92 Best Restaurants in Cape Town, South Africa

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Cape Town is the culinary capital of South Africa and quite possibly the continent. It certainly has the best restaurants in southern Africa. Nowhere else in the country is the populace so discerning about food, and nowhere else is there such a wide selection of high-quality restaurants. Western culinary history here dates back to the 17th century—Cape Town was founded specifically to grow food—and that heritage is reflected in the city's cuisine and the fact that a number of restaurants operate in historic town houses and 18th-century wine estates.

Cape Town dining today offers a global culinary experience, with Cape chefs showing the same enthusiasm for international food trends as their counterparts worldwide. French and Italian fare has long been available, but with Thai, Japanese, and Pan-Asian influences flooding in, accents of lemongrass, miso, and yuzu have become de rigueur in fine-dining kitchens. Middle Eastern cuisine is finally making some headway, and the Americas have also come to the fore, with plenty of burgers and ribs, and even chicken and waffles popping up on menus these days, not to mention a few South American and passable Mexican eateries. Ubiquitous pan-Asian fare is probably not as good as what you might be used to in major American cities; sushi is also easily found, though largely limited to tuna and salmon, and often prepared with lots of drizzled mayo and sauces. The locavore trend toward organic produce and healthful dishes is also gaining popularity, though attitudes toward vegetarianism in this meat-happy land remain somewhat backward.

Salsify at the Roundhouse

$$$$ | Camps Bay Fodor's Choice

Away from the Camps Bay "strip" and higher up on the mountains in the historical Roundhouse building, high-profile chef Ryan Cole has created one of the country's finest restaurants. The seasonal 10-course menus are immaculately crafted, taking diners on astonishing flavor-focused journeys that could include a coal-smoked oyster starter or Wagyu sirloin; wine pairings (for an additional fee) are available, as is a reduced five-course menu for lunch. The "Roundhouse" was once a hunting lodge, and its crazy history (involving an illicit affair between Lord Somerset and a woman who disguised herself as a man so she could work as a doctor) is told in graffiti on the walls of one of the little rooms, which is where a few unusual pre-meal canapes and an uplifting cocktail is served. That's after a friendly hand-washing ceremony in the entrance and before you're led to your table—when you book, ask to be seated in the "Sea Room" with its gorgeous view of Camps Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. 

Round House Rd., Cape Town, 8005, South Africa
021-010–6444
Known For
  • Hyper-seasonal tasting menus
  • World-class service and an exquisite wine program
  • Immaculate views from a historic venue with edgy touches
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.
Reservations essential

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Bao Down

$$ | Green Point Fodor's Choice

Having made their name selling delicious bao buns at Woodstock's Old Biscuit Mill, the team behind this innovative operation continues to astonish with their beautiful Asian flavors—whether it's the sauce and textures in the pork belly bao, the miso sesame and black garlicky goodness of the charred broccoli, or their addictively good gochujang sweet potato bao, there's just never a wrong note. They have a great, compact wine selection and some off-the-beaten-track beers to wash it all down. It's recommended that you order two dishes per person, or several to share. Lunch is served on Saturdays only.

79 Main Rd., Cape Town, 8005, South Africa
066-022--1165
Known For
  • Tiny selection of awesome desserts
  • Food that gets the balance between flavor and texture just right
  • The pretty pastel interior is a joy to step into, and there is a partially enclosed terrace for a bit of a view—there'll be a vibe everywhere
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.–Fri.

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Belly of the Beast

$$$$ | Zonnebloem Fodor's Choice

Intimate, edgy, and slightly experimental, there's no telling what ingredients might have given rise to the day's dishes—the tasting menu is designed around choice cuts of sustainable meat (although vegetables and fish are served if meat’s not your thing). They don’t tell you what’s going to be served, the idea being to trust in the talent in the kitchen and in what owner-chefs Anouchka Horn and Neil Swart decide to make with what they’ve got. Whether they do something special with West Coast mussels or put some extraordinary cut of gemsbok on your plate, though, you can be sure it will please your palate and stretch your imagination at the same time. For their multi-course menus, they charge R750 for lunch and R1,050 for dinner, and you must book in advance.

