2 Best Restaurants in Malta

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Traditional Maltese cuisine is Italian in origin, but "international" food is on most restaurant menus as well. Locally caught fish is a specialty. The national dish is fenek (rabbit); bra?joli (beef olives) and lampuki (dorado) pie are runners-up. Pastry coats fish, vegetables, cheese, and pasta dishes. Soups, minestra (minestrone) and aljotta (fish) especially, are common, and are delicious with daily baked crusty Maltese bread. Capers, the buds of the caperis specicum shrub that is native to the islands, are widely used. Native wine is abundant and inexpensive; look for medium-dry whites. Cisk lager is a local favorite, and try Hop Leaf pale ale for something with a bit more bite. Kinnie, a terrific nonalcoholic thirst quencher, is made from a "secret recipe" that includes bitter oranges.

Il Kartell

$$

Fresh fish served by the sea is the signature of success for this long-standing Gozo favorite. Try a salad sprinkled with locally grown capers followed by grilled catch of the day or clams with pasta. The low ceiling of the vaulted dining room, once an old boat house, can feel a little claustrophobic but the sunny terrace overlooking the bay is popular with visitors from surrounding hotels and many local families make this the place for long lunches or dinners.

Marina St., Marsalforn, MFN 1010, Malta
21-556–918
Known For
  • An excellent selection of island wines
  • Great fresh seafood
  • Great views over the bay if you sit outside

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Tartarun

$$$
While most of the restaurants lining Marsaxlokk's waterfront are rather cheap and cheerful, aimed more at the ravenous lunchtime crowd, Tartarun not only skews more upscale but also makes superb use of the island's seafood—it is literally fresh off the boat. The atmosphere buzzes with intent, and light pours through its huge windows. There's no terrace, but you'll get more than a taste of the sea from the menu, with the prawn carpaccio a classic opener, followed by roasted sea bass and clam sauce and fried lentil or perhaps one of the fine local lobsters.
20 Xatt is-Sajjieda, Marsaxlokk, Malta
21-658–089
Known For
  • Refined seafood
  • Views out over the water
  • Sunlit dining space
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.; closed for dinner Sun.

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