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Restaurants in Fes

Fassi cooking is a foodie delight. Traditional tagine and couscous dishes mix sweet and savoury flavours with moreish results, and Fès is lauded by Moroccans for being home to the country’s best cuisine. The medina has a wide range of restaurants for every budget and mostly dishes up Moroccan fare, while the Ville Nouvelle is the place to head to for European-style cooking.

The restaurants below have been grouped into three different pricing categories:
Expensive (over 400 dirhams)
Moderate (200 to 400 dirhams)
Cheap (under 200 dirhams)
The prices quoted are for a three-course meal (or equivalent with shared meze, main course and dessert) without drinks.


 

Expensive

La Maison Bleue

Cuisine: Moroccan

Relax like a pasha on brocaded divans in a candlelit salon, while musicians strum traditional oud music in the background and waiters in pantaloons and babouches (Moroccan slippers) serve up subtly spiced traditional feasts. Succulent lamb tagines and sweet-savoury pastille (pigeon pie) are two of the highlights here. Alcohol is served.

Address: Batha, Medina, 2 Ahmed Mekouar Square, Fès, 30110
Telephone: +212 535 741 843

NUR Restaurant

Cuisine: Middle Eastern

Designed as a contemporary tribute to Morocco’s rich and diverse history, this restaurant delivers pure artistry in cuisine and décor. Chef Najat and her team improvise the menu every night based on the best available produce, and serve each diner about eight courses. Alcohol is available and reservations are a must.

Address: Fès el-Bali, 7 Derb Zkak Rouah, Fès, 30110
Telephone: +212 694 277 849
Website: http://www.nur.ma

Restaurant MB

Cuisine: French

The classic French and Italian cooking found here attracts plenty of well-to-do locals as well as tourists, who come to dine on juicy steaks, pasta and seafood. The ultra-modern interior seems a world away from the medina hustle and the service is top-notch. Alcohol is served.

Address: Ville Nouvelle, 12 Rue Ahmed Chaouki, Fès,
Telephone: +212 535 622 727
Website: http://www.mbrestaurantlounge.com

Moderate

Fez Café

Cuisine: International

You can’t beat the ambience of dining in the garden of a pasha’s one-time palace. The menu offers both Moroccan and European dishes, so there’s something for the fussiest of eaters, while the shady green surroundings are a reviving setting after a day in the souks. Alcohol is served.

Address: Fès el-Bali, 13 Rue Akbat Sbaa, Fès, 30000
Telephone: +212 535 635 031
Website: http://www.jardindesbiehn.com

L’Italien

Cuisine: Italian

If you’ve had your fill of couscous, brochettes and tagines, head here for a little pizza and pasta. The pasta is made in-house and the pizzas are straight from the wood-fired oven. Alcohol is served and there’s a good range of wines.

Address: Ville Nouvelle, Avenue Omar Ibn Khattab, Fès,
Telephone: +212 535 943 384

The Ruined Garden

Cuisine: Moroccan

This has to be one of the most tranquil dining spots in the medina. Tables here are surrounded by blooming flowers, lush banana-leaf plants and columns, while the menu takes Moroccan dishes and gives them a modernised twist for a flavourful treat. A particularly good choice for vegetarians. Alcohol served.

Address: Fès el-Bali, 15 Derb Idrissy Sidi Ahmed Chaoui Medina, Fès, 30110
Telephone: +212 649 191 410
Website: http://www.ruinedgarden.com

Cheap

Café Clock

Cuisine: International

When you’re tired of tagines, head to this buzzing spot where camel burgers, quiche, sandwiches, and inventive salads sit on the menu alongside more traditional Moroccan dishes. The prime seats are on the top floor terrace, with close-up views of the Medersa Bou Inania. No alcohol.

Address: Fès el-Bali, 7 Derb el-Magana, off Talaa Kbira, Fès,
Telephone: +212 535 637 855
Website: http://fez.cafeclock.com

Chez Hakim

Cuisine: Moroccan

For a true Moroccan experience, stop by this friendly and relaxed family-run restaurant, which offers simple and traditional Moroccan cuisine at affordable prices. Try the skewers or the couscous, and sit out on the terrace overlooking the marketplace to take in the bustling city atmosphere.

Address: , 12 El Batha, Rue de la Poste, Fès,
Telephone: +212 535 740 816

Medina Café Restaurant

Cuisine: Moroccan

There’s a comforting, cosy vibe at this little restaurant squirrelled off a side alley just outside Bab Boujeloud. The menu dishes up tagines with proper home cooked flavours, making it a cut above the budget restaurants just inside the medina gate. Set menus start at 90 dirhams. No alcohol.

Address: Fès el-Bali, 6 Derb Mernissi, Fès,
Telephone: +212 661 350 839
A digital image at https://illuminoto.com

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Riad Salam Fes

This gorgeously restored riad in the center of the medina offers luxury and charm at a fair price. Rooms are individualised and elegantly decorated, and the food is a must-try. Head up to the rooftop patio for a beautiful view.

Riad Fès

This sumptuous property offers rooms and suites with traditional furnishings, zellig floors, plaster-decorated walls, and exquisite Moroccan fabrics. There is an amazing rooftop bar, plunge pool, restaurant and spa plus fabulous views of the medina and Atlas Mountains. This is a fantastic place to envelop yourself in old world opulence.

Riad Tizwa

This inviting and cosy riad offers homely touches such as coffee delivered to your door each morning and breakfast served at any time of the day. There’s a large roof terrace to slouch out on after exploring the dusty souks and the staff go out of their way to help.

Dar Seffarine

Behind high walls and a discrete doorway in the oldest part of the medina is Dar Seffarine, a beautifully renovated 750-year-old riad that has been restored to its former glory. Guests here are treated like long-lost friends by the sociable owners, who host evening drinks and organise nightly dinners.

Dar Attajalli

This charming old medina riad has bags of traditional appeal, with painted-wood ceilings, original zellig tilework and antiques, and Berber textiles scattered throughout. There are just four rooms here so expect fabulously personal service from staff. The dinners, made from seasonal local produce, are not to be missed.

Riad Maison Bleue

This elegantly restored, traditional 19th century medina mansion allows you to sleep amid opulence fit for a pasha. The rooms are scattered across four interconnecting courtyards and boast four-poster beds, antiques, and mashrabiyya (lattice-screens) details, as well as painted cedar-wood features and zellig tiling in abundance: a vision of palatial luxury.