Where We Are Going Today: Joontos restaurant

Joontos is deliberately kept exclusive to AlUla with no other branches, ensuring high quality and a unique experience. (AN photo)
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Updated 08 January 2026
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Where We Are Going Today: Joontos restaurant

While staying at Dar Tantora: The House Hotel in AlUla recently, I kept coming back for seconds at the establishment’s restaurant, Joontos, awarded a Bib Gourmand distinction in the Michelin Guide 2025.

If you are also staying at the hotel, this is the breakfast option that is conveniently provided — with no buffet in sight.

On my first breakfast there, on a crisp cool morning, I overheard several guests ask if there was a buffet and each was told no, it was a la carte.

That special attention to each plate made sense moments later when my selection arrived. I did not need to be distracted or stuff my plate with a mismatch of items but focus on one decadent dish at a time.

Even if you are not a hotel guest, you can — and perhaps should — also dine there. Seating is limited, so it is best to book ahead. 




Joontos is deliberately kept exclusive to AlUla with no other branches, ensuring high quality and a unique experience. (AN photo)

You can enter either from outside the building or via the labyrinth within the hotel. Like in life, the path there seems complicated at first, but very easy once you know where to go.

The aptly-named Joontos derives from the Spanish word “juntos,” meaning “together.”

While the staff told me they tend to skirt around using the overused word fusion, the food is indeed a tasty mix of this and that.

It serves what they call “modern Saudi cuisine” from chef Jaume Puigdengolas, using local ingredients from nearby farms, with a menu medley full of international favorites.

The outdoor seating in the fresh air is spacious and offers sweeping views of the ancient rock formations. But the main view will be your beautifully curated dishes, bursting with vibrant color and even brighter flavor. 




Joontos is deliberately kept exclusive to AlUla with no other branches, ensuring high quality and a unique experience. (AN photo)

There are limited semi-indoor tables, which usually need to be reserved.

Since oranges were in season, I had freshly squeezed juice and indulged in the mascarpone croissant with berries that they recommended, both highlights. I also could not resist the plate of homemade baked bread with various sauces for dipping.

One morning, I ordered the Moroccan eggs bowl, made with freshly poached eggs — I asked for mine medium — served with roasted cherry tomatoes, olives, whipped labneh and chili oil.

I returned for several days and also for a group lunch — everything was excellent. It was consistently good.

My food arrived on time, and the service was attentive; friendly without being overbearing. 




Joontos is deliberately kept exclusive to AlUla with no other branches, ensuring high quality and a unique experience. (AN photo)

That said, on one visit, my friend ordered a granola yogurt bowl and an egg dish — the granola arrived instantly, and she raved about it, but the eggs never came.

Despite asking multiple times, they did not arrive, and we eventually had to rush out, so the rest of the order was canceled.

Joontos is deliberately kept exclusive to AlUla with no other branches, ensuring high quality and a unique experience.

It is open daily for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, with a smart-casual dress code. 




Joontos is deliberately kept exclusive to AlUla with no other branches, ensuring high quality and a unique experience. (AN photo)

If you travel by car, there is free parking available at Old Town South Parking, making it easy to pop in and enjoy a meal, as many locals did.

While the Dar Tantora hotel is named for the tantora atop its building — the triangular stone sundial whose shadow across the space below historically signaled the start of the farming season — perhaps the truest marking of time is one’s grumbling stomach, signaling that it is time to eat.

Follow them @joontos_alula on Instagram.


Where We Are Going Today: Makbous Express in Riyadh

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Updated 08 February 2026
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Where We Are Going Today: Makbous Express in Riyadh

  • Each option complements the dish in its own way, though the mandi rice seems best suited to absorb the savory depth of the sauce

Sometimes comfort arrives in a takeout box. Makbous Express in Riyadh brings the warmth of home-style cooking to your doorstep, offering familiar Gulf flavors designed for casual indulgence rather than fine dining.

Even without the dine-in experience, the food travels well, retaining much of its authentic charm. The tabolah stands out immediately. A bright mix of parsley, bulgur, tomato, and onion, it tastes crisp and refreshing, cutting through richer dishes with balance and simplicity. It is a welcome palate-cleanser.

The Makbous meat, the restaurant’s bestseller, shows why it carries that title. Tender meat cooked in aromatic saffron sauce arrives perfectly seasoned, with your choice of biryani, mandi, or plain rice.

Each option complements the dish in its own way, though the mandi rice seems best suited to absorb the savory depth of the sauce. This plate captures the essence of Kuwaiti soul food: generous, fragrant, and deeply satisfying.

Less exciting was the shrimp pasta, tossed in Makbous hot sauce. The shrimp were well-cooked, but the overall dish felt predictable, with the sauce adding heat but not much complexity.

The jareesh, made from crushed wheat groats simmered in chicken stock and cumin, then topped with butter or wild ghee, is pure comfort food. Warm, wholesome, and nostalgic, it delivers understated satisfaction rather than surprise. It’s the kind of dish that feels like home cooking done right.

The potato stew was runny for my taste and lacked the richness needed to tie its flavors together. A thicker texture or deeper spice could have made it more enjoyable, especially if it had more body.

Despite a few uneven dishes, Makbous Express succeeds in delivering the homely warmth of Kuwaiti cuisine, one that speaks of tradition, spice, and generosity. It may not dazzle at every turn, but for days when you crave hearty, unpretentious comfort food, this express route hits close to home.