The restaurants below have been grouped into four different price categories:
$$$$ (over €50) (over 100 Lev)
$$$ (€30 to 50) (60 to 100 Lev)
$$ (€15 to 30) (30 to 60 Lev)
$ (up to €15) (up to 30 Lev)
The prices quoted above are for an average three-course meal and for a bottle of house wine or cheapest equivalent; they do not include tax or tip. Reservations are recommended wherever possible; in the case of upscale and popular restaurants, they are essential.
La Capannina
With striking views of the Parliament and Aleksandar Nevski Memorial Church,
this authentic Italian cuisine is probably the best in Bulgaria. With hot and cold antipasti, veal, fresh pasta and a top-notch wine list, this place is a real treat. Reservations essential.
Ploshtad Narodno Sabranie 9
Tel: (02) 980 4438.
Price: $$$$
Pri YafataTypical Bulgarian cuisine in a colorful
mehana (tavern) this is a great place to try
cavarma (hearty pork and vegetable casserole) and
shashlink (mixed barbecued meats). The large selection of top local wines is perfectly accompanied with live folk music nightly. Reservations recommended.
Corner of ulitsa Solunska and Tzar Assen
Tel: (02) 980 1727.
Price: $$-$$$
Before & After
In renovated 1920s style, this ancient house is a haven for artists, musicians and journalists. Serving good-value food all day, it is popular for its cocktails, light lunch, chicken dishes and creme brulée. Great fun.
Ulitsa Hristo Belchev 12
Tel: (02) 981 6088.
Price: $$
Pod Lipite
Located southwest of the center, this is a wonderful place to sample traditional local dishes in a typical busy
mehana, and a garden for the warmer months. Service is friendly, and there is live music on Friday and Saturday nights.
Ulitsa Erin Perin 1
Tel: (02) 866 5053.
Price: $$
Dream House
Located inside a small shopping arcade, this is one of Sofia’s few vegetarian restaurants. Its large menu has salads, soups and local dishes, plus a nudge towards Asian flavors. Cool, fresh decor, this is popular at lunchtime.
1/F, ulitsa Alabin 50A
Tel: (02) 980 8163.
Website:
www.dreamhouse-bg.comPrice: $
Nightlife:Despite previous economic hardship and high unemployment, Sofians love to go out and party. Day and night, the countless bars and cafes throughout the city are heaving - a phenomenon that never fails to amaze foreign visitors. Unfortunately, the public transport system completely shuts down from 0100 to 0500. However, a number of restaurants and cafes operate 24 hours, including
Art Club Museum, ulitsa Saborna 2,
Divarka, ulitsa 6-ti Septemvri 41A and ulitsa Gladston 54, and bright, brash
Happy Bar and Grill, ploshtad Sveti Nedelya 4.
The biggest concentration of bars and cafes lies to either side of Vitosha bulevard, and the increasingly hip ulitsa Rakovski, with cafe-restaurants like
Opera, ulitsa Rakovski 113. Irish pubs have hit Bulgaria and, as always, pull a mixed clientele of locals and expats. Bars are busy until midnight, after which people move on to nightclubs, which are fairly dispersed throughout town. Heavily frowned upon during Communist times, homosexuality is now considered quite cool and there are a number of gay clubs including
Sax, bulvard Vasil Levski 67, and
Vital, ulitsa Alabin 5.
Outside the city center, the southern suburb of Studenski grad by the university is packed with bars, clubs and restaurants for those who love partying 24-hour student-style. Get there on bus 280 from ulitsa Shipka, and the taxi back is reasonable.
It is possible to buy alcohol all day and night, for over 18s only.
Most bars and cafes stay open until midnight. Locally produced wine and
rakiya (local brandy)
are excellent and reasonably priced, and good local beers include Zagorka and Kamenitza. Cigarettes are cheap (tobacco is one of Bulgaria’s main exports), so don’t expect smoke-free bars. Sofians are open-minded when it comes to dress, although some clubs only allow admission once ’no neck’ bouncers have checked you out.
For good up-to-date nightlife information, check the English-language weekly
Sofia Echo (website:
www.sofiaecho.com), the quarterly
Sofia In Your Pocket, the booklet
Programata (website:
www.programata.bg) or the monthly
Sofia City Info Guide. Or try
www.gay.bg as a good guide to gay venues.
Bars: Much of the city’s more stylish nightlife is in lounge bars with leather sofas although shabbier cafes, especially around the shopping streets, have the cheapest booze. An informal place to meet friends,
By the Way, ulitsa Rikovski 166, has good cocktails and food, and
Motto, ulitsa Aksakov 18, attracts the beautiful people with designer decor and comfy sofas.
Living Room, bulvard Yanko Sakuzov 1, has floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the lush Oborishte Park. For an alfresco cold beer (and people watching) the huge cafe-bar with no name on the pedestrianized ulitsa Pirotska off bulvard Maria Louisa, is busy on warm evenings.
Clubs: Sofia’s clubs play music ranging from techno to jazz and rock to salsa, with
chalga, a curious mix of Turkish pop and gypsy dance often referred to as pop-folk, always popular.
Sin City, bulvard Hristo Botev 61,
is a huge venue, reputedly one of the chicest clubs in the Balkans, with pop-folk and house in its different halls.
Gramofon, ulitsa Budapeshta 6, also plays chalga.
Alcohol, ulitsa Rakovski 127, gets everyone on the dancefloor and also has a chill-out room to cool down. The award-winning
Chervilo, bulvard Tsar Osvoboditel 9, has several resident DJs playing house music, and
Yalta, down the road at Tsar Osvoboditel 20, has international DJs.
Cabaret, ulitsa Hristo Belchev 12 (downstairs from
Before and After), houses an old-time atmosphere in an art nouveau building, with retro, Latino/Turkish and mixed dance nights.
Live Music: There are several venues with live performers of local music, like
Swingin’ Hall, bulvard Dragan Tzankov 8,
featuring live jazz, rock and pop, with local and foreign performers.
Toucan Bluzz and Rock, ulitsa Rakovski 112, has decent live jazz, and
Back Stage, bulvard Vasil Levski 100, offers a range of live music every night.
For a true Balkan experience, spend the evening at a restaurant featuring live Bulgarian folk music. Recommended venues include
Vodenitzata, set in an old mill in the Dragalevtzi district close to the chairlift,
Vitosha, bulvard Vitosha 33, and
Chevermeto, bulvard Maria Louisa 106.
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