Restaurant in Auderghem, Belgium
Maza'j
375Pearl PointsTwo Bib Gourmands. Lebanese. Strong value case.

About Maza'j
Maza'j is Auderghem's strongest value case for serious cooking: a Lebanese restaurant that has earned the Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025, at a €€ price point that makes the decision easy. Chef Mor's kitchen holds a 4.4 Google rating across 432 reviews. Book it for a weeknight dinner when you want Michelin-recognised food without the fine-dining bill.
Verdict: Book Maza'j for Lebanese cooking that punches well above its price point
Imagine arriving in Auderghem on a quiet weekday evening, the Bd du Souverain emptier than Brussels' centre, and finding a Lebanese restaurant that has earned the Michelin Bib Gourmand two years running — in 2024 and again in 2025. That double recognition is the clearest signal available: Maza'j, under chef Mor, delivers cooking worth seeking out, at a price point (€€) that makes the decision easy. If you are looking for serious Lebanese food in the Brussels periphery without paying fine-dining prices, book here first.
Portrait: What Maza'j Is, and Who It Is For
Maza'j sits on Boulevard du Souverain in Auderghem, one of Brussels' quieter southeastern communes. The neighbourhood is residential rather than touristic, which tells you something useful about this restaurant's audience: it is built on local repeat custom, not passing trade. For explorers who track down cooking on its own terms rather than by postcode prestige, that is a positive signal. A restaurant sustaining a 4.4 Google rating across 432 reviews in a neighbourhood like this is earning those scores from diners who return by choice, not from first-time tourists ticking boxes.
The cuisine is Lebanese, a category that rewards attention in Brussels. Lebanese cooking at its finest is built on precision with mezze, generosity with bread and dips, and the kind of layered flavour that comes from knowing your spice work. Chef Mor's kitchen has been recognised twice by Michelin's Bib Gourmand programme, which specifically rewards good cooking at moderate prices — a harder standard to meet consistently than many diners realise. Earning it once is notable; retaining it in 2025 suggests the kitchen is not resting on early momentum.
The €€ price range positions Maza'j clearly: this is not a cheap takeaway, but it is also not a tasting-menu destination. Think of it as the category where serious cooking meets accessible spending, the range where a full meal including drinks lands at a figure that does not require budget planning. For food-focused diners who want genuine cooking rather than a performance, that positioning is close to ideal. For the same quality of culinary recognition (two consecutive Bib Gourmands), you would typically pay more at comparable addresses in central Brussels.
The Space and the Late Evening Case
Without verified floor-plan data, specific seat counts are not available here, but the address on a broad boulevard in Auderghem, the neighbourhood profile, and the restaurant's consistent review volume all suggest a mid-sized room built for genuine hospitality rather than destination theatre. Lebanese restaurants at this price and quality level typically organise around shared tables and a rhythm of dishes arriving across the table, which makes the spatial experience communal rather than formal.
That format is worth considering if you are thinking about Maza'j as a late-option. Lebanese mezze-led cooking is one of the few cuisine formats that works well at the end of an evening: dishes arrive incrementally, the menu structure does not demand a fixed multi-course commitment, and the food itself, breads, dips, grilled proteins, salads, holds up to a relaxed pace. If you are in Auderghem or the southeastern Brussels arc and want to eat well after standard dinner-rush hours, Maza'j's format is better suited to late arrivals than a tasting-menu restaurant where timing is structural. Confirm hours directly before a late visit, as operating hours are not listed in Pearl's current data.
Booking and Access
Know Before You Go
- Address: Bd du Souverain 145, 1160 Bruxelles (Auderghem)
- Cuisine: Lebanese
- Price range: €€ (moderate)
- Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 and 2025
- Google rating: 4.4 from 432 reviews
- Booking difficulty: Easy
- Chef: Mor
- Hours: Confirm directly, not currently listed
- Phone/website: Not currently listed in Pearl data
Booking difficulty at Maza'j is rated Easy, which is genuinely useful information. A double Bib Gourmand in Belgium can create demand spikes, comparable addresses in Brussels' centre sometimes require two to three weeks' notice after award announcements. Maza'j's Auderghem location means that pressure is lower. For most midweek evenings, same-week booking should be achievable. Weekend dinner slots may be tighter, particularly now that the 2025 Bib Gourmand is confirmed, book a few days ahead to be safe.
For broader context on eating and drinking in this part of Brussels, see our full Auderghem restaurants guide, our full Auderghem bars guide, and our full Auderghem hotels guide. Nearby options worth knowing include Le Transvaal and Villa Singha (Thai) for variety in the same neighbourhood.
If Lebanese cuisine is your focus and you want to see how Maza'j compares internationally, Al Mandaloun in Dubai and Almayass in Abu Dhabi represent the higher-end regional benchmark for the cuisine. Maza'j is operating in a different price register but with comparable Michelin-level recognition for its category.
