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GUEST BOOK
These are comments left by guests in our
guest book, sent by email or comments made on other web-sites. Please send
us your opinions also.
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I had the privilege of dining at Salahadeen with a
friend on October 19th. We ended up having another lovely couple from
London ask to join us at our table which made for a fun and festive
evening. The food and atmosphere was divine! I highly recommend this
authentic Egyptian feast of a meal. Mara House is worth finding. It is
clean and welcoming. I will definitely be back the next time I'm in Luxor.
Janis Bane - Oct. 2008
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Last night we went
with Marvin, Carrie and Lindiana to the Salahadeen Restaurant. This is a new
establishment buried in the district behind the railway station. I know "the
wrong side of the tracks" comes to mind but this is a peaceful area not
frequented by tourists so has that added, real Luxor, feeling.
Booking is essential because all food is prepared freshly on the day and the
large number of dishes presented need to be organised with numbers in mind. They
offer a courtesy taxi to collect you from hotel or wherever and return at the
end of the evening. I think this is a shrewd move on the part of the owner
because it is quite a long way to walk through some area's of re-development.
You are welcomed at the door and go into the tastfully decorated bar for
complimentary Karkade and then pre-dinner drinks. You then move through to the
dinning room which has a beautiful Moorish fountain as a centrepiece. The
furniture and decor reminded me of the AlHambra in Spain.
The meal itself consists of 4 sequential trays each loaded with 4 or 5 dishes
for communal eating.
The first course consisted of dips and salads and bread being used to scoop up
your portions.
The second course was a very tasty chickpea soup followed by a second tray of
fried aubergine and various pulses.
The third tray contained beef, liver and chicken dishes as well as the delicious
potato dish which is so popular. This was served with roasted sweet potato as
well. Its all about choice. Needless to say we just had to try everything.
The final course was a delicious fruit sourbet with pomegranate. Finally the
meal was rounded off by a cup of chai.
All the food presented to us was superbly cooked and presented with smooth but
unobtrusive service.
Our host was a delightful lady and we left saying we would definitely return.
The meal was a fixed price of LE100 per head so not necessarily the cheapest you
will find but the quantity and quality make it good value for money. Oct. 2008
Barry on
Luxor4u.com
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This restaurant offers a unique dining experience in Egypt
because it offers genuine Egyptian food.
I have been to Egypt on a number of occasions and have found a lot of
restaurants offer a far blander, westernised equivalent of Egyptian foods.
The restaurant offers a set menu of 14 -16 different dishes over four courses;
with the offer of a break between if it is needed!
The price for the meal comes in at 100LE a person and the restaurant has a bar
with a large range of lagers and spirits including Heineken available at 10LE
and spirits such as Smirnoff vodka and Gordons Gin.
Salahadeen restaurant is located in a suburban part of Luxor a short taxi
journey away from the fuss and constant interruption of the tourist section,
something that the restaurant is happy to arrange for you.
This restaurant is definitely worth a visit for people looking for the real
Egyptian experience. I thoroughly enjoyed my meal here, the food, the excellent
and friendly service and the peace away from the tourist quarter.
TDPO5 tripadvisior October 17
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We wanted to try Egyptain Food and decided to visit Salahadeen on the
recommendation of 'our flat at luxor'. It was easy to book a reservation via
email before going on hoilday and the complementary taxis arrived on time as
promised. Although you can phone and book while you are there - best do it in
advance as the food is slow cooked so they need a bit of notice.
We wanted a bit of an adventure and we got one. As some of you are aware there
is lots of regeneration and lots of building works going on in Luxor. Once the
taxi crossed the very basic level crossing, we entered the real Luxor and for
just a few minutes I did wonder whether this was going to be a good idea.
Amidst all the chaos appeared a beautiful white building that looked out of
place with its surroundings. At that point I realised that this was going to be
a really good adventure.
This was a superb dinning experience. After pre-dinner drinks in the bar, we
were escorted to the dining room which was wonderfully decorated with hand
crafted egyptian furniture and art works.
Mara (the owner) describes the meal as a feast and that it certainly was.
Each couse, and there are four of them, was a wonderful experience. It is a
mezze style meal with a selection of different things to try, salad and dips and
bread to start, followed by soup, followed by vegetable dishes, followed by meat
course that was wonderfully slow cooked beef and very tasty. The liver which is
a very traditional was beautifully cooked, and I dont like liver!
On one hand it was dissapointing that dessert was missing due the mangoes being
too ripe to serve, but on the other we were glad as we were so full we would
have been unable to eat anything else.
It was good to try egyptian food, new tastes, flavours and ingredients, we
didn't like all of it but that was due to our personal taste, but we did try it
all as it looked so good. Some egyptian food is meant to be eaten in small
quantities, which is why each course has a selection of foods for you to dip in
and try.
