3 Best Restaurants in Neveh Tzedek, Tel Aviv

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Elegant wine bars and contemporary dining rooms are what you will find in historic Neve Tzedek. As the home of the Suzanne Dellal Centre for Dance and Theatre, this neighborhood is the ideal place for a pre- or postperformance meal.

Dallal

$$$$

Inside a beautifully restored historic building, this bistro has a rarefied atmosphere and an on-the-premises bakery that turns out a luscious array of French-style pastries. The breakfast menu highlights some of the baked delights, including smoked-salmon croissants and the indulgent French toast sandwich with fruit, ricotta cheese, and maple syrup. An enclosed patio, with its wrought-iron tables and chairs, is a lovely place to enjoy a late-afternoon coffee among a mixed crowd of businesspeople, surfers, and families. The executive lunch is a good value while the dinner menu offers more extensive (and significantly higher-priced) fish and meat options.

Popina

$$$$

Few restaurants have made a splash on the Tel Aviv dining scene as big as Popina, Chef Orel Kimchi's trendy Neve Tzedek eatery. The menu is divided into cooking techniques—cured, steamed, baked, roasted, and slow-cooked—and uses innovative flavor combinations, like pumpkin jam ravioli with amaretto, foie gras, roasted almonds, and truffle foam; a shrimp burger with yuzu aioli; or raw fish tartare with gin and tonic jelly. Snag a table on the romantic outdoor patio, or take a seat indoors near the open kitchen and watch the master at work. The "Popina Experience" tasting menu is exceptional, if your budget stretches that far. Some find Popina pretentious, while others will tell you it's the best restaurant in Tel Aviv.

3 Ahad Ha'Am St., 6514437, Israel
03-575–7477
Known For
  • Creative cuisine from a top chef
  • Exceptional tasting menu
  • Open kitchen
Restaurant Details
No lunch except Sat.

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Suzana

$$

In a century-old building near the Suzanne Dellal Centre for Dance and Theatre, this popular eatery bustles day and night. Sample the Kurdish kubbeh (meat-filled semolina dumplings) and pumpkin soup, the okra in tomato sauce, the red peppers stuffed with meat and rice, or the Moroccan harira, a thick soup with chickpeas, veal, and coriander. To start things off, the savory antipasti platter is a welcome sight for the hungry traveler. Opt for a table on the charming terrace beneath the massive branches of an old ficus tree.

9 Shabazi St., 65144, Israel
03-517–7580
Known For
  • Unbeatable setting on a charming patio
  • Middle Eastern--Israeli menu
  • Convenient to Suzanne Dellal Center

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