110 Harrington St., Cape Town, South Africa
076-220–5458
Known For
  • Boundary-pushing experimental dishes
  • Local-ingredient focus and sustainability
  • A favorite among in-the-know Capetonians
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Mon.
Reservations essential

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Recommended Fodor's Video

The Black Sheep

$$$ | Gardens Fodor's Choice

An utterly unpretentious yet elegant restaurant with a select seasonal menu posted on a chalkboard, Black Sheep features food inspired by all of the Cape’s culinary influences: indigenous, North African, Asian, Middle Eastern, and more. Ingredients are locally and ethically sourced, and the restaurant has a nose-to-tail food philosophy with a focus on ensuring that nothing's wasted. Expect dishes like seared marlin, crispy pork trotters, rabbit puff pastries, Vietnamese style chicken, and grilled kudu. Typically, what appears on the blackboard depends on what meat's available, what produce is at market, and what's in season and freshest. Come early or make a booking, as the restaurant gets full quickly in the evenings.

104 Kloof St., Cape Town, South Africa
021-426–2661
Known For
  • Ethically sourced local ingredients
  • Lively, busy vibe
  • Hearty fare that won't leave you hungry
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Mon.
Reservations essential

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Blondie

$ | Gardens Fodor's Choice

From late afternoon through midnight you can follow your ears to find the party at this hipsterish hangout, but come here for lunch, and you'll discover some of the most addictive Mediterranean- and Middle Eastern-inspired food in the city. The unusual menu items—wood-fired lettuce, beef and lamb baked into a pita, eggplant done on the coals and smothered with tahini and other goodies, and cured yellowtail on challah toast that you will dream about for weeks—are full of flavor and everything is scrumptious, simple, and served with a smile. And while there's a bar full of everything (at very reasonable prices, much like the food), you can order filtered water, still or sparkling, served from a specialized tap and free of charge. Just be warned that if you're not up for a slice of pandemonium, you'll want to make your exit before the late-afternoon partiers begin to descend, it will gradually begin to throb with young people out for a good time.

71 Kloof St., Cape Town, South Africa
072-169–8671
Known For
  • Turns into the biggest get-together on all of Kloof Street after 4 pm
  • Astonishing flavors in every dish like the fire potatoes served with crème fraîche for dipping
  • The co-owner and chef Maor Harris is also a DJ and legendary festival organizer
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Chefs Warehouse Beau Constantia

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Enjoy soaring views of the Constantia Winelands from this elegant space of carved wood and huge glass windows, where a fantastic chef's menu reminds you why long lunches were invented. A variety of dishes—all marked by freshness of ingredients and a globe-trotting host of inspiration—are served tapas-style, according to various menus which in turn are determined by what's available at market, what's in season, and what's inspired chef Ivor Jones's creativity in the kitchen. Expect items like coal-fired tuna with Namibian crab and a North African dressing or a pecorino risotto with goat cheese mousse. Everything sounds simple, but the tastes are expertly elevated, ensuring that this is perhaps the city's favorite destination for off-duty chefs.

Constantia Main Rd., Cape Town, South Africa
021-794–8632
Known For
  • Smooth service, wonderful views, and consistently beautiful food
  • Great, small wine list that includes very reasonable by-the-glass options from the host estate
  • For sweet tooths, there is a dessert tasting menu
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Clarke's Bar & Dining Room

$$ | Cape Town Central Fodor's Choice

A Bree Street institution beloved by the hip, the young, and the young at heart, Clarke's is known for many things, among them its burgers (with their famously butter-fried brioche buns), drinks (from smoothies and fresh juices to excellent cocktails and everything else you'd expect from a place with the word "bar" in its name), and delicious breakfasts (the huevos rancheros are yummy if not strictly authentic). As day turns to night, this light-and-bright restaurant (seating options range from a few tables on the sidewalk to a designer-diner interior, to a small plant-filled courtyard) morphs from a child-friendly brunch spot to a casual coffee and burger joint, to a vibey nighttime bar, where DJs and parties are not unusual. Service is friendly and fast.

