41 Best Restaurants in Portland, Oregon

Background Illustration for Restaurants

These days, rising-star chefs and the foodies who adore them are flocking to Portland. In this playground of sustainability and creativity, many of the city's hottest restaurants change menus weekly—sometimes even daily—depending upon the ingredients they have delivered to their door that morning from local farms. The combination of fertile soils, temperate weather, and nearby waters contributes to a year-round bountiful harvest (be it lettuces or hazelnuts, mushrooms or salmon) that is within any chef's reach.

And these chefs are not shy about putting new twists on old favorites. Restaurants like Le Pigeon, Beast, Ox, Ned Ludd, Natural Selection, and Aviary have all taken culinary risks by presenting imaginatively executed, often globally inspired fare while utilizing sustainable ingredients. There’s a strong willingness in and around Portland for chefs to explore their creative boundaries.

Menus frequently extend across nations and continents. First-time visitors to Portland always seem to be impressed by the culinary scene’s international diversity, especially when it comes to Asian and Mediterranean fare, but you’ll also find outstanding examples of Peruvian, Russian, regional Mexican, and dozens of other ethnic restaurants. Of course, seafood is prevalent, with chefs regularly taking advantage of the availability of fresh salmon, albacore, halibut, crab, oysters, and mussels from the rivers and the Pacific Ocean.

Most of the city's longtime favorites are concentrated in Nob Hill, the Pearl District, and downtown. But many of the city’s most exciting food scenes are on the East Side, along Alberta Street, Mississippi Avenue, Williams Avenue, Fremont Street, Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, Burnside Street, 28th Avenue, Belmont Street, Hawthorne Boulevard, and Division Street, and tucked away in many neighborhoods in between. Serious food enthusiasts will definitely want to make some trips to some of these vibrant, if out-of-the-way neighborhoods.

Bar and restaurant culture greatly overlap in Portland, and many eateries around the city stand out as much because of their carefully curated beverage programs as for their food. Expect to find wine, craft beer, and cocktail lists that rely heavily on Northwest products, and also note that many of the top cocktail lounges, brewpubs, and wine bars we included in our Nightlife and Performing Arts chapter also serve excellent tapas and bar snacks.

Afuri Ramen

$$ Fodor's Choice

Acclaimed Japanese ramen chain Afuri decided to open an outpost in the United States in 2016, choosing this modern, high-ceilinged dining room in food-obsessed Portland in part because the exacting culinary team appreciated the city's pristine, glacially fed water supply, which plays a significant part in the steaming, savory portions of yuzu shio (with chicken broth, yuzu citrus, shimeji mushrooms, seasoned egg, chashu, endive, and nori), one of a half dozen deeply satisfying ramen bowls. The kitchen also turns out flavorful skewers of shishito peppers and chicken thighs, pork dumplings, sushi, and other izakaya-style fare, all of it consistently exceptional.

923 S.E. 7th Ave., OR, 97214, USA
503-468–5001
Known For
  • Authentic Japanese ramen
  • Meat and veggie skewers
  • Flights of premium sake

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Akadi PDX

$$ | Southeast Fodor's Choice

Verdant plants hang from the timber beams and high, pitched ceiling of this outstanding West African restaurant founded by chef-owner Fatou Ouattara, who grew up in Cote D'Ivoire and learned to cook using clay ovens and wood fires from her grandmother. Akadi's menu draws on traditional recipes like street-style grilled goat with a mustard sauce and plantains, and palm butter stew with shrimp, gambas, crab, fish, and spices. There's a full bar.

1001 S.E. Division St., Portland, OR, 97202, USA
971-271–7072
Known For
  • Nice selection of mostly South African wines
  • Boldly flavored West African stews and grills
  • Several vegan options
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

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Casa Zoraya

$$ Fodor's Choice

A warm and welcoming Peruvian American family runs this superb—and reasonably priced—Latin American restaurant that occupies a pretty little house on an otherwise bland commercial street in North Portland. The beautifully plated food bursts with flavor and complexity, from classic causas and ceviches packed with seasonal vegetables, Peruvian chilis, and fresh shellfish to stick-to-your-ribs fish, lamb, and steak grills.

841 N. Lombard St., OR, 97217, USA
503-384–2455
Known For
  • Plenty of vegetarian options
  • Ceviche with a flavorful ají limo leche de tigre sauce
  • Bright and refreshing pisco cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Deschutes Brewery Portland Public House

$$ Fodor's Choice

The Portland branch of the Bend-based Deschutes Brewery typically has 26 beers on tap, including nationally acclaimed mainstays Mirror Pond Pale Ale, Inversion IPA, and Black Butte Porter, plus seasonal and experimental brews. On the food side, the talented kitchen staff have made this a worthy destination for elevated pub fare, such as Manila clams steamed in cider, Nashville-style hot chicken and waffles, and peanut butter–pork belly burgers.

