfaraz K Irani and Bakhtyar K Irani, and cousins Zeenia K Patel and Parvana S Mistry — revamped the flagship Marine Lines store into a more Instagram-friendly space while keeping recipes and ingredients unchanged ("South Mumbai's iconic 107-year-old Parsi Dairy Farm dons a new avatar"). By 2025, the company had grown to three physical stores in Mumbai, a network of dark stores across the state and beyond, tie-ups with quick-commerce and hotel chains, and reported revenue of ₹38 crore in FY2023-24, up from ₹27 crore the year before. That same 2025 profile noted that Parsi Dairy's paneer sales had actually spiked during a nationwide paneer-adulteration scandal, on the strength of its reputation for purity (Parsi Khabar, September 2025, linked above).

That reputation is precisely what makes this week's FDA action notable: a brand whose entire identity has rested on "unchanging purity" across four generations is now the one facing a hygiene-linked licence suspension.

Reaction

The news drew a strong reaction online, with many social media users expressing shock that a brand as established as Parsi Dairy Farm had been flagged for hygiene violations.

The FDA action remains a licence suspension pending compliance; it is not a permanent closure order. Parsi Khabar will update this story as more details, including any response from Parsi Dairy Farm's management, become available.