133 Bree St., Cape Town, 8001, South Africa
087-470–0165
Known For
  • Burgers and other American-style comfort food
  • Good breakfasts and brunches, and used by many to clear out a hangover
  • Fun and sometimes raucous drinks spot
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.
Worth booking as it's incredibly popular

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Coy

$$$$ | V&A Waterfront Fodor's Choice

Inspired, clever, and—above all—delicious, the food at this excellent Ryan Cole–helmed restaurant is intent on redefining South Africa's high-end dining scene. To achieve this, Cole (whose other venture, Salsify, is also a must-try) asked head chefs Teenola Govender and Geoffrey Abrahams to create a menu inspired by personal food memories and their respective cultural backgrounds using the best seasonal ingredients. The result is set menus, with options for vegetarians and pescatarians, that are a concise, flavor-focused acknowledgement of Africa as its own gastronomic entity. There's a beautiful vegetarian dish of samp (dried corn kernels) and chakalaka (chopped veggies, tomatoes, and beans) that's quintessentially South African or maybe ox tongue with ras el hanout (a Moroccan spice blend) and beef tallow, or an incredible tuna tartare cold starter made with sugarcane and caramelized pineapple that beautifully evokes summertime on the beachfront in Durban (where Teenola grew up). Most of the dishes will be unlike anything you've ever had and will probably never have the opportunity to try again; mouthful after mouthful, you'll likely feel as though the world has shifted off its axis slightly, altering your understanding of what food can be.

Dock Rd., Cape Town, South Africa
021-207–3278
Known For
  • Groundbreaking new take on South African and African cuisine
  • Set menus that change seasonally
  • Incredible mountain, city, and harbor views
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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The Electric

$ | Zonnebloem Fodor's Choice

Although it's on Canterbury Street, this community-building café is also accessible from Harrington via the "Electric Avenue" alleyway. Occupying a former mechanic shop, expect good, wholesome food, fresh juices, music events and social happenings, and an effort to help feed the local homeless and hungry. If you're looking for a spot to linger, fill up on nutritious drinks and bites, and maybe start a conversation with a stranger—this is a good place to make that happen. At the same time, there's plenty of choice in terms of salads, sandwiches, burgers, hot dogs, flatbreads, and an extensive choice of beverages, both healthy and boozy.

48 Canterbury St., Cape Town, South Africa
021-461–0916
Known For
  • Great pick-me-up drinks to boost mood, health, and spirits
  • Popular with students, health nuts, film crews, and anyone looking for a bit of respite
  • Socially and environmentally conscious
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No dinner

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ëlgr

$$$$ | Gardens Fodor's Choice

Arguably the best dining establishment on all of Kloof Street, this always delicious, always fun restaurant is helmed by Swedish-born, South Africa–raised chef Jesper Nilsson, who does everything from gourmet pizzas to line fish with baba ganoush or lamb ribs with butter bean pilaki. His menus are a bit of a puzzle, listing the chief ingredients and making no attempt to name the dish nor describe how the ingredients will be combined. The puzzle is solved by Jesper and his chefs and the reward will be all yours: he manages to coax miraculous flavors onto every plate, and somehow achieves that "OMG" reaction every time.

75 Kloof St., Cape Town, South Africa
021-422–0384
Known For
  • Small-plates format, so you'll want to order several dishes to share or enjoy on your own
  • Dodgy acoustics in some areas, so ask for a quieter table if you want to engage in conversation
  • Service is slick, smooth, and tremendously friendly, much like the chef
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.–Fri.
Reservations recommended

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Foxcroft

$$$$ | Constantia Fodor's Choice

Serving a range of exquisitely prepared international fusion cuisine in a casually elegant industrial setting, this restaurant and bakery in the heart of leafy Constantia is a true gem. The various dishes, each one a little more mind-blowing than the last, might incorporate flavors from harissa to ponzu to smoked garlic and feature dishes like coal-roasted lamb with brinjal curry, cauliflower parfait with baharat (an Middle Eastern spice mix), or honey-glazed duck with gem squash, turnips, and chard. The various seasonal set menus include the main chef's menu, reduced menus, and lunchtime-only winter and spring menus.

