7 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.

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 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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Seven Colours Eatery

$$ | V&A Waterfront Fodor's Choice

Chef Nolu Dube-Cele has created one of Cape Town's absolute must-try restaurants, a place where you can enjoy many of the country's diverse traditional dishes that haven't yet made their way from the home kitchens to restaurant menus (although this is steadily changing). At this lovely spot by the canal that runs through Battery Park, you can tuck into a variety of dishes like chicken sosaties (skewered meat), meat potjie (stew), tripe, and the crowd-pleasing "roadrunner," a free-range chicken cooked slowly in its own juices. There's a great selection of vegan dishes, too, including salads made using healthy grains such as sorghum, as well as "roosterkoek" breakfast buns and sandwich buns stuffed with mince and chakalaka. It's everything necessary to get you properly acquainted with the real-deal gastronomy of this country. The eponymous "seven colours" is a nickname for meals traditionally served at special gatherings, when there's an assortment of differently colored foods on the plate: yellow rice, orange pumpkin, green spinach or beans, red beetroot, and brown meat. 

2 Dock Rd., Cape Town, South Africa
087-265–8762
Known For
  • Authentic and satisfying survey of indigenous South African cuisine
  • Uses lesser-known and healthier grains for many vegan dishes
  • Meals that are often as colorful (and therefore varied) as they are delicious
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Upper Union

$$$$ | Gardens Fodor's Choice

At this restaurant—part of Cape Cadogan, the boutique hotel next door—chef Amori Burger's (who has done time on TV food shows and worked in the bush cooking at safari lodges) concept revolves around the idea of a family feast. Menus change with the seasons and gravitate around a theme Amori and her squad of chefs are exploring, but guests can choose between a couple of tasting menus or dip into the à la carte selection of small plates, all of it made to be shared. Think of it as food cooked by your (South African) grandmother if she were a world-class professional chef with a contemporary outlook: sharing plates of tasty vegetables, mains with hints of nostalgia, everyone reaching across the table, and lots of fine wine. Just off Kloof Street, the venue is a double-story colonial-era manor house that's been jazzed up and turned into a seriously eye-catching space, decorated in green and white, with tables that spill onto the outside terrace. 

3 Upper Union St., Cape Town, South Africa
021-891--0360
Known For
  • Unusual, refined, delicious, and fragrant flavors
  • "family feast" style of eating
  • Beautiful venue with a relaxed ambience
Restaurant Details
Reservations recommended

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Biesmiellah Restaurant

$$ | Bo-Kaap

This much-loved Bo-Kaap landmark keeps it real with its non-frills, homestyle approach to traditional Cape Malay cuisine. Dishes include bredies (thick slow-cooked stews, usually tomato-based and made with spices, meatballs, mutton, or lentils and vegetables), denning vleis (a traditional dish made with lamb or mutton and cooked with tamarind), curries, and of course beloved snacks like samosas, half-moons (savory breadcrumb-covered, fried dough bites filled with meat or vegetables), and chili bites (spicy deep-fried morsels, usually chickpea flour–based, made with onion, spices, and herbs). The menu isn't limited to Cape Malay cuisine offering Indian dishes and light meals like toasties (toasted sandwiches like grilled cheese) and wraps.

2 Wale St., Cape Town, South Africa
021-423–0850
Known For
  • Properly spiced traditional Cape Malay cuisine
  • A casual, family-run Bo-Kaap institution
  • No alcohol
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Faeeza's Home Kitchen

$

Up the stairs and in a courtyard corner that literally spills out of her kitchen, Faeeza Abrahams shares recipes, tales of the neighborhood, and insight into local ways of life; a more intimate and authentic taste of traditional Cape Malay cuisine is hard to find. Besides her cooking classes, she also serves a variety of curries, bobotie (mince meat pie), daily specials, and something sweetkoesisters (donuts), milk tart, carrot cakein her intimate tea garden.

1 Chiappini La., Cape Town, South Africa
072-120--3710
Known For
  • Cooking classes and homestyle dishes
  • Casual atmosphere under the trees
  • Can get crowded with tour groups
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No dinner

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Makers Landing

$$ | V&A Waterfront

Located at the V&A's cruise terminal, Makers Landing is a collection of food stalls, casual sit-down restaurants, and even a culinary school. The initial aim was to showcase a diversity of local food, and even though a fast-food vibe has set in, you can get a proper taste of South Africa at Pitso's Kitchen, taste a unique range of spirits at the Pienaar & Son distillery, or satisfy your sweet tooth with some of the best chocolate at Afrikoa.

Cape Town Cruise Terminal, Cape Town, South Africa
021-408–7529
Known For
  • A variety of eats and treats under one roof
  • A snapshot of South African culinary entrepreneurship
  • There's a terrace where you can sit in the sun and watch ships coming and going
Restaurant Details
Some vendors are closed Mon.–Thurs.

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