It was worth every penny, and an absolute pleasure to drink nice room
temperature egyptian red wine (why do some hotels serve it cold!)
we recommended it to friends we had made at our hotel and they too enjoyed it.
Will we come again? - See you next time Mara - it was a pleasure. - "Smudgejg"
on
www.tripadvisor.com/ October 2008
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Dinner was an experience we will
never forget, true Egyptian Food. We thank Mara and her
staff for a wonderful stay and we shall return again in the
future. John, Julie and Jason. 7 Oct. 2008
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After a few truly amazing days in Luxor with all its
intoxicating sounds, smells and sights we were verging
on the brink of sensory overload as we stepped into the
quiet refuge of Salahadeen Restaurant situated in Mara
House. I confess to having inkling as to what we would
find given that I had read a review on Trip Advisor and
had taken the opportunity to visit the website
http://www.salahadeen.com.
My family and I were not disappointed. Mara House is a
tranquil oasis from the hustle and bustle of the city
situated on the outskirts somewhere behind the train
station – just ask any taxi driver to take you there or
Mara will arrange, with her compliments, a taxi to
collect you from your accommodation.
On entering Mara House we were greeted warmly by Mara
herself and as we sipped karkadeh in the beautifully
decorated bar area, it was interesting to hear her story
of how, once bitten by the Luxor bug, (so many of us
have been) she decided to move from her native Ireland
and build Mara House. The house itself is a rather
large, grand building which comprises a number of
apartments available to rent together with the
Salahadeen restaurant. Mara is indeed a brave lady
taking on such a huge project in a foreign land but she
has done a fantastic job. The house is beautifully
decorated in true sympathy with its surroundings and
Salahadeen restaurant is both comfortable and sumptuous.
A great deal of attention to detail has been given to
everything from the alabaster wine goblets to the
feature fountain which is the focal point of the room.
Mara sensibly serves a fixed menu at 8pm each night and
ravenous after our day of adventures we eagerly awaited
what proved to be an enormous feast of wonderfully
flavoursome Egyptian food. The first taste of Mara’s
food was a selection of cold mezze style starters with a
plentiful supply of flatbreads – delicious! Then arrived
bowls of steaming soup followed by another large
assortment this time of hot mezze style dishes and even
more flatbreads. Just when we thought we could eat no
more the main course arrived!!!! This was a homemade
tagen with a large baked sweet potato and enough rice to
feed the population of Cairo. Thankfully, pudding was no
more filling that a bowl of deliciously sweet mango. How
we managed to move from the table is beyond me but with
great difficulty we forced ourselves to leave - with the
promise that undoubtedly, one day soon, we would return.
Salahadeen is a true gem. Go quickly whilst you can
book a table – the word will surely be out soon!!!
The
Stanmore family September 2008
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Sep 5, 2008
We arrived at the Salahadeen Restaurant and Bar, at
Mara House Luxor, at 7.30pm on 4th September 2008. Joining the other diners
in the bar, we were enchanted by the pleasent atmosphere which the
decoration and furnishings created. Although we stick to soft drinks, there
were wines, beers and spirits available. (I noticed that Heiniken was LE 10
and most of the spirits were LE35,)
It wasn't too long before Mrs. Vaughan personally led us into the lovely
restaurant, where we were seated at a good solid table, on matching
meshrabeya chairs. A nice touch was the fountain in the middle of the room,
and the elegant drapes which served to partly divide the dining areas
The meal is advertised as an "Egyptian Banquet," which it certainly was. We
worked our way through 5 courses, and 19 dishes!
The starter was a selection of 5 cold Mezzas with baladi bread, followed by
a delicious soup. Then came a selection of 7 hot Mezzas, also with bread.
7 hot Mezzas
These were followed by the main course consisting of 5 dishes, which
were, rice, sweet potato, lamb tagen, moussaka, and lambs liver with onions.
The meal culminated in a selection of sweet Egyptian cakes, washed down with
black Egyptian tea and hot Karkadeh (hibiscus).
I would defy anyone to manage to eat everything placed in front of them.
Although there were two dishes which I didn't try (simply because I don't
like them) everything else was a treat. Tastes which I hadn't bargained for
joined with well known and loved ones to further the experience of my
palate. Even though I've lived in Luxor for over 12 months, some of these
tastes really took me by surprise!
I thought the cost, at £10 per head, was very reasonable, as it also covered
the cost of picking up the diners and returning them to their lodgings when
they had had their fill! We certainly had a taste of the REAL EGYPT.
Excellent!
Edward - www.ourluxor.co.uk
review written for
www.tripadvisor.com
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