NOMMOS TANGER
Right on the marina, this restaurant-bar-lounge boasts an incredible view ...Read more
L'ADRESSE LOUNGE
A fashionable address for a drink or dinner. In the new city, in a large ...Read more
Right on the marina, this restaurant-bar-lounge boasts an incredible view ...Read more
A fashionable address for a drink or dinner. In the new city, in a large ...Read more
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Cafés open early in the morning, some as early as 6am or 6.30am, to serve breakfast to early risers and late sleepers. They close at dusk, or sometimes later. It's all up to the owner.
You should expect to pay less than 10 DH for a mint tea or a cup of coffee in a small café in Tangiers. Prices can go up if you're in a luxury or touristy establishment.
Although theoretically open to all, traditional cafés are generally frequented exclusively by male customers. If you're a woman, and a lonely one at that, you may feel uncomfortable.
The people of Tangier have a café culture. Men go there to read the paper, play cards or dominoes and sip mint tea. Middle-class and middle-class women are more likely to visit the ice-cream parlors on the corniche with their children.
Children are welcome everywhere, as long as they are accompanied by their parents. With the exception of bars serving alcohol, where their presence would be highly inappropriate.
A 1991 law banned smoking in public places. But as the implementing decrees were never adopted, the law remained a dead letter. As a result, each establishment does as it pleases.
There are no "scams" as such in cafés or tea rooms. The only inconvenience, as everywhere else in the world, is the high prices charged in certain tourist or luxury establishments. You pay to see (and be seen).