Other restaurants in Jakarta
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A
VOC Galangan
Occupying the premises of a beautifully restored warehouse that dates back to 1628, this is a fabulously atmospheric cafe – enjoy a drink or meal inside the beamed interior or on the terrace, which overlooks a grassy courtyard where there’s a vintage car and horse-buggy carriage. Manager Derek Courbois runs a tight ship, and prices are very reasonable for dishes like gado gado (13,500Rp) given the setting.
reviewed
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B
Vietopia
Authentic Vietnamese food, including steaming pho noodle broth, and plenty of delicious chicken, beef and seafood mains – green papaya with shrimp is gorgeous. All dishes are moderately priced and delicately spiced and the surroundings are very attractive, with Zen-influenced minimalist decor and bamboo plants.
reviewed
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Samarra
Samarra has an intimate opium-den atmosphere, with secluded tables, subtle lighting, oriental antiques and a great outdoor terrace (with DJs spinning lounge and house music on weekends). The food here encompasses flavours from the Middle East, Indonesian classics and some of the most creative salads in town.
reviewed
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Shanghai Blue 1920
A five-minute walk from the northern end of Jaksa, and located downstairs in a historic building, Shanghai Blue serves masakan peranakan (Chinese and traditional Indonesian cuisine) in a large room dripping with furniture and artefacts rescued from an old Batavia tea house.
reviewed
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Kemang Food Festival
This is one of the best food courts here. It has 50 or so stalls rustling up roti canai (Indian-style flaky flat bread), Japanese noodles, and Iranian, Arabic and Indonesian food. On weekend nights there’s a real buzz here and the place is crammed.
reviewed
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Casa
Stylish, modern cafe-restaurant with large plate-glass windows overlooking the happening Kemang strip. There’s always a buzz about this place, with quality lounge music and a straight-forward menu of pizza, grilled meats, pasta and salads.
reviewed
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Blueberry Pancake House
Below the Cipta hotel, this smart little restaurant is good for Indonesian food, pasta and snacks at moderate prices and offers a welcome air-conditioned retreat from Jaksa’s steamy streets. The pancakes are only so-so, though.
reviewed
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C
Santong Kuo Tieh 68
For fried or steamed Chinese pork dumplings, look no further than this humble but highly popular little place; you’ll see cooks preparing them out front. The bakso ikan isi (fish balls) are also good.
reviewed
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D
KL Village
Deservedly popular new Malaysian place with pavement tables under a covered terrace. Offers great curries (try the kambing masala), Western food, terrific juices and fruit shakes (but no beer).
reviewed
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Kemang Food Square
The small Kemang Food Square has stalls.
reviewed
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