Showing 1-5 of 5 results
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Assaf
This welcoming and cosy place specialises in meze and other tasty titbits; the set dinners are a mixture of six to eight different items. There are good-value set lunches (around HK$80 ) and dinners (vegetarian/meat around HK$160 / HK$180 ) as well. The Assaf brothers also own the Beyrouth Cafe Central (2854 1872; 39 Lyndhurst Tce), a simple place that does takeaway sandwiches, kebabs and so on for nix.
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Bahçe
'The Garden' might be a somewhat ambitious name for this small eatery but it has all our Turkish favourites, including sigara böregi (filo parcels filled with cheese) and yaprak dolmasi (stuffed vine leaves) as well as kebabs and felafel.
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Habibi
Whether or not Habibi serves strictly authentic Egyptian food is a moot point - the halal food is very good and the setting is the Cairo of the 1930s - all mirrors, tassels, velvet cushions, ceiling fans and hookahs. Habibi's casual and takeaway section, Habibi Café (2544 3886, -midnight) in Shop A next door is a lot cheaper, with meze from around HK$25 to HK$58 , meze platters around HK$85 and a very affordable set lunch during the week.
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La Kasbah
La Kasbah is a Frenchified Maghreb caravanserai serving dishes from Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco, which effectively means meze and tajine or couscous. It's good stuff but expensive for what it is. The bar, Medina, is open til .
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Shalom Grill
If it's Ashkenazic and Sephardic glatt kosher food you're after, the Shalom Grill can oblige. Don't expect cordon bleu, but if you're in the mood for felafel or gefilte fish (or you answer to a Higher Authority on matters culinary), this is the place to visit. Shabbat dinner and Saturday lunch can be prearranged and paid for in advance. For something lighter, sandwiches are around HK$45 to HK$55 .
Showing 1-5 of 5 results