For Belgian fine dining context, Bozar Restaurant in Brussels anchors the city's creative cooking offer at a higher price tier. Further afield, Boury in Roeselare, Zilte in Antwerp, Hof van Cleve in Kruishoutem, Willem Hiele in Oudenburg, and Bartholomeus in Heist define what Belgium's top-tier restaurant circuit looks like at €€€€ price points. Maza'j is doing something different: delivering Michelin recognition at a fraction of those prices, in a cuisine category those rooms do not touch. Also worth knowing: Castor in Beveren, Cuchara in Lommel, and d'Eugénie à Emilie in Baudour are worth tracking for explorers covering Belgium's broader creative dining scene. Consult our Auderghem wineries guide and our Auderghem experiences guide for rounding out a visit to the area.
The Bottom Line
Maza'j is the clearest value case in Auderghem's restaurant offer right now. Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmands at a €€ price point, in a cuisine that is underrepresented at this quality level in Brussels' southeastern communes, make it an easy recommendation for food-focused travellers and local diners alike. Book it for a weeknight dinner, arrive without rushing, and order broadly across the menu, the mezze format rewards sharing and curiosity in equal measure.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Maza'j?
No bar seating is documented for Maza'j. The venue is a neighbourhood Lebanese restaurant on Boulevard du Souverain in Auderghem, not a bar-format operation. Book a table rather than counting on a counter option — hours and layout details are not publicly confirmed, so calling ahead is advisable.
Is Maza'j good for solo dining?
Lebanese restaurants that run a mezze format tend to suit solo diners reasonably well — ordering a handful of small dishes works at any table size. Maza'j's €€ price point keeps the bill manageable for one. It won't offer the full spread of a shared mezze feast, but the value case holds even dining alone.
What should I order at Maza'j?
Specific menu items are not documented here, so ordering advice beyond this is off-limits. What the two Michelin Bib Gourmands (2024, 2025) do confirm is that the kitchen is delivering consistent quality at a €€ price — so ordering broadly across the menu is a lower-risk proposition than at an unrecognised spot.
What are alternatives to Maza'j in Auderghem?
Auderghem has a thin restaurant offer compared to central Brussels, which is part of why Maza'j stands out at this price point. For Lebanese elsewhere in Brussels, the city has a cluster of options in Ixelles and Saint-Gilles. For Michelin-recognised value cooking in the wider Brussels area, Castor and Cuchara are worth comparing — different cuisines, but similarly positioned on the value-to-quality axis.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Maza'j?
No tasting menu format is confirmed in the available data for Maza'j. Lebanese restaurants at the €€ level typically run an à la carte or set mezze structure rather than a formal tasting menu. At this price point, the value case is strong regardless of format — but verify the current menu structure directly with the restaurant before booking around a specific format.
Is Maza'j good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key celebration where good food and value matter more than ceremony. Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmands give it credibility, and chef Mor's Lebanese cooking at €€ pricing means the bill won't sting. If the occasion calls for a grander room or a longer tasting format, Comme chez Soi or Boury are the right category — Maza'j is the right call when the food is the focus and the budget is the constraint.
Location
Bd du Souverain 145, 1160 Bruxelles, Belgium
Auderghem, Belgium
Compare Maza'j
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maza'j | Lebanese | €€ | Easy |
| Boury | Modern Frlemish, Creative French | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Comme chez Soi | French - Belgian, Classic Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Castor | Modern European, Modern French | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Cuchara | Modern European, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| De Jonkman | Modern Flemish, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Auderghem for this tier.
Also Consider
- Boury, Modern Frlemish, Creative French, €€€€
- Comme chez Soi, French - Belgian, Classic Cuisine, €€€€
- Castor, Modern European, Modern French, €€€€
- Cuchara, Modern European, Creative, €€€€
- De Jonkman, Modern Flemish, Creative, €€€€
Maza'j operates in a completely different price tier from the comparison set here. Boury, Comme chez Soi, Castor, Cuchara, and De Jonkman are all €€€€ addresses working in Modern Flemish, Classic French-Belgian, and Creative European registers. Maza'j is €€ and Lebanese. The Michelin thread connecting them is the Bib Gourmand, which is specifically designed to flag the best cooking-to-price ratio in the guide. On that measure, Maza'j is not competing with those rooms, it is doing something they are not built to do.
If your priority is Belgium's highest-level tasting-menu experience and price is secondary, Boury or De Jonkman are the stronger calls. Comme chez Soi remains the benchmark for classic French-Belgian cooking in the country, and Castor and Cuchara offer creative modern menus at the premium end. None of those addresses will satisfy the specific want for well-executed Lebanese food at a sensible price in the southeastern Brussels arc.
For a mixed-group dinner where budget range is a real consideration, Maza'j wins on accessibility: easier to book, lower spend per head, and a cuisine format, shared mezze, that works naturally for groups of different appetites and preferences. If you are planning a full Brussels dining itinerary and want to cover both ends of the quality spectrum without spending €€€€ at every meal, Maza'j is the most practical anchor for a midweek dinner, with a €€€€ address reserved for the occasion meal.
Recognized By
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