Cafes, Restarants & Bars
The quality of New Zealand restaurants is
fantastic, the portions are respectable,
and good value for money - especially
at BYO establishments,
where the cost is eased if you "bring
your own" wine, sometimes
for a small corkage fee (typically
$2-5). In most restaurants you
can expect to pay upwards of $15
for a main course, perhaps $30
for three courses without wine.
Service tends to be unpretentious
and helpful without being forced,
and there is no expectation of
a tip, though a reward for exceptional
service is always welcomed.
New Zealand's range of
ethnic
restaurants is meagre
by international standards, with
only the major influx of east Asian
immigrants enervating the scene
and lending a strong Chinese and
Japanese and Thai flavour to the
larger cities, alongside a smattering
of Mexican places. Maori
food is barely represented
in restaurants at all, but you
shouldn't miss the opportunity
to sample the contents of a hangi
, an earth oven producing delectable,
fall-off-the-bone meat and delicately
steamed vegetables.
Often there is little ground between
restaurants and the better
café/bars which
have sprung up all over New Zealand
and offer food that's just as good
and a few dollars cheaper. In the
café or bar dining is less
formal and you may well find yourself
elbow to elbow with people only
there for the beer or coffee, but
dining is very much part of the
café/bar scene. Simpler cafés may
only stretch to breakfasts, grilled
focaccias stuffed with Italian-inspired
fillings, salads and cakes but
always produce good coffee and
keep long hours.
Though common in the more cosmopolitan
cities, cafés are less prevalent
in the country towns, which are
still ruled by traditional
tearooms ,
daytime (most close around 5pm),
self-service places that are low
on atmosphere but high on value.
Your drink of choice would be coffee
or Tea, nothing to flash here,
usually accompanied by a cellophane-wrapped
sandwich, uninspiring savouries
and either "Devonshire (cream)
Teas" or home-style cakes
- the carrot cake, banana cake
and custard squares are generally
good bets. On main tourist routes,
long-distance buses usually make
their comfort stops at tearooms.
Most good bars serve
pub
meals , often the best
budget eating around with straightforward
plates of steak and chips, lasagne
or burritos, all served with salad
for around $10. One to look out
for here is the nationwide Cobb & Co. chain,
formerly used as waystations by
stagecoaches and now offering reliable
meals and good last-all-day breakfasts.
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