Showing 138 restaurants
The seven-course menu offered here will take up most of an afternoon or evening, promising 'the flavours and tastes of molecular cuisine'. — Time Out
This restaurant is worth the considerable splurge, but only if you can snag one of the highly coveted riverside tables. — Frommer's
Everything is a faithful replica of what once was: immense polished-brass and silk-shaded lamps are suspended from the glossy, white-beamed ceiling. — Travel + Leisure
Perhaps the best-known cafe in all of Prague, Slavia was historically the haunt of artists, intellectuals, and dissidents, including Renaissance man Václav Havel. — Let's Go
The Savoy is a classic, L-shaped Habsburg-era café from 1893 with a superb, neo-Renaissance ceiling. — Rough Guide
Popular pub/brasserie located in the Jewish Quarter, with a pavement terrace and a large beer counter at the entrance. — Michelin Guide
Easily the most epic café space in town, this balconied, art nouveau sipping space (with a grand piano, no less) is situated at street level in the magnificently restored Municipal House. — Time Out
An excellent place for a late and lazy breakfast on the terrace, Louvre has been in business since the early 1900s. — DK Eyewitness
Try a mezze starter, with excellent humus, and then a lamb shish kebab or salmon served in nori seaweed as an entrée. — Frommer's
This warm, inviting cafe and bakery serves freshly made soups, salads, sandwiches, and pasta dishes, making it a convenient stop for lunch. — Fodor's
The most engaging venue for indulging in Prague's growing obsession, Thai food, is better than its tag-line, 'the art of taste'. — Time Out
Five centuries of cred as a beerhall have made the Little Bears a mecca for Budvar drinkers. The menu goes well beyond pub grub, with pork in plum sauce and fillets in dark beer reduction. — Time Out
Jáma gets its share of abuse from longtime residents for being a kind of American-style college bar in Prague, but there's no denying it is a fun place to grab a beer. — Frommer's
The city's best seafood restaurant is in the Radisson Blu Alcron, a stately New Town hotel where many journalists, artists, and world leaders stayed during the city's interwar golden age. — Concierge
Ideal for special occasions, U Modre Kachnicky (which means “At the Blue Duckling”) serves traditional Czech cuisine in an intimate, old-world dining room. — Travel + Leisure
Set amidst the castle vineyards, just outside the Black Tower (Černá věž), this place has three separate places one on top of the other. — Rough Guide
After bringing the first true bagel café to post-1989 Prague, it moved on to free coffee refills, fresh muffins, delicious breakfast bagels and bagel sandwiches. — Time Out
Who knew that Czechs had such a love for hamburgers? This cozy, wood-paneled place on a quiet corner in Vinohrady makes the best burgers in Prague. — Frommer's
Decent vegetarian food and a trendy, club-like atmosphere has won Radost FX a good local following for many years. — DK Eyewitness
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