Eem

$$ Fodor's Choice
This impossibly delicious mash-up of Thai street food and Texas barbecue, a collaboration between the talents behind locally renowned restaurants Langbaan and Matt's BBQ, excels in both its playful approach and smoking-good execution. Potted plants and hanging basket lamps impart a subtle, relaxed beach bar vibe, perfect for enjoying tiki-esque cocktails with inspired names like Arranged Marriage and Act of God. Beware that tables can be tough to score, although lone diners and pairs can often score a counter seat by the window even when it's busy.
3808 N. Williams Ave., OR, 97227, USA
971-295–1645
Known For
  • Colorful tropical drinks
  • Chopped barbecue-fried rice with shishito peppers
  • Rich curries with smoked brisket, lamb shoulder, and other barbecue staples

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Hat Yai

$$ Fodor's Choice

Operated by the acclaimed chef behind Langbaan and Eem, this cozy and casual counter-service eatery takes its name from a small Thai city near the Malaysian border and its concept from that region's spicy and delicious fried chicken with sticky rice and rich Malayu-style curries with panfried roti bread. Other treats here uncommon to Thai restaurant culture in the States include fiery turmeric curry with mussels and heady oxtail soup with lemongrass. There's a second location on Belmont Street in Southeast.

1605 N.E. Killingsworth St., OR, 97211, USA
503-764–9701
Known For
  • The roti dessert with condensed milk
  • Perfectly crunchy free-range fried chicken
  • Good selection of Asian beers

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Hey Love

$$ Fodor's Choice

The food-and-drink component of the stylish Jupiter Next hotel has quickly become one of the East Side's favorite destinations for hobnobbing over drinks and creative bar fare, much of it—salmon poke, the seven-layer taco bowl—framed around Asian and Latin American elements. The space is adorned with hanging and potted greenery and Oriental rugs, which provide a decidedly funky aesthetic.

920 E. Burnside St., OR, 97214, USA
503-206–6223
Known For
  • Fried chicken sandwiches
  • Late-night dining and people-watching
  • A cast-iron macadamia nut–white chocolate cookie with coconut caramel and sea-salt ice cream
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Interurban

$$ Fodor's Choice

A laid-back North Mississippi gastropub with an L-shaped indoor bar and a bi-level back patio with lush landscaping and a shaded pergola, Interurban is both a convivial drinkery and a fine spot for affordable, well-crafted American fare served from late afternoon until 2 am. The kitchen creates consistently good and creative food, such as risotto with seasonal vegetables and smoked-trout BLT sandwiches, and there's an extensive selection of cocktails and microbrews.

4057 N. Mississippi Ave., OR, 97227, USA
503-284–6669
Known For
  • Terrific afternoon and late-night happy hour menu
  • Well-curated beer and cocktail list
  • Top-notch staff
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Ken's Artisan Pizza

$$ Fodor's Choice

Douglas-fir beams, old wine barrels, and hungry crowds surround the glowing, beehive-shaped wood oven in the open kitchen of this thin-crust pizza joint. Ken Forkish, also of Ken's Artisan Bakery, uses fresh, organic ingredients for the dough, sauces, and toppings of his pies, which include a Margherita with arugula, a hand-pressed fennel sausage with onion, and a soppressata with basil.

304 S.E. 28th Ave., OR, 97214, USA
503-517–9951
Known For
  • Terrific salads and vegetable sides
  • Unique topping combos such as leek and potato
  • Solid wine list
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch
Reservations not accepted

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Lovely's Fifty-Fifty

$$ Fodor's Choice

This unpretentious and airy neighborhood spot with wooden booths and whimsical fire-engine-red chairs is really two delicious dining options in one: the dining room serves inventively topped, crisp, wood-fired pizzas, and a small takeout counter dispenses homemade hard and soft-serve organic ice cream with flavors like hazelnut toffee and candied kumquat. Pizza toppings change seasonally and might include homemade fennel sausage with lacinato kale, or rainbow chard with fermented tomatoes and chilis.

