The Best Restaurant in Oman

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Traditional Omani food is a marriage of rustic Bedouin dishes of rice, meat, and preserved fish, plus the plentiful, sweet dates that grow abundantly in the country, all infused with the diverse flavors of the spice route. The East African island of Zanzibar, as well as port cities in Persia and South Asia were once part of the Sultanate, and local versions of foods like biryani, pulao, and coconut-enriched vegetables have become part of the Omani canon of dishes. Great examples of local cuisine can be sampled at restaurants in Muscat, along with a wide offering of international options, from sushi to American fast food. In the capital and other coastal cities, like Sohar, Sur, and Salalah, fantastic fresh fish, prawns, crab, and giant squid called cuttlefish, are on offer even at humble restaurants. Options in the mountains and deserts of the interior are more limited, though simple sandwich shops, restaurants serving Yemeni-style mandi (a dish of rice and tandoori-cooked meat), tea shops offering Omani bread with various fillings, and casual Indian restaurants can be found almost everywhere.

Tokyo Taro

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There may be a new crop of sushi restaurants appearing throughout the capital, but it is worth the drive to Ruwi to experience this one, the oldest Japanese restaurant in Muscat. Tucked inside the Al Falaj Hotel, the kitchen has been overseen by the same Japanese chef for over a decade, offering a teppanyaki grill table, sushi rolls, sashimi, bento boxes, and the largest sake menu in Oman. Reservations are not necessary during the week but highly recommended on the weekends.