Restaurant in Kuwait City, Kuwait
Matbakhi
225Pearl PointsSerious Palestinian cooking inside a mall.

About Matbakhi
Matbakhi, open since spring 2024 inside Kuwait City's The Avenues mall, is a credible destination for contemporary Palestinian and Levantine cooking — charcoal grills, mezze, and meat-filled pastries anchored by ingredient quality. It books easily, suits solo diners and groups alike, and sits at the premium end of mall dining without the formality of a white-tablecloth restaurant.
Verdict
Matbakhi is worth booking if you want a serious, ingredient-forward take on Palestinian and Levantine cooking in a setting that punches above the typical mall-dining expectation. Open since spring 2024, it has already built a loyal following in Kuwait City — rare for a restaurant in its first year. The format suits everyone from solo explorers lingering over mezze to small groups working through a charcoal grill spread. Booking is easy, which makes it accessible, but that also means it can get busy at peak hours. Go with intent rather than impulse, and you will get a meal that holds up against the better Levantine tables in the Gulf.
About Matbakhi
Matbakhi sits inside The Avenues, Kuwait's largest shopping mall on Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan Road in Surra. The location sounds like a compromise, but in practice it works in your favour: The Avenues draws a crowd that expects quality, and Matbakhi has positioned itself as a destination within that space rather than a fallback option. Since opening in spring 2024, the restaurant has focused on contemporary interpretations of Palestinian and Levantine classics, a cuisine category that lives or dies by the quality of its sourcing.
That sourcing orientation is where Matbakhi earns its credibility. Levantine cooking at its core depends on produce integrity: the brightness of a good tomato in a fattoush, the fat content of lamb going onto a charcoal grill, the freshness of herbs folded into meat-filled pastries. When those inputs are right, the cuisine reads as clean and vivid. When they are not, no technique rescues it. Matbakhi's contemporary approach to this tradition suggests a kitchen that understands this — the menu spans traditional breakfast dishes through to charcoal grills and mezze, a range that requires consistent sourcing across protein, dairy, and vegetable categories simultaneously. For a food explorer interested in how regional cuisines translate to a Gulf dining context, that breadth is the thing to pay attention to.
Visually, the room carries the same contemporary framing as the food. The Avenues is a high-design environment, and Matbakhi fits that register without tipping into the kind of over-styled interior that distracts from the plate. The setting is polished enough for a business lunch or a dinner with people you want to impress, but not so formal that a solo lunch feels out of place. The charcoal grill component means there is often visual and aromatic activity coming from the kitchen side of the room, which gives the space a sense of purpose that purely comfort-driven Levantine restaurants sometimes lack.
For practical logistics: The Avenues is accessible by car and has substantial parking. The restaurant is easy to book relative to comparable dining options in Kuwait City, so you do not need to plan weeks in advance, but arriving at peak mall hours , particularly on weekends and Thursday evenings , without a reservation is a risk. Since opening in spring 2024, the restaurant has had roughly a year to refine its operation, which is long enough that early teething problems should be behind it but recent enough that the kitchen is likely still cooking with ambition rather than complacency.
If you are visiting Kuwait City and want to understand the contemporary Levantine dining conversation happening in the Gulf right now, Matbakhi is one of the more coherent places to do it. It is not the only answer , see the comparison section below , but it is a considered one, and the combination of Palestinian and Levantine focus in a properly resourced setting is not something you find at every price point in this city. Check our full Kuwait City restaurants guide for broader context, or explore Kuwait City hotels, bars, and experiences to build out your trip.
Booking
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. You do not need to plan far ahead for most visits, though weekend evenings and Thursday nights at The Avenues are busier. A reservation is advisable for groups of four or more at those times. For solo or paired visits on weekday lunches, walk-in availability is likely but not guaranteed.