4039 N. Mississippi Ave., OR, 97217, USA
503-281–4060
Known For
  • Beautiful seasonal salads with local greens
  • Warm-and-friendly servers
  • Unique pizza toppings like peaches and pancetta
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Måurice

$$ Fodor's Choice

Described by baker-owner Kristen Murray as a "modern pastry luncheonette," this dainty West End café has just a handful of wooden booth and counter seats and a minimalist-inspired white-on-white aesthetic. The menu features exquisite French–Scandinavian pastries, cakes, and sandwiches, as well as a full gamut of drinks, including wine (interesting flights are offered), beer, cocktails, teas, and coffee.

921 S.W. Oak St., OR, 97205, USA
503-224–9921
Known For
  • Ever-changing, handwritten menu
  • Assorted Swedish fika (snack) pastries
  • Revelatory black-pepper cheesecake
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Tues. No dinner

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Mediterranean Exploration Company

$$ Fodor's Choice

This vegetarian-friendly tribute to Mediterranean cuisine occupies a handsome former warehouse on historic 13th Avenue in the Pearl. MEC (for short) is an energy-filled, open space with a mix of communal and individual tables (the food is served family-style)—it's surprisingly affordable considering the extraordinary quality and generous portions.

Mother's Bistro & Bar

$$ Fodor's Choice

Beloved chef and cookbook author Lisa Schroeder dedicates her home-style, made-with-love approach to food to the comforting foods prepared by mothers everywhere. Clearly the theme resonates, as evidenced by the long waits on weekends, and even some weekday mornings for breakfast, which is arguably the best time of the day to sample Schroeder's hearty cooking; try the wild salmon hash with leeks or the French toast with a crunchy cornflake crust. Reservations are recommended on weekends.

Oma's Hideaway

$$ | Southeast Fodor's Choice

Colorful lights, floral-print tablecloths, and lush plants provide a bit of tropical flair to this festive culinary homage to the hawker foods of Singapore and Malaysia, such as corn fritters with sweet-chili peanut sauce, charred-pineapple salad with chili-shrimp sauce, and sour-tamarind baby-back ribs with fish sauce. Save room for a Fruity Pebble rice crispy treat.

3131 S.E. Division St., Portland, OR, 97202, USA
971-754–4923
Known For
  • Amusingly named but seriously tasty cocktails
  • Lunch on weekends
  • Whole charcoal-roasted game hen with coconut sambal
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Pacific Standard

$$ Fodor's Choice

At this trendy restaurant inside the hip KEX hotel, the menu showcases not only delectable foods of the entire Pacific Coast, including the Northwest but also California (try the steamed and then chilled Castroville artichoke with umami mayo and garlic butter) and even Baja (the Tijuana-style whole-leaf Caesar salad is spot on). The warmly lighted, atmospheric seating in the dining room–cum–lobby is at tables or the long, elliptical bar, a space that encourages lingering and socializing over an Oregon berry cast-iron crumble and rosé negroni.

100 N.E. Martin Luther King Blvd., OR, 97232, USA
Known For
  • Reasonably prices for the quality
  • Cool, living room-esque vibe
  • Exceptional beverage program
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Screen Door

$$ Fodor's Choice

The line that forms outside this Southern-cooking restaurant during weekend brunch and dinner is as epic as the food itself, but you can more easily score a table if you come for weekday brunch, and it's easier to find seating at the newer Pearl District location. A large, packed dining room with canned pickles and peppers along the walls, this Portland hot spot does justice to authentic Southern cooking, especially when it comes to the crispy buttermilk-battered fried chicken with creamy mashed potatoes and collard greens cooked in bacon fat. Or choose the Screen Door plate with your choice of four sides (consider the mac and cheese, creamy grits, and most any of the salads on the rotating seasonal menu).

2337 E. Burnside St., OR, 97214, USA
503-542–0880
Known For
  • Fried chicken (with waffles at breakfast or brunch)
  • Seasonal side dishes, from praline bacon to spiced zucchini fritters
  • Banoffee pie with shortbread-pecan crust

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Toki

$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

Established by the team behind the vaunted weekend dinner house, Han Oak, this cozy, casually minimalist spot in the trendy West End doles out inventive modern Korean bites, from savory bay shrimp pancakes with a soy-vinegar dipping sauce to Manila clams with miso butter and ginger sake. A highly popular brunch is served Friday–Sunday and is especially known for its twisted donuts in tantalizing flavors like milk tea and toasted coconut.

580 S.W. 12th Ave., Portland, OR, 97205, USA
503-312–3037
Known For
  • Korean fried chicken wings with a variety of sauce options
  • Kimchi and pork belly buns at brunch
  • Butter mochi cake for dessert
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Wed. No lunch Thurs.

