Restaurants in Balochistan
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A
Usmania Tandoori Restaurant
One of Quetta's plusher restaurants (with a hard-to-miss orange sign), Usmania has a wide selection of tasty dishes at reasonable prices. We particularly liked the mutton tandoori (Rs 375), a serving big enough for two with bread, salad and raita, washed down with green Pashtun tea. Service is good, and there's a handful of Chinese and Continental dishes if you need a break from local tastes.
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B
Lehri Sajji House
Prime among the group of sajji restaurants clustered in this area, this place could hardly be more basic, with plastic tables and chairs spilling out onto the road. But the sajji is fantastic - great hunks of lamb spit roasted, with crackly skin and sticky fat. It's better if there's more than one of you dining as you get a leg of lamb to yourself; there's also whole chicken cooked in the same delicious way. It's just off Jinnah Rd.
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C
Ziarat Coffee Shop
More than just a coffee shop, this is a proper restaurant and a good place for a splurge. Come for high tea (16:00 to 18:00) and an array of sandwiches, salads, cakes and pastries. If you visit after that the menu turns Italian, with everything on offer from lasagne to tiramisu. Expect to pay around Rs500 for the whole meal.
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D
Café Baldia
One of Quetta's oldest eateries, the Baldia attracts an interesting crowd who congregate here to chat, read the newspaper or just chill out. It's an atmospheric spot to sit back with a cup of tea or light bite (sandwiches from Rs20) and simply engage in people-watching.
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E
Dolphin
Quetta has plenty of bakeries but this is our favourite, with its mind-boggling array of crunchy cookies, sticky sweets and gooey cakes. Just browsing is enough to give you toothache, but there are a few savoury sandwiches and pizzas that make good snacking.
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F
Baig Snack Bar
A solid fast-food option where burgers and sandwiches won't set you back more than about Rs 40. There are big bowls of sticky ice cream, rose-water faluda (sweet vermicelli) and fruit juices for afters.
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G
Café China
A good place for Chinese food, where portions are generous. There are steaming bowls of noodle soup Rs50 and plates piled high with everything from beef chop suey Rs170 to a broad selection of vegetarian dishes.
reviewed
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H
Xuelian
Pakistani versions of Chinese food often don't run to much more than sweet and sour and chow mein, but the Serena's more formal restaurant offers a much broader spectrum, in appropriately swanky surroundings.
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I
Sheraz Bar.B.Q
A busy eatery if you just need to fill up and go. Sheraz is great for traditional Pakistani cuisine, with a decent selection on offer from tikka chicken and garlic naan to huge plates of biryani.
reviewed
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J
Broast
Away from the downtown action, the Broast is a fast-food joint that whips up beef burgers with cheese Rs35, full roast chickens Rs200, mango shakes Rs25 and more.
reviewed
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