Explore More
For broader reference on what serious ingredient-led restaurants look like at the global level, Pearl profiles include Arpège in Paris, which built its reputation almost entirely on sourcing integrity, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, where the kitchen's relationship with its ingredient supply defines the entire menu concept. Closer to a contemporary urban dining format, Atomix in New York City and Atelier Crenn in San Francisco show what it looks like when a regional culinary tradition is reframed with modern precision and sourcing discipline. See also Le Bernardin, Alinea in Chicago, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Emeril's in New Orleans, Alain Ducasse Louis XV in Monte Carlo, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Aqua in Wolfsburg, and Arzak in San Sebastián for international benchmarks across fine-dining formats. Also see our Kuwait City wineries guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Matbakhi good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. Matbakhi delivers a premium take on Palestinian and Levantine cooking — charcoal grills, mezze, pastries — that reads as a proper dining event rather than a mall stopover. It works well for celebratory dinners with friends or family, though it is not a formal fine-dining room. If the occasion calls for a quiet, intimate setting, a Thursday or Friday night at The Avenues will be busier and louder.
Is Matbakhi good for solo dining?
Reasonably so. Levantine menus like Matbakhi's are built around sharing plates — mezze, grills, pastries — which can make solo ordering feel lopsided, but a couple of dishes plus a traditional breakfast spread works well on your own. The mall setting at The Avenues means the room stays active, so dining alone here is comfortable rather than awkward.
What should I wear to Matbakhi?
Matbakhi is inside a shopping mall, so there is no formal dress requirement. Neat, presentable clothing is appropriate given the premium positioning of the restaurant, but you are not expected to dress for a formal occasion. Most guests arrive having been shopping or heading out for the evening.
What are alternatives to Matbakhi in Kuwait City?
Cantina is the most direct comparison if you want a different angle on serious, ingredient-led cooking in Kuwait City. For Palestinian and Levantine specifically, Matbakhi has built a devoted following since opening in spring 2024 and is currently the clearest venue for that cuisine category in Kuwait at this price positioning.
Can Matbakhi accommodate groups?
The Avenues location gives Matbakhi enough floor space to handle groups comfortably, and the shareable format of Palestinian and Levantine food — mezze, grills, pastries — suits group dining well. For larger parties on a weekend or Thursday night, booking ahead is advisable since The Avenues draws heavy foot traffic those evenings.
What should I order at Matbakhi?
The menu covers Palestinian and Levantine classics: traditional breakfast dishes, charcoal grills, mezze, and meat-filled pastries. Based on what Matbakhi has built its following around since opening in spring 2024, the charcoal grill section and pastries are the items that differentiate it from a standard Levantine restaurant. Order across categories rather than focusing on one section.
Can I eat at the bar at Matbakhi?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in available venue data for Matbakhi. As a restaurant in Kuwait — a dry country — there is no alcohol bar. If counter or casual seating options matter to you, check the venue's official channels or check on arrival at The Avenues.
Location
Avenues Mall, Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan Rd, Surra 03000, Kuwait
Kuwait City, Kuwait
Compare Matbakhi
Also Consider
- Cantina, Notable alternative
How It Compares
In Kuwait City's contemporary dining scene, Matbakhi's closest named peer on Pearl is Cantina. Where Matbakhi focuses on Palestinian and Levantine cooking with a charcoal-grill and mezze format, Cantina operates in a different cuisine lane. If your priority is regional Arab cooking with serious sourcing credentials, Matbakhi is the clearer choice between the two. If you want something outside the Levantine category, Cantina is worth considering on its own terms.
Within the Levantine dining tier more broadly, Matbakhi earns its position through format breadth, the menu covers traditional breakfast through to evening grills, which gives it more occasion flexibility than single-format competitors. The mall location at The Avenues is not a drawback in the Kuwait City context: The Avenues is the city's most high-profile retail and dining environment, and restaurants there operate at a higher baseline standard than typical mall dining elsewhere. Booking difficulty is Easy across both venues, so you are not choosing one over the other because of access, you are choosing based on what cuisine and atmosphere you want.
For a food explorer building a Kuwait City dining itinerary, Matbakhi makes sense as the Levantine anchor of your trip. Pair it with something from our full Kuwait City restaurants guide in a different cuisine category to get a rounder picture of what the city's dining scene offers right now.
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