Constantia Main Rd. at Groot Constantia Rd., Cape Town, South Africa
021-202–3304
Known For
  • Part of the lauded La Colombe group, its casual but elegant setting perfectly captures Capetonian style
  • Impeccable wine list
  • Out-of-season lunchtime menus afford the opportunity to try Glen Williams's exquisite food without breaking the bank or investing too much time

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Fyn

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Arrive at acclaimed chef Peter Tempelhoff’s exquisite glass-walled restaurant on the fifth floor of the Speakers’ Corner building when the sun's still shining, and you'll be treated to soaring views of Table Mountain and Lion’s Head. The real focus, though, is on the open kitchen, where you can also sit at the counter and watch or interact with the team as they prepare multicourse kaiseki menus that focus intently on giving fresh and often unexpectedly local ingredients a Japanese treatment while refraining from overcomplicating what’s on the plate. There are multiple courses (fewer at lunch, and cheaper at R1,375) in this profound showcase of culinary imagination and skill: think burnt mushroom custard in a Hokkaido milk bun, Cape wagyu temaki, seared chokka, tuna with tomato ponzu and kelp biltong, and a gorgeous xigugu ice-cream sandwich or amasi cheesecake.

37 Parliament St., Cape Town, 8001, South Africa
021-286–2733
Known For
  • Wonderfully knowledgeable service in a slick, gracious, eye-catching space
  • Impeccable wine pairings and cocktails
  • Smart attire requested for dinner
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and public holidays
Price is for the set dinner menu without wine.

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Galjoen

$$$$ | Zonnebloem Fodor's Choice

Across the road from the world’s first hemp high-rise building, chef Isca Stoltz heads up South Africa’s first upmarket restaurant dedicated to local, sustainable seafood. It's a strange reality that, in a city built around a harbor, local seafood is often elusive, which is why the core tenet here is refusing anything imported and using only ethical local suppliers and artisanal fishers. The result is a more adventurous approach to cooking, with diners getting introduced to seldom-heard-of fish—like katonkel and Cape bream—cooked over coals, served sashimi-style, or even poached in its own liquid. It's not fine dining so much as smart thinking about how best to create honest, authentic-tasting dishes, none of which you'll likely find anywhere else on Earth. The restaurant’s namesake galjoen, by the way, is South Africa's national fish, and though it's an endangered species (and thus never to be fished), the restaurant's name is intended to spark conversation about maritime conservation. Galjoen is also committed to minimizing food wastage by utilizing as much of the animal as possible.

99 Harrington St., Cape Town, South Africa
079-093–0559
Known For
  • Fixed-price tasting menus (no à la carte options available)
  • Hypervigilant about sustainable seafood and minimal wastage
  • Pushing the edges, especially with lesser-known fish
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Mon.–Wed.

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The Gardener's Cottage Restaurant

$ | Newlands Fodor's Choice

Hidden in the Montebello Design Center and Nursery is this quaint little cafe that has been serving locals for decades. Serving thoughtful breakfasts, light lunches, sandwiches, and a select number of delicious hot meals. There is an extensive cake, pastry, and deli counter with all kinds of homemade goods. On warmer days, a seat outdoors allows you to view the wonderful plants in the nursery next to it and there's a small play area for kids to enjoy. 

Gigi Rooftop

$$$$ | Cape Town Central Fodor's Choice

With its unrivaled atmosphere, whimsical decor, and personality-forward waitstaff, this wonderful farm-to-fork restaurant showcases the chef's respect for local ingredients and his interest in the provenance of what he cooks with. Menus respond to the seasons and feature wonderfully uncomplicated dishes you might call "classics with a twist," such as a twice-baked cheese soufflé that will knock your socks off, and a simply wonderful French onion soup. Whether it's springbok loin with smoked artichokes and zamli dates or fish en papilotte done in a shakshuka-style miso tomato sauce, you can rest easy knowing the chef knows precisely where each ingredient came from, and possibly how it was grown or raised. Apart from the wonderful food and spirited cocktails (there are many classics and a number of in-house signature concoctions), there's the sense of being somewhere quite special so you might want to linger. So set aside enough time to let it all sink in.

