Restaurant in Doha, Qatar
Michelin-noted Indian worth booking at Fairmont.

Masala Library at The Fairmont Doha holds a Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025) and pairs a West Bengal-inflected Indian kitchen with one of the Gulf's more serious wine lists: 1,230 selections anchored in Burgundy and Bordeaux. The restaurant is currently closed for rebranding, so confirm timing before you plan. When it reopens, book the kulcha, the dal, and ask about Madeira pairings.
Masala Library at The Fairmont Doha is one of the more considered Indian dining options in the city, holding a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025. It is currently closed for rebranding, so before you plan a visit, confirm reopening timing directly with The Fairmont Doha. If you have been once and are wondering whether to return, the answer is yes — provided the kitchen has carried its signature approach through the transition. For new visitors, this is where to eat Indian food in Doha if presentation and wine pairing matter to you.
The room sits on the first floor of The Fairmont Doha, overlooking Lusail Marina through floor-to-ceiling windows. The white interior is considered rather than cold, and service runs in an organised, attentive register without feeling over-managed. For a return visitor, the things worth knowing are that the kitchen draws meaningfully from West Bengal in addition to more broadly North Indian cooking, which means the fish dishes are worth your attention. The kulcha arrives soft and charred in the right places, and it is the right vehicle for working through the dal selection, which the Michelin inspectors specifically noted. Save room for the bebinca: the Goan dessert is a quiet closer that does not announce itself but rewards the patient diner.
The wine program here is more serious than the setting might suggest. With 1,230 selections and an inventory of 3,500 bottles, this is one of the deeper lists you will find attached to an Indian restaurant anywhere in the Gulf. The list leans into France — Burgundy and Bordeaux are the pillars , with strong representation from Italy, California, Spain, and Madeira. Wine pricing sits at the mid tier of the list's range, meaning you are not trapped at the high end if you want to drink well without ordering a trophy bottle. For a return visitor who drank house-level wine on a first visit, this is the occasion to ask about the Burgundy section. The pairing logic between the wine program and the spice-forward kitchen is not accidental: Madeira in particular handles heat and umami with more grace than most red wines, and a good sommelier will steer you there if you ask.
Editorial angle matters here because the drinks program is genuinely part of the reason to book Masala Library rather than a comparable Indian restaurant in Doha. If you are dining solo or as a pair and want to work through two or three glasses with the tasting arc of the meal, the list gives you real options. For groups who prefer to order a bottle and move on, the France section offers enough range at the mid-price tier to make that decision quickly. The wine director role sits under general manager Brennan Harmeier, who also oversees the floor, which typically produces a more integrated dining experience than venues where those responsibilities are siloed.
On booking: the venue is currently closed for rebranding, which is the single most important practical note on this page. Once it reopens, based on its Michelin recognition and Fairmont positioning, expect demand to be moderate rather than intense. Doha's fine dining scene is growing but has not yet reached the booking-difficulty levels of comparable venues in Dubai or London. This likely means you can plan with a week or two of lead time rather than the month-plus you would need at, say, Trèsind Studio in Dubai or Opheem in Birmingham. Confirm through The Fairmont Doha directly while the rebrand is in progress.
The price range sits at three symbols on the local scale, which places it above mid-market but below the ceiling of Doha's luxury dining tier. For context, you are spending more than you would at Dalchini or Rivaaj, but less than the leading end of venues like Hakkasan. The Google rating of 4.5 across 41 reviews is a small sample but consistent with the Michelin recognition.
For those who prefer to compare the broader Indian fine dining field in the region: Avatara in Dubai runs a vegetarian-only tasting menu at a higher price point. Chaat in Hong Kong and Haoma in Bangkok offer useful reference points for what Michelin-recognised Indian cooking looks like across the region. In London, Amaya and Benares occupy similar territory. Masala Library holds its own in that company, particularly on the wine side.
Also worth noting for Doha visitors: Gymkhana Doha offers another point of comparison in the Indian fine dining bracket locally. For a full picture of where Masala Library sits in the city's dining scene, see our full Doha restaurants guide. If you are planning around a hotel stay, our Doha hotels guide covers the Fairmont and its competitors. Doha's bar and drinks scene is covered separately in our Doha bars guide, and for broader planning, see our Doha experiences guide.
See the full comparison below.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Masala Library | Indian | The Fairmont Doha is a striking property by Lusail Marina and this Indian restaurant occupies a position on its first floor, with full-length windows facing the ever-changing landscape. The plush white surroundings are matched by a well-organised service team, while the kitchen produces colourful and artistically plated dishes – their kulcha is a must for enjoying the excellent dals. There is also a subtle influence from West Bengal so you can expect plenty of fish. Be sure to save room for the bebinca dessert.Currently closed for rebranding.; Michelin Plate (2025); WINE: Wine Strengths: France, Burgundy, Bordeaux, Italy, California, Spain, Madeira Pricing: $$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Selections: 1,230 Inventory: 3,500 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: Pricing: $$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: STAFF: People Brennan Harmeier:Wine Director General Manager: Brennan Harmeier Owner: Jason & Laurie Eubanks; Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| IDAM by Alain Ducasse | French, French Contemporary | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Argan | Moroccan | Unknown | — | |
| Hakkasan | Chinese | Unknown | — | |
| Jiwan | Middle Eastern | Unknown | — | |
| Morimoto | Japanese, Sushi, Japanese Contemporary | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Doha for this tier.
Book at least one to two weeks in advance, particularly for weekend evenings at The Fairmont Doha. The restaurant is currently noted as closed for rebranding, so confirm availability directly with the hotel before committing. Once open, a Michelin Plate venue in a five-star marina property fills quickly.
The first-floor room within The Fairmont Doha is a full-service restaurant, which typically supports group bookings. Contact the Fairmont directly to arrange larger parties, as seating configuration and private dining options are managed at hotel level. The well-organised service team noted in the Michelin guide is a reasonable indicator for groups needing coordinated pacing.
Yes. The floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Lusail Marina give solo diners something to anchor to, and the plated, artistic format suits a leisurely single-cover meal. At ﷼﷼﷼ pricing, solo visits are a real spend, but the Michelin Plate recognition across 2024 and 2025 means the kitchen is consistent enough to justify it.
For a different take on Indian cooking, Jiwan at the National Museum of Qatar offers a strong point of comparison with a distinct cultural setting. If you want to broaden beyond Indian cuisine, IDAM by Alain Ducasse operates at the same tier with French-Qatari cooking. Hakkasan is the closer format match for upscale Asian dining in a hotel environment.
At ﷼﷼﷼, Masala Library sits in the upper tier of Doha dining, but the back-to-back Michelin Plate in 2024 and 2025 confirms the kitchen is producing at a level that justifies the price. The kulcha with dals and the bebinca dessert are flagged specifically in the Michelin notes, which is useful for anchoring value. If artistically plated Indian cooking with West Bengali fish influence is your format, it earns its price point.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.