The restaurants below have been listed alphabetically and classed into four different pricing categories:
$$$$ (over €50)
$$$ (€25-50)
$$ (€10-25)
$ (under €10)
These prices are for a three-course meal for one with half a bottle of wine or equivalent.
Balthazar
On a side street home to many embassies in east Bucharest, Balthazar is Bucharest’s great fusion restaurant, and one of its classiest. The menu’s in French, but riffs on Thai themes. The setting, in a restored villa, is a winner.
Strada Dumbrava Rosie 2
Tel: (021) 212 1460.
Website:
www.balthazar.roPrice: $$$
Caru cu Bere
Bucharest’s
oldest beer house (recently renovated to show off its 1879 birthday) is a classic three-floor beer hall from the days when a night of boozing came with serious pomp. There are set lunches and plenty of pork ribs and minced meat, not to mention mugs of the Caru cu Bere’s own beer.
Strada Stavropoleos 3-5
Tel: (021) 313 7560.
Website:
www.carucubere.roPrice: $$
Casa Doina
Housed in a 19th-century villa near the ‘Arc de Triumf’ in north Bucharest, Casa Doina is one of Bucharest’s most luxurious spots for high-quality Romanian fare such as polenta, stuffed grape leaves and grilled fillets.
Soseaua Kiseleff 4
Tel: (021) 222 6717.
Price: $$
Count Dracula Club
It’s campy and touristy all the way, with Transylvania-style medieval themes like a coffin room and fake impaled heads, but it’s hard not to enjoy it. Dracula himself appears on Tuesday and Friday nights, otherwise it’s just you and a host of good grilled meats and glasses of blood-red wine.Splaiul Independentei 8A
Tel: (021) 312 1353.
Website:
www.count-dracula.roPrice: $$
Trattoria Il Calcio
This bustling Italian spot brings in locals for hearty pastas and wood-oven pies in a place that looks like a mix of a Tuscan villa and football museum. Walls are lined with old Romanian football journals and photos, picked up over the years by the ex-footballer owner.Strada Mendeleev 14
Tel: 07221 34299.
Website:
www.trattoriailcalcio.roPrice: $$
Nightlife:Bucharest’s nightclubs vary between hip hop haunts spinning the latest sounds and flashy discos where Romania’s wealthy go to let off steam. There are no licensing hours in Romania. Nor is there a legal drinking age, however, you must be over 18 to purchase alcohol. Entrance fees are cheap compared to those in the West. Many nightclubs are concentrated in or around the historic center, making club-hopping an option. Clubbers going further afield can grab one of the taxis that hover outside most clubs. Some nightclubs close in June for the summer and reopen in early October.
Jazz is popular in Romania and Bucharest has good jazz clubs. Latino music is also trendy and salsa-dancing couples invade the dancefloors of certain clubs. Casinos flourish in the newfound capitalist climate and many of Bucharest’s well-to-do flock to those along Calea Victoriei.
For up-to-date information on nightlife, check out
www.sapteseri.ro, the website for a free entertainment weekly available in the city. Another useful site is
www.bucharest-online.com.
Bars: Young people gather in bars to drink cocktails, cappuccinos and foreign beers. Most go to the Lipscani area in the historic center, where you can follow the sound of muffled beats to sidewalk spots or basement bars.
Fire Club, Gabroveni 12, has a beer-soaked ground-floor bar with loud students and a basement stage for alt-rock shows. A bit more to-do and grown-up is
Majemo, Covaci 6, a compact bar in an antiques shop, or the posh and pricey
Office, Strada Tache Ionescu 2, a slick lounge with 1980s tunes for a more dressed-up crowd.
Another key drinking scene is hidden away in the National Theater, Bulevardul Balcescu 2. On the theater’s left side, the fourth-floor
La Motor’s spectacular outdoor roof terrace brings in students not theater-goers. It’s a booze-filled scene, with live bands at the weekends. Expats tend to favor the Irish or English pubs, such as the blokey
Dubliner, Bulevardul Titilescu 18, with Guinness on draught, football on the TV, darts in a side room and great steak sandwiches. Posher locals needing a bit of British pub action, opt for
White Horse, George Calinescu 4, a two-story pub in a ritzy residential area in northeastern Bucharest.
Clubs: The club scene is booming in Bucharest and many venues have lasers and skimpily clad dancers atop stages or bars. A new entry is the king-sized
Pacha, Bulevardul Libertatii 1 (website:
www.pachabucuresti.com), a sprawling space with big-name DJs, staged dancers and flashing lights. More low key are the student-filled
Other Side, 4 Brezoianu (website:
www.expirat.org), a funky lounge with dancing and cubicle seats or the sweaty student dance scene at
Club A, Strada Blanari 14 (website:
www.cluba.ro), just east of the center. Stylised and futuristic (and a bit more upmarket)
Embryo, Strada Ion Oteteleseanu 3A (website:
www.embryo.ro), holds a wide mix of costume dance parties for Bucharest’s hip twenty-something crowd.
Live Music: Jazz is big in Bucharest.
Green Hours 22 Jazz Club, Calea Victoriei 120 (website:
www.green-hours.ro), a capsule-style basement club with jazz or theater most nights, and
Art Jazz Club, Bulevardul N Balcescu 23A (website:
www.artjazzclub.ro), both feature top jazz names (most live performances start around 2100). Rock-loving students file into the
Fire Club, Strada Gabroveni; there’s a red-brick bar upstairs and indie-rock or punk shows in the basement stage. Way out in west Bucharest, the friendly
Piranha Club, Splaluil Independentei 313 (website:
www.clubpiranha.ro), is an outdoor web of bars, aquariums, gazebos, eating areas and a stage for live alt-rock shows. Folk music and dancing is performed in restaurants serving traditional Romanian cuisine, including
Burebista Vanatoresc, Strada Batistei 14.
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Word Travels is a comprehensive travel guide covering hundreds of cities and holiday resorts in more than 125 countries.
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