Pricey.we ordered 250 gm of cheese kunafa. The boys there had no idea how to serve it. Cheese was rubbery. Kunafa wasn't good either. Place was run down. Aircon was dilapidated. Certainly avoidable now.
I appreciate the concept to sell Turkish sweets in a typical turkish style but it's not value for money. I mean like they give you a very fancy box for sweet with a bag which looks like you are getting a jewelry but the taste. And they don't even sell a real kunafa. A real kunafa is like a pizza shaped with a topping of thin sewai and little sweet with honey dipped. I don't know what they sell and tag it "KUNAFA". Kunafa is one of my favorite sweets but this ruined it.
Just a very big hype created about Mediterranean food sweets product is not at all value for money even otherwise there is no royal eating Delicacies taste is also not that much good very few people like it they are always short of packing box
Not the greatest of places to for for Turkish fare. The main place is actually far away and this location is actually just a shop with a small sit in. The cheese Kunafa was just ok but the Turkish tea was way below the standard Turkish fare, the cost of the tea is exorbitant and the taste is almost bland, like drinking regular Taj Mahal - Black Tea!
Baklava's tastes really good & has a bit of crunchiness to it unlike indian sweets but kunafa was way too sweet for my liking one or two bites are fine but finishing whole for one person can ruin the taste due to too much sweetness.
All the baklava's are tasty One slice of Kunafa should be shared by 2 or may be 3 people to keep the taste bud alive & sweetness contained.
All the things are priced a little high for e.g: 1 slice of kunafa Bel Jibna was 416 rupees.