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23Hoyt

$$ | Nob Hill

While this upscale tavern serves fine dinner plates, it's happy hour and brunch that draws scene-y Nob Hill revelers to 23Hoyt. With a cool, clean ambience and the owner's private collection of contemporary art on the walls, this corner establishment makes an excellent place to partake in early-evening or weekend noshing.

529 N.W. 23rd Ave., Portland, OR, 97210, USA
503-445–7400
Known For
  • Cocktails made with house-infused spirits
  • Recurring drag brunch
  • A wide selection of small plates
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
No lunch

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3 Doors Down Cafe and Lounge

$$ | Southeast

Three doors down a side street from the bustling Hawthorne Boulevard, this small restaurant is known for its high-quality Italian food and extensive happy hour list. The intimate, unpretentious trattoria has built a reliable clientele with consistently well-crafted plates like lemon-zest-and-ricotta-stuffed eggplant with marinara, panko-crusted Oregon fried oysters and aioli, and a risotto of sautéed kale, sweet corn, and aged Gouda. There's a good list of reasonably priced wines, too.

1429 S.E. 37th Ave., Portland, OR, 97214, USA
503-236–6886
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Mon. No lunch

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Apizza Scholls

$$

The pies here—which have been lauded by Anthony Bourdain, Rachael Ray, and thousands of everyday pizza lovers—deserve the first-class reputation they enjoy. The greatness of the pies rests not in innovation or complexity, but in the simple quality of the ingredients, such as dough made by hand in small batches and baked to crispy-outside, tender-inside perfection and toppings—including basil, pecorino romano, and house-cured bacon—that are fresh and delicious. Although the decor is rather plain and you'll likely have to wait for a table, you'll forget all once you take your first bite and start basking in the glory of some of the best pizza in the city.

4741 S.E. Hawthorne Blvd., OR, 97215, USA
503-233–1286
Known For
  • Interesting beer list
  • The bacon bianca pizza (white, with no sauce)
  • Reservations are a good idea, even to sit at the bar
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Assembly Brewing

$$
Detroit-style pizza with thick, crunchy crusts are the specialty of this handsome craft brewery in increasingly hip Foster-Powell. It's open until 2 am, and there's ample seating inside and on the adjacent patio.
6112 S.E. Foster Rd., OR, 97206, USA
971-888–5973
Known For
  • Diverse list of house-brewed craft beers
  • Gorgeous murals on both inside and exterior walls
  • Plenty of salad, appetizer, and sandwich options

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Bamboo Sushi

$$

Claiming to be the world’s first certified sustainable sushi restaurant, this Portland-based chainlet partners with nonprofits such as the Marine Stewardship Council and Monterey Bay Aquarium to ensure it sources its seafood from eco-conscious fishing operations. Bamboo has five locations throughout the metro area, including this stylish branch in Downtown's West End, where the counter seating fills for the weekday happy hour, served until 6 pm.

404 S.W. 12th Ave., OR, 97205, USA
503-444–7455
Known For
  • Creative, nontraditional signature rolls
  • Choose-your-own sake flights
  • Happy-hour nigiri set
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Bollywood Theater

$$

Set beneath a soaring beamed ceiling, and with a welcoming mix of worn wooden seating, kitschy decor, bright fabrics, and intoxicating smells, this lively restaurant along Division Street's hoppin' restaurant row specializes in Indian street food. Order at the counter, and your food—perhaps vada pav (spicy potato dumplings with chutney), gobi Manchurian (Indo-Chinese fried cauliflower with lemon, curry leaves, and sweet-and-sour sauce), or Goan-style shrimp served with a full complement of chutneys, paratha bread, and dal—will be brought out to you. The smaller original location is in the Alberta Arts District.

3010 S.E. Division St., OR, 97202, USA
503-477–6699
Known For
  • Delicious breads and vegetable side dishes
  • Small Indian gourmet market with spices and curries
  • Mango lassi
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.

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Cafe Olli

$$ | Northeast

This welcoming employee-owned restaurant focused on locally and seasonally sourced ingredients bills itself an "all-day café" and encourages guests to linger. Start the morning with a frittata sandwich and a latte, or drop by later in the day for a wood-fired wild mushroom pizza or a bowl of clams steamed in fennel broth, and maybe a glass of wine.

