- Steamed mussels mariniere, St. Ives Bakery bread £9.5 - big juicy mussels that really filled the shell. Better than I expected.
I thought being located on the Red Sea would mean it would be easy to find a recommended seafood restaurant that served locally caught items. It turned out to be surprisingly difficult, maybe because there aren't many (any) decent review sites and so it was really going off Google reviews, most of which aren't the most helpful. Certainly finding out menus and prices was near impossible. In the end the choices near the marina were Alhalaka (4000+ reviews), Shellfish restaurant (5* on Google but only 7 reviews), or Starfish (6000+ reviews). I chose Alhalaka in the end only really because we hadn't walked up north of the marina and there was a fish market nearby that I wanted to see (which was unfortunately closed at that time).
Upon walking in we were directed upstairs. We were ignored up there for a good long period and staff hustled around quickly trying to get things done. Eventually we had a table and started the next wait for menus and service. I asked about fresh seafood and was told about the counter downstairs, right next to the entrance and somehow I'd missed it. It had both Red Sea and Mediterranean Sea options and get charged by weight. There's also some tanks, in which the largest bugs I've ever seen were clambouring. Medium Red Sea shrimp (320g for 6) was EGP450/kg and I also chose a Red Sea grouper (EGP195/kg, whole, uncleaned 500g) for it's beautiful red colour with blue-black spots that at least kept some of the beauty after cooking. They had bigger shrimp and other things from the Mediterranean but I wanted to stay as local as possible.
After choosing from the counter downstairs, they weighed and put them into a metal bowl before it was off to the kitchen. I was sent back upstairs to give a ticket to the waiter and I added some seafood soup and dip.
The food is very good and cooked very well. Bread was fresh, puffy and nice, and aubergine dip was good and really cheap. Soup was delicious with a lovely colour and containining prawns, clams and fish. Prawns had been grilled as had the grouper been butterflied and served sengari style. They tasted good and particularly the fish showed that the seafood lived up to their standing as a specialist restaurant..
However the service is chaos and it takes effort to get attention. Busboys in red shirts worked really hard and deserved tips. When I gave one specifically to one busboy he seemed shocked but thankful. Management staff who deal with orders and payments tried to make me pay for water we didn't have. When I informed him, his reply was it's only a little bit of money and I should pay it anyway, then wanted to deduct less than the actual amount charged for the water.
The bill was printed but the total was hand written so I had to ensure the counting was correct. They need to learn some honesty at the management level.
Apparently camel is a developing meat source in Australian butchers, and maybe I'll have to try seek it out after this experience.
This lovely hotel (although with slightly deceptive descriptions of the room balconies) was well located at the corner of the marina, and a short walk to a large supermarket, all the marina shops, the included beach club, and general street festivities. We were primarily in the area for scuba diving and it made a good base for that.
Included breakfast had options of Egyptian (pictured) which was a nice ful, a way too salty falafel (salad and bread helped to balance) and egg. They also had other ones such as English which I don't have a picture of but was quite inferior.
The fresh morning mango or guava juices were thick and excellent. It meant for a good full stomach before the long boat out to the beautiful Red Sea.
After 4 long and hot, packed days of touring from Aswan, Abu Simbel, Luxor and now finally to Hurghada, we were ready for a rest. Our hotel on the marina in Hurghada meant we could have a little swim at the beach club to feel the Red Sea for the first time, before a restful evening enjoying the views.
A walk along the marina looking for takeaway left me at Red Dragon for sushi - fish from the Red Sea and a little bit different preparation to what we'd been having recently.
The nigiri platter EGP310 was a simple order and the manager let me substitute a few things, namely the salmon and tuna, since that is common and also it wasn't from the Red Sea, which I specifically wanted. Basically they were all subtituted for eel and so the final dish was 2 nigiri shrimp, 4 nigiri eel (unagi), 2 nigiri octopus, 2 nigiri squid fried, 4 ura shrimp, 4 ura eel, 6 maki crab. They were all fine without being outstanding. The ratio of rice was quite high but it meant for a slightly more filling morsel.
Simple and adequate.
The outdoor area looks nice to sit in although in summer it is too hot to enjoy that anyway.
Our guide was keen to take us for a traditional Egyptian breakfast in Luxor, his hometown. With a bright and early 6am start, this unnamed hole in the stone wall building which was indescriptly next to what looked like a plain open sandy walled off section (like an empty carpark) already had some locals waiting outside for their morning falafel.
The turnover of fresh fried falafels filled the air inside, but definitely not in an oil-saturated air way.
Breakfast was served with a traditional ful (fava beans with a boiled egg to mix in), crisp falafels which were very good, salad, pickles, potato fries (average and not crisp unfortunately), aubergine strips, and a soft cheese with cumin. And of course extra cumin and chilli to sprinkle as required.
An excellent and delicious Egyptian breakfast indeed. I'm sure a local will be able to find the location again for me if needed...