Etnachta: new cafe on Dizengoff
Artichoke, just for looks ;8~)'
Looking for a new dining experience in Tel Aviv? You should try the Etnachta cafe-restaurant at 190 Dizengoff (Tel: 03-522-6001). Etnachta opened a month ago (July 2007) and is already drawing good crowds on evenings and weekends.
The Etnachta has a very pleasant inside dining room. There are only eight (8) inside tables for or 4. There is also a friendly styled bar/counter that can seat another 8 to 10 people. Outside there are many tables of good size with comfortable chairs.
The service is friendly and fast. The menu offers breakfast, lunch and dinner. The Etnachta is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Snacks and appetizers are also offered. One of the features is a real pizza oven that turns out a beautiful product. They also serve fresh sourdough bread with the meals.
Besides pizza they offer a variety of cheeses, hummus and tehina, baked and stuffed eggplant, oven roasted chicken breast, a combo of apples and yogurt and a few salad combinations.
Try the Etnachta for an enjoyable dining experience // sam-d-man from Tel Aviv.
Editor's note: Etnachta is an example of early local gentrification. Not that Dizengoff is a rundown area, but this general area has not been renovated for years. Keep your eye on this block and the area down to Dizengoff circle, it's the north Dizengoff developpers and renovators gobbling up more city property ;8~)'
Etnachta means 'break' in Aramaic
Editor's note: Aramaic words are used in everyday Hebrew. Aramaic comes from the 'Mishna' the first commentary to the Torah which was written in the first diaspora in Babylon. More on the Hebrew language in upcoming stories.
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