3925 N.E. Martin Luther King Blvd., Portland, OR, 97212, USA
503-206–8604
Known For
  • Upbeat, community-oriented vibe
  • Homemade ice cream with seasonal flavors
  • Well-curated list of aperitivo cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Dan & Louis Oyster Bar Restaurant

$$

This Old Town landmark, located near the river and Voodoo Doughnuts, has oysters baked Rockefeller-style, stewed, and on the half shell, but the venerable 1907 restaurant offers plenty of other tasty local seafood, including steamed clams, Dungeness crab stew, and beer-battered cold-smoked salmon. The collection of steins, plates, and marine art fills beams, nooks, crannies, and nearly every inch of wall space.

208 S.W. Ankeny St., OR, 97204, USA
503-227–5906
Known For
  • Oyster stew
  • Mix-and-match fried or sautéed combination dishes
  • Endearingly old-fashioned ambience
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.–Thurs.

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Dolly Olive

$$ | Downtown

Angular wood-cut wall mountings and soft overhead globe lamps impart a subtly chic vibe at this upbeat mod-Mediterranean restaurant that divides its menu into "from the grill" (fennel-crusted rib eye, Spanish octopus) and "roasted and fried" (chicken in a Calabrian-chili tomato sauce, Sicilian eggplant parmigiana). If you were hoping to avoid carbs, think again: the homemade pastas are divine, as is the focaccia, baked fresh daily by the in-house bakery.

527 S.W. 12th Ave., Portland, OR, 97205, USA
503-719–6921
Known For
  • Flavorful sides that could be combined into an entire meal
  • Italian-focused wine list
  • Chocolate-pistachio cannoli
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Eleni's Philoxenia

$$ | Pearl District

A self-taught cook who grew up on the island of Crete, chef-owner Eleni Touhouliotis serves up flavorful Greek fare in this unassumingly romantic neighborhood bistro where lamb, rabbit, and shellfish figure prominently on the menu. Share a variety of the more than 40 tapas-size dishes, from traditional dips to refreshing salads to hearty pastas, and note the well-chosen selection of wines, including a number of Greek favorites.

112 N.W. 9th Ave., Portland, OR, 97209, USA
503-227–2158
Known For
  • The midweek $30 per person Eleni's choice tasting menu
  • Kouneli stifatho (an earthy casserole of tender braised rabbit and baby onions)
  • Saganaki cheese flambéed with cognac
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Mon. No lunch

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Firehouse Restaurant

$$ | Woodlawn/Concordia

Occupying a stately, redbrick, former firehouse, this inviting neighborhood spot in Woodlawn is warmed by a wood-fire oven, rustic redbrick-and-wood decor, and sunlight streaming through a glass garage door that's open in nice weather. Although justly well-known for the delicious thin-crust pizzas (try the one with chanterelles, garlic, mozzarella, and thyme), the restaurant receives deserved kudos for its appetizers, salads, and grills, from lightly battered and perfectly fried cauliflower with crème fraîche to meatballs with tomato, rosemary, and kale.

711 N.E. Dekum St., Portland, OR, 97211, USA
503-954–1702
Known For
  • Affordable three-course prix fixe that includes appetizer, salad, and pizza
  • Well-curated list of after-dinner drinks
  • Wood-fired pizzas
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Luce

$$ | Southeast

Run by the same creative team behind top-notch nearby eateries Angel Face and Navarre, this sunny corner storefront is both a casual neighborhood trattoria and a small Italian gourmet grocery stocking olive oils, vinegars, pastas, and sauces. The menu is well suited to sharing and focuses on rustic, hearty classics like minestrone, pappardelle pasta with rabbit, spaghetti with garlic, hot peppers, and clams, and hanger steak with garlic and rosemary. The quality of both the ingredients and the talent in the kitchen makes for a consistently terrific experience here. Save room for the flourless chocolate cake.

Masala Lab PDX

$$ | Northeast

With a colorful purple-and-green color scheme, soaring ceilings with exposed air ducts, and lots of hanging plants, this modern mashup of Indian cuisine and comfort brunch fare isn't quite like anything even offbeat Portland has ever seen before. Dishes are both pretty and tasty, from the kitchari (savory rice dal with cabbage, herb salad, and bright-purple pickled eggs) to a rendition of shrimp and grits that showcases shrimp in a tikka mole sauce over coconut milk polenta. The owners also operate the popular DesiPDX food cart on North Mississippi Avenue.

5237 N.E. Martin Luther King Blvd., Portland, OR, 97211, USA
971-340–8635
Known For
  • Masala Mary cocktails
  • Friendly service
  • Unusual flavor combinations
Restaurant Details
Closed Wed. No dinner

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