Jerusalem offers many restaurants near the Baka, so weather you are looking for a certain cuisine, budget, or menu of your liking, start your search below, with a list of Baka restaurants and bars
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The "Grand Café" located in the Bakaa neighborhood, opened in 2011. European atmosphere and New York looks meticulous design of each detail brought a significant change in design concept of cafes in Jerusalem, and this is certainly evident in style of "Grand Café".
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Nearly identical dairy cafes are legion in Jerusalem, and Beit Lechem Road, the leafy and uncharacteristically peaceful thoroughfare that cuts through the heart of the old stone villas and gardens of Baka, is home to more than its fair share.
Occupying a choice spot midway along the road's length is Kalo, a pleasant-enough cafe that earns its charm more from its read more
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Tel Avivians, Israel's equivalent of those New Yorkers who seem skeptical of the existence of restaurants, bars, nightlife and living people beyond the municipal boundaries of their home turf, have long derided Jerusalem and its residents as beyond square. Lately, however, Tel Avivians have been forced to acknowledge Jerusalem's growing hip cachet, as bars and clubs catering to the young read more
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Traveling around Israel, especially northern Israel, one is bound to come in contact with a tzimmer, Israel's variant of the bed-and-breakfast concept. However, this nearly ubiquitous establishment of the North has yet to really arrive to the capital city. But Jerusalem does have one noted B&B called Little House in Baka, which is indeed as its name might imply, a little house read more
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Jerusalem's nightlife scene is known for its sweet tooth. Sure, the city has its share of pre-drinking gathering spots (and post-revelry munch binge institutions) offering pizza, griddled meats and sandwiches, but in the wee hours, the party people can be observed huddled in highest concentrations around modest, beloved local joints frying up French crepes and Belgian waffles with homemade read more
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Recent spikes in the rate of anti-Semitic incidents in France have sent French aliya (Jewish immigration to Israel) numbers through the roof, making the French an increasingly visible group in Jerusalem. Dispiriting as the situation may objectively be, France's loss is Israel's gain, as French Jews bring with them a touch of the French approach to cuisine - and some seriously good baguettes.
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Cafe B'Gina allows you to take in its biggest selling point with spacious outdoor seating, which is the obvious choice during the seven or eight months of the year when the weather is guaranteed to be perfect. The menu offers the same basic categories of food (soups, salads, pastas, sandwiches, pastries) as every other cafe in Jerusalem, but distinguishes itself with a willingness to experiment read more
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