118 St. George's Mall, Cape Town, 8001, South Africa
021-612–0999
Known For
  • Slightly bohemian and definitely theatrical indoor rooftop setting
  • High regard for provenance of ingredients and ethical sourcing
  • French-pedigree cooking given a local twist
Restaurant Details
Reservations highly recommended

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The Happy Uncles

$$$$ | Salt River Fodor's Choice

What's been termed South Africa's "first fine-dining halal restaurant," The Happy Uncles offers a chance to try dishes full of intricate and expert spicing, some that you may never have heard of, through a choice of multi-course set menus. Part of a burgeoning reinvention of Cape Malay cooking by chef and co-owner Anwar Abdullatief, dishes are elevated, beautifully prepared, and impeccably plated. From a bread course that might include springbok bone marrow and chili and ginger chimichurri to braised Angus short rib with celeriac milk and charred cabbage with truffle and nutmeg, just about every dish is some sort of fiercely novel use of local and often unusual ingredients to showcase unstoppable gastronomic pizazz. It’s not only a novelty for your taste buds, but this restaurant is a bit of history in the making, living evidence that Cape Malay cooking, frequently pigeonholed or defined by a few specific dishes, is evolving and rolling with the times.

100 Voortrekker Rd., Cape Town, 7925, South Africa
079-929--5322
Known For
  • Halal fine-dining (no alcohol or pork)
  • In an area of urban renewal, the location is unexpected and an adventure in itself
  • Complex and clever food that is both tasty and presented with theatrical flare
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Fri.

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Kyoto Garden

$$$$ | Gardens Fodor's Choice

Elegant and tranquil, this small oasis at the busy Kloof Nek intersection serves pricey but beautifully executed Japanese fare that reaches far beyond sushi. Sourcing as much as possible from Japan, the owner verges on obsessive in his effort to maintain a high standard of both ingredients and technique, evidenced in the lightness of the tempura, the freshness and variety of seafood, and the deliciousness of dishes like salmon, seaweed, shiitake, and shimeji salad; miso clams; or warm scallops in their shell.

11 Kloof Nek Rd., Cape Town, 8001, South Africa
021-422–2001
Known For
  • Authentic and obsessively crafted Japanese food
  • Amazing Japanese whiskey and sake selections
  • Zen ambience makes for a superb space in which to indulge in super-pricey food
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch Tues.
Reservations highly recommended

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La Colombe

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Among South Africa's most lauded fine-dining establishments—it's been listed among the world's top 50 restaurants and named "Best Restaurant in Africa 2024"—chef James Gaag's sublime French-Asian-inspired tasting menus are served in a smart minimalist setting overlooking a pretty and bucolic patch of green in the Constantia wine region. Inspired by extensive global travels, incessant research, and an obsessive desire to improve, Gaag's menus change regularly. Having made the effort to secure a table here, you might as well go all in and have the full gourmand experience, as there is not a false note to be found. With plating so artful that you almost feel reluctant to break into some dishes, Gaag's genius does not come at the expense of taste, but instead creates breathtaking moments that become burnt into your memory.

off Hout Bay Main Rd., near Constantia Nek, Cape Town, 7806, South Africa
021-794–2390
Known For
  • An intimate, cool, and beautifully minimalist space
  • Theatrical moments (like tuna served in a tin) that enhance the meal
  • Gorgeous wine pairings and delightful service
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Marble

$$$$ | V&A Waterfront Fodor's Choice

In a dizzying rooftop venue that was purpose-built (on top of one of the Waterfront's 100-year-old buildings) for this outpost of chef David Higgs' most iconic Johannesburg restaurant, this glamorous spot opened at the end of 2024. With "meat, salt, and fire" its watchwords, the focus is on food cooked over an open flame, inspired by a kind of upmarket rendition of what South Africans call braai and Americans refer to as barbecue, and undertaken in kitchens decked out in the world's most state-of-the-art grilling equipment. Steaks of the highest caliber are only the beginning—the entire menu, from wood-fired linefish with burnt leeks and seaweed butter to mushroom paella made with rice from the wood-burning oven, is a charred, smokey, coal-tinged thing of beauty. Plus there's a scene-stealing bar (for which walk-ins are possible) and a wraparound balcony where it's possible to feel elevated in ways both literal and metaphoric.

