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RESTAURANTS |
For your convenience, browsing through the restaurant
offer can be done in two ways. By clicking on the links for recommended
restaurants in Dubrovnik or Dubrovnik Region located above you will
be taken to to the first page. From there on, use the “ Browse by
pages: 1 2...” to navigate through other pages.
Another way is to click directly on any of the restaurants
bellow.
For the complete list of all restaurants and taverns in Dubrovnik
and Dubrovnik Region click
here.
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Recommended restaurants
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by location
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Gastronomy - general
info
The cuisine of Dalmatia and the islands follows
the trend of modern nutritional norms. The brief thermal preparation
of foodstuffs (mainly boiling or grilling) and plenty of fish, olive
oil, vegetables and self-sown herbs found near the sea is why this
cuisine is considered to be very healthy.
Dalmatian wines, like olive oil and salted olives,
have been highly esteemed since ancient times, which the present
names of some of the indigenous grape sorts reveal (Grk : Greek,
from the island of Korčula; Prc from the island of Hvar). Famous
wines include Dingač and Postup from the Pelješac Peninsula, then
there are Pošip and Grk from Korčula; Maraština from the island
of Lastovo, and also Prošek (a sweet dessert wine), the very strong
grape (loza) and herbal brandies (travarica, grapes with medicinal
herbs).
Although even today every area has its own way
of preparing certain dishes, the cuisine of the islands represents
a separate world, their distinguishing features having been discovered
only recently, such as the cuisine of the islands of Hvar, Korčula,
Brač (vitalac, a dish made from lamb offal wrapped in lamb gut and
spike-roasted), Vis (spike-roasted pilchards, as during the Ancient
Greek period; flat cake with pilchards from Komiža and Vis, related
to the modern-day pizza).
Fresh sea fish (dog's tooth, gilt head, sea-bass,
grouper, mackerel, pilchards) grilled, boiled or marinated; then
there are mollusks (squid, cuttlefish, octopus), crustaceans (shrimps,
lobsters) and shellfish (mussels, oysters, date-shells) boiled in
a fish stew or as a risotto.
Of the meat dishes, prosciutto is unarguably unrivaled
- pork leg smoked and dried in the bora (from Drniš), served with
dry, mostly sheep’s cheese (famous sorts of cheese are those from
Pag and Dubrovnik) and salted green and black olives, capers and
pickled onions. Lamb is also very highly valued, especially boiled
or baked on an open fire (Franjevačka begovica from Visovac, or
lopiz from the island of Iž); also, dried mutton (kaštradina), roast
beef, Dalmatian stew (pašticada) with gnocchi, offered by many restaurants.
Lightly boiled vegetables are also favorite dishes
(Swiss chard with potatoes, tomato sauce) often a mixture of cultivated
and self-sown vegetables, spiced with olive oil and wine vinegar,
or served with meat (manestra - pasta with minced meat; arambašiæi
- stuffed vine leaves).
Regions with an abundance of fresh water are famous
for their frog, eel and river crab dishes (the Neretva valley, Trilj
and the Cetina basin). Typical Dalmatian desserts win the heart
with their simplicity. The most usual ingredients include Mediterranean
fruit, dried figs and raisins, almonds, honey, eggs (rafioli, mandulat,
smokvenjak, the gingerbread biscuits from the island of Hvar - rozata).
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Restaurants - good to know
There are more than 60 restaurants in Dubrovnik,
offering a great variety of dishes.
In general, restaurants offer traditional Dalmatian cuisine, Croatian
continental cuisine, and international cuisine, including a Mexican
and a Chinese restaurant in Dubrovnik.
The working hours of most restaurants are from 11.00 - 24.00.
A restaurant's menu is shown at the entrance, as well as the signs
of the credit cards accepted (most major credit cards are generally
accepted).
The price includes taxes, but the service charge
is almost never included and is not mandatory. It is a customary,
however, that the guest who is satisfied with the service leaves
a tip for the waiter, 10% of the total amount is usually a fair
tip.
