Where We Are Going Today: Lisboa, Nata & Cafe

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Updated 14 February 2022
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Where We Are Going Today: Lisboa, Nata & Cafe

  • The cafe offers another Portuguese dessert called the pillow filled with almonds

Lisboa, Nata & Cafe is a newly opened cafe in Jeddah that specializes in the famous Portuguese pastry, pastel de nata.
The name of the cafe fuses the Portuguese capital, Lisboa, with the traditional dessert.
The recipe for nata, the custard-like filling of the pastry, is more than 200 years old, and contains egg yolks, flour, butter and sugar. The crunchy exterior is a fine puff pastry. Many Portuguese towns and cities features regional dessert varieities, but pastel de nata can be found across the country.
The cafe also offers another Portuguese dessert called the pillow filled with almonds. There is also a Portuguese croissant, a mix between a classical French croissant and a brioche pastry.
Located on Prince Saud Al-Faisal Street, Al-Khalidiyyah district. For more information visit the cafe’s Instagram account @lisboa.ksa.

 


Where We Are Going Today: Orenda Coffee Hub in Dhahran

Updated 14 January 2026
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Where We Are Going Today: Orenda Coffee Hub in Dhahran

  • The Hasawi cookie was the highlight of my visit, and definitely something I would order again

In search of a hot beverage that you can hold like a hug for your hand as the winter weather cools? Try Orenda in Dhahran.

According to Dictionary.com, Orenda is defined as “an invisible magic power believed by the Iroquois people of North America to pervade all natural objects as a spiritual energy.”

While geographically far away from the land in which the word originated, the cafe has plenty of inspiration from local and global lands.

Their Hasawi cookies—caked with dates and a tiny bit of nuts and cardamom tucked within to give it texture and an elevated taste of neighboring Al-Ahsa—goes for SR 12. This was the highlight of my visit and I would definitely order again.

I tried it with a satisfying SR 16 cappuccino in a ceramic mug. Soft jazz played on the day of our visit. Plenty of natural light bathed the space with the giant windows and many people were typing on their laptops or scrolling on their phones in silence.

 It has a perfectly quiet, perhaps even an orenda atmosphere.

While the weather is still pleasant, you can find many options for outdoor seating. There’s also an upstairs section, up a fun, winding green spiral staircase. Though no elevator was in sight, the bottom floor interior seems wide enough for a wheelchair.

If you do find yourself wandering up the second floor, you’ll find even more seating with an even cozier feel with decor reminiscent of a warm home.

Restrooms are situated on the next and final floor, up even more steps.

A prayer area can be found on the third floor too, along with a massive glass door leading into an outdoor space with tables and chairs aplenty.

Opened eight months ago, it remains the first and only branch in the Kingdom.

Because it seemed very popular, I ordered an iced Orenda matcha for the road, at SR 24. It was decent.

It is open from 6 a.m. until midnight daily, aside from Thursdays and Fridays when it closes at 1 a.m.

Follow them on @orendacoffee.sa.