19 Dock Rd., Cape Town, South Africa
021-002–8484
Known For
  • Food, especially high-quality steaks, cooked over an open fire
  • Dazzling views and dashing design
  • Chef David Higgs, who is considered one of South Africa's best
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Maria's Greek Cafe

$$ | Gardens Fodor's Choice

Located on vibey Dunkley Square, this lovely restaurant is one of Cape Town's oldest dining establishments, initially started to provide traditional dishes to Greek immigrants. Its owners, one of whom dined here as a boy, continue that tradition, serving all kinds of mezzes which can be ordered as a platter, as well as traditional dishes like moussaka, calamari, lamb chops, pitas, souvlaki, and even burgers, plus new recipes and ideas to keep things interesting.

31 Barnet St., Cape Town, South Africa
021-461–3333
Known For
  • Lovely dining spaces: taverna-style inside, beautiful outdoor dining on the cobblestone square
  • Mezze platters and sharing plates, plus innovative smoothies, juices, and health drinks
  • Beautiful breakfasts, including wonderful shakshuka, and plenty more vegetarian options for any time of day
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Nikkei

$$$$ | Cape Town Central Fodor's Choice

You step into this revitalized historic space as much for the upbeat atmosphere and heartwarming service as you do for the delicious Japanese-Peruvian fusion cuisine that's distinctive enough to be its own genre. Order from the large and diverse menu, or select one of the set menus that will give you a good overview of the offerings like braised sesame-coated short rib with yam mash, tea-cured apricots, and black truffle sauce, or yellowtail hamachi with fermented chili, black garlic and confit yolk. If you opt for a la carte, you'll need to order quite a few of the tapas-style sharing plates. You'll probably want to linger, so book the later dinner seating so there's no time limit.

87 Bree St., Cape Town, South Africa
021-109–0081
Known For
  • Aside from the chef's menus, there are lots of options including sushi, raw and marinated seafood, a Peruvian bento box, robatayaki (charcoal-grilled skewers), and wonderful sides
  • Sushi platters and half-price sake specials on Sunday (sometimes with a DJ)
  • Wonderful desserts, teas, Japanese whiskeys, pisco and sake cocktails, and an extensive wine list
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Nish Nush

$ | Cape Town Central Fodor's Choice

"No drama, just shawarma" is the motto of this cute Middle Eastern street food joint started by Israeli-born Ofer Hollinger in the stone-walled bowels of the repurposed St Stephen's Church. If you're looking for the juiciest shawarmas and the best-tasting falafel in town, not to mention wonderful stuffed pitas topped with hummus and tahini, there's nowhere quite like this. They also do Lebanese arayes, Yemeni zhouk, burgers with either kofta or falafel, and absolutely delicious Iraqi-style sabich pita with eggplant and boiled egg. Order some mezze to share, along with crispy fries served with spicy mayo, and a bowl of hummus for dipping. You can grab a seat (there is a small outdoor courtyard at the back, and you might find tables of backgammon players out front on the sidewalk) or grab it to go, best washed down with a homemade lemonita (although they do have wine and beer, too).

100 Bree St., Cape Town, South Africa
061-543–1120
Known For
  • Excellent made-from-scratch Middle Eastern street food
  • Super-friendly down-to-earth atmosphere
  • Best falafel in town
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Our Local

$$ | Gardens Fodor's Choice

A surprise repurposing of a former auto repair shop, this vast warehouse-like space is full of mix-and-match furniture and packed to the rafters with plants—whether it's a nursery with a restaurant or a restaurant with a nursery is beside the point—and has become a true neighborhood gathering spot. You come here for the personality of the waitstaff, the comforting food (breakfasts, lunches, toasted sandwiches, and dinners, plus all manner of baked goods, and no expectation that you sit down for anything more than tea or coffee), the buzz, and the marvelous assortment of people, many of them strangers sharing tables. There's a separate room at the back where free-roaming laptop workers are often connected to the outside world via free-flowing Wi-Fi.