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Dubrovnik Region Specialties
- secret recipes revealed
Black
Risotto
Prep Time: 10 Minutes
Cook Time: 20 Minutes
Ready in: 30 Minutes
Serves: 6 people
500 g cuttlefish or whole squid
3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
salt to taste
pepper to taste
410g Arborio rice
810g fish soup
500 g shrimps
500g shells (different kind)
3 teaspoons chopped parsley
3 teaspoons chopped garlic
3 teaspoons tomato paste
1 dl white wine
Directions:
Clean the cuttlefish by removing eyes, beak and transparent quill.
Remove and reserve ink sac. Cut the cuttlefish into strips. Sauté
garlic in the oil until translucent. Add the cuttlefish and cook
over moderate heat until golden, stirring from time to time. Add
salt, pepper, parsley, and tomato paste and reduce heat. Add the
rice and stir briefly over high heat to blend flavors. Add the ink
from the cuttlefish sac, and then little by little the fish soup.
Reduce heat to low and cook for about 15 minutes, stirring constantly.
Add white vine, stir briefly until the risotto boils. Stir once
more and serve. |
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Lobster Salad
Prep Time: 30 Minutes
Cook Time: 15 Minutes
Ready in: 45 Minutes
Serves: 4 people
Ingredients:
2 kilo lobster
2 medium head garlic
2 spring onion
salt to taste
2/3 cup olive oil
2 tablespoon vinegar
black pepper to taste
4 teaspoons cappers
Directions:
1. Cook a lobster in a large bowl for 15 minutes. Cool it, cut its
shell horizontally, take the lobster meat out (tail), chop it.
2. Chop garlic, spring onion, and cappers.
3. Place the lobster meat in a large bowl. Add garlic, spring onion,
cappers, salt, olive oil, vinegar, and pepper; mix until ingredients
are combined.
4. Put the mixture back into lobster shell. decorate and serve.
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Motar Salad
Prep Time: 5 Minutes
Cook Time: 20 Minutes
Cooling time: 120 Minutes
Ready in: 15 days
Motar is Adriatic plant that grows at the rocks near the Sea. It
is served with Dalmatian smoked ham and cheese, or it can be served
as a salad.
Directions:
Wash motar and put it into salted water. Cook it for 20 minutes.
Cool it and put into vase in which you previously added water and
vinegar. Keep it for 15 days in a cold and dark place. After that
time it is ready for serving. |
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Dubrovnik's
Rozata
Prep Time: 15 Minutes
Cook Time: 50 Minutes
Cooling time: 120 Minutes
Ready in: 3 Hours 5 Minutes
Serving: 6 people
Ingredients:
1 cup white sugar
1/4 cup water
6 egg yolks
1 liter of milk
Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
2. In a heavy saucepan over medium heat, cook sugar with water,
stirring, until melted and light brown. Pour into a pan or cake
mold, tilting to coat the bottom of the pan. Set aside.
3. In a bowl, gently whisk together evaporated milk, condensed milk,
and egg yolks and mix.
4. Line a roasting pan with a damp kitchen towel. Place baking dish
on towel, inside roasting pan, and place roasting pan on oven rack.
Fill roasting pan with water to reach halfway up the sides of the
baking dish.
5. Bake in preheated oven 45 to 50 minutes, until set. Let cool
completely.
6. To unfold, run a knife around the edges of the pan and invert
the rozata onto a rimmed serving platter. Refrigerate 2 hours and
pour with Caramel Sauce before serving.
Caramel Sauce
Ingredients:
1 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup water
1 cup heavy cream
Directions:
1. In a small, heavy-bottomed saucepan, combine the sugar and water
and bring the mixture to a boil, stirring often. Cook, stirring
occasionally, until the mixture is a deep caramel color and has
the consistency of thin syrup, 10 to 15 minutes.
2. Remove from the heat. Stir in the cream, return the saucepan
to the high heat, and boil the sauce until it regains the consistency
of thick syrup, about 2 minutes.
3. Cool it.
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Recipes
courtesy of restaurant Gverovic - Orsan, Zaton |
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Restaurants
in Dubrovnik and Dubrovnik region currently online: 10
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