Restaurant de la Libération

Rabat


Cheap, cheerful and marginally more classy than the string of other places along this perpetually busy road, this basic restaurant does a steady line in traditional favourites. Friday is couscous day and a bowl of harira (a hearty soup made of tomatoes, onions, saffron and coriander, often with lentils, chickpeas and lamb) will set you back Dh6.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Rabat attractions

1. Rabat Medina

0.26 MILES

When the French arrived in the early 20th century, this walled medina by the sea was the full extent of the city. Built on an orderly grid in the 17th…

2. Grande Mosquée de Rabat Medina

0.33 MILES

This mosque, a 14th-century Merinid original much rebuilt in the intervening years, is located just off the Souq As Sebbat. It is closed to non-Muslims.

3. Souq As Sebbat

0.43 MILES

Recently restored, this covered souq at the eastern end of Rue Souika specialises in jewellery, rugs and leather goods, and is the only part of the medina…

4. Andalusian Gardens

0.49 MILES

These gardens, laid out by the French during the colonial period, are located within the Kasbah des Oudaias. Full of citrus trees, lofty palms and vibrant…

5. Bab Oudaia

0.53 MILES

The most dramatic entry to the kasbah is through the enormous Almohad gate of Bab Oudaia, built in 1195. Its location, facing the heart of the city and…

6. Kasbah des Oudaias

0.53 MILES

Rabat's historic citadel occupies the site of the original ribat (fortress-monastery) that gave the city its name. Predominately residential, its narrow…

7. St Pierre Cathedral

0.59 MILES

With an architecturally interesting exterior, this bright white cathedral dates from 1919 but its two art deco–style towers were added in the 1930s. They…

8. Mosque El Atiqa

0.6 MILES

This small mosque is Rabat's oldest. It was built in the 10th century and restored in the 18th with funds donated by an English pirate known as Ahmed El…