117 Kloof St., Cape Town, 8001, South Africa
064-642–5004
Known For
  • Excellent breakfast options
  • Lunch and dinner choices range from fab burgers and healthful salads to osso bucco
  • A coffee stop with knock-your-socks-off cocktails
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun. and Mon.

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Ouzeri

$$$ | Cape Town Central Fodor's Choice

Both Cyprus and Greece have a fondness for local tavernas known as ouzeri, where people hang out over plates of meze and drink barrel wine in tumblers. Close to the very heart of the city, this Greek-Cypriot restaurant established by the young, brilliant chef Nic Charalambous pays tribute not only to his upbringing in a traditional, Orthodox Cypriot household, but also to the many sociable eating-and-drinking-and-schmoozing experiences he’s had on Cyprus and across the Greek isles. The atmosphere, mood, and charm are straight from another world, and the food's unlike anything else in the city. Each dish beautifully showcases Nic's special way of taking genuinely home-style, traditional dishes and giving them a contemporary, highly creative twist, with a firm focus on utilizing local ingredients. The feasting might include warm green olives (a standard at any Cypriot mealtime), taramasalata in which to dip homemade chickpea fries, eliopita (olive bread) stuffed with butter-soft roasted garlic, and Macedonian lamb manti or braised lentils with squid and youvetsi (a dish from Corfu) made with beef shin.

58 Wale St., Cape Town, South Africa
061-533–9071
Known For
  • You can (and should) order several different dishes to share including dessert
  • Local ingredients used to bring a contemporary twist to traditional recipes
  • Tongue-in-cheek Mediterranean island-inspired, playfully kitsch decor
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.

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Pahari

$ | Woodstock Fodor's Choice

From fried termites (majuru) and mopani worm chili bites (madora) to ox trotters (zondo), tripe (guru), and kapenta (a tiny sardine-like lake fish that's dried) cooked in peanut butter, this no-frills restaurant showcases some of the interesting, unique, and delicious tastes of Zimbabwean cuisine. Popular, and perhaps less intimidating, choices include their hearty oxtail stew (also a beloved South African dish) and tilapia steamed, pan-fried, or cooked in a curry sauce. Dessert isn't really a thing here, so consider heading to Tapi Tapi, a Zimbabwean ice cream parlor in the nearby Observatory neighborhood.

121 Cecil Rd., Cape Town, South Africa
078-107–1541
Known For
  • Curious and unexpected dishes you won't find anywhere else in Cape Town
  • A selection of less familiar starches (like millet and sorghum) are available as sides
  • Portions are generous, so consider ordering a meal to share and see how it goes
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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The Pot Luck Club

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

With great harbor and mountain views from its position on the sixth floor of a renovated silo, this hip tapas-style restaurant serves an eclectic but clearly Asian-influenced array of small plates. Helmed by the young and highly creative Greek-born chef, Jason Kosmas, the regularly changing menu contains dishes like smoked beef fillet with truffle café au lait; ceviche avocado tacos; and fish sliders. You'll want to order about three plates per person, and be sure to ask about whatever fish is most recently off the boat (Kosmas is a fisherman who takes marine sustainability very seriously). Drink service is excellent, too, with imaginative and delicious cocktails and a well-curated selection of wines from the Cape. The atmosphere, enhanced by tip-top servers, is pleasantly relaxed, and stepping into the handsome space is always a great treat.

375 Albert Rd., Cape Town, 7925, South Africa
021-447–0804
Known For
  • Marvellously creative umami-packed dishes with distinct Asian overtones
  • Simultaneously hip, elegant, and casual setting
  • Two seatings for dinner—don't expect to linger if you choose the early one (6 pm)
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.
Reservations essential

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Reverie Social Table

$$$$ | Observatory Fodor's Choice

An evening spent with a dozen-or-so strangers at this anti-restaurant fine-dining experience is as much of a pleasure as is tucking into the exquisite five-course wine-pair meal created by Julia Hattingh, the young and vibrant chef-owner, who was raised in the Cape Winelands. Hattingh's knowledge of terroir and experience in some of the region's best kitchens are reflected in her brilliantly created and executed menus that feature local, seasonal ingredients. Hattingh personally introduces each dish that's served family style at a single 18-seater wooden table and then joins the table to chat and socialize toward the end of the evening.

226A Lower Main Rd., Cape Town, South Africa
079-060–6971
Known For
  • Wonderful boutique wine pairings
  • Atypical "restaurant" experience shared with a group of strangers
  • Always-changing menu
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch.

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Salon

$$$$ | Woodstock Fodor's Choice

Like so many of chef Luke Dale Roberts's restaurants—such as The Test Kitchen, the former fine-dining establishment that truly put Woodstock on the international culinary map—Salon transports diners to another era with its rich golden hues, velvet banquettes, art deco artwork, fringed vintage-style lamps, and tinted, textured glass panels. Along with executive chef Carla Schulze, Roberts takes diners on a global culinary journey inspired by the international places he's cooked, eaten, and learned about food. Without too much complication, diners are surprised again and again by inventive ideas that have their roots in Mexico, the Philippines, Morocco, Mexico, South Africa, and elsewhere—a literal culinary journey that's equal parts nostalgia and innovation.

375 Albert Rd., Cape Town, South Africa
087-093–5890
Known For
  • Imaginative food grounded in good ingredients and seasonal shifts
  • A handsome, designer-crafted space
  • Voted Africa's Best New Restaurant at 2024's World Culinary Awards
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues. and Wed.

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The Test Kitchen

$$$$ | Woodstock Fodor's Choice

Consistently rated South Africa’s top restaurant and on the top 50 restaurants in the world list, this industrial-elegant boutique eatery in Cape Town’s trendy Woodstock neighborhood is a struggle to get a table at, but the fantastical sensory and culinary journey that awaits you is a worthy and potentially life-changing reward. Since opening in 2009, TTK, as it’s known, has led fine-dining trends in foodie-mecca Cape Town. Keeping one step ahead of the game, chef-owner Luke Dale Roberts has curated a food-theater experience that, in a manner at once playful and artful, employs all five senses to transport you through a mind-blowing array of courses, with an end result that feels simply magical. Come with your best appetite, as the richness of the meal—starting with canapés like a shortbread-foie-gras with gold-leaf, moving on to dishes like lamb sweetbread with liquorice liver jus, and finishing with the likes of duck breast with duck liver stuffing and sour cherry—is also superlative.

Booking system has become month-to-month, so instead of planning months in advance, log in very early on the morning of the 1st.

375 Albert Rd., Cape Town, 7925, South Africa
021-447–2337
Known For
  • Sensory-culinary food-theater experience
  • Intense flavors from all over the globe presented in unexpected and thrilling ways
  • Great cocktails (served from a delightful trolley), amazing wine pairings
  • Bevy of excellent servers
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.
Reservations essential

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Three Wise Monkeys

$$ | Sea Point Fodor's Choice

What began as a mere ramen outpost has expanded its menu to include sushi and bao (silky soft steamed buns), crispy tofu, and a bunch of delicious experiments like yakitori sticky wings, bao dogs tuna, and salmon sushiritos (burritos with sushi inside). They've also done taiyaki (fish-shaped cakes stuffed with red bean paste or Nutella) and have matcha-infused steamed buns stuffed with salted custard filling for dessert (a must-try). Their ramen continues to be a favorite luring folks from across the city, so it's usually bustling, but tables turn quite quickly though, so get yourself on the waiting list or grab a drink from the bar while you watch all those happy diners slurping up their noddles, chins glistening with delectable, umami-rich broth.

77 Regent St., Cape Town, South Africa
021-433--1837
Known For
  • Beautifully prepared ramen and other Japanese surprises
  • Small, bustling interior with fast-turning tables
  • Lively with friendly service that'll make you want to linger for a dessert
Restaurant Details
No reservations

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