How to spend 48 hours in Cape Town

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Curated selection of points

Serving up everything from artisan coffee to buzzing bazaars, hipster eat streets and fine diners.

Follow this guide and embark on a food safari.
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1
Coffee at Origin Coffee Roasting28 Hudson Street

Get coffee from the 12-year-old Origin on Hudson Street.

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28, Hudson Street, Western Cape, South Africa
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The only recently trendy De Waterkant district, lays claim to the city’s original ‘good coffee’ place.
2
Eastern food bazaar on Longmarket StreetLongmarket Street

Nowhere lays this city’s cultural idiosyncrasies on the table better and faster.

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Longmarket Street, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
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To the sheltered traveller, the canteen is a cave of chaos, but it has its own natural flows and rhythms; queues sprout and wither equally speedily in the dual-entrance mall. Ten shops purvey shawarmas, tandoor dosas, local sweet biryanis et al, celebrating Cape Town’s Asian and sub-continental food heritage. Local carb-and-curry overload ‘bunny chow’ best represents this: a loaf of white bread, de-cored, then filled with the not-too-spicy, fragrant and sweet Cape Malay curry.
3
Cape Town's coolest foodie corridorBree Street

This is Cape Town’s coolest foodie corridor.

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Bree Street, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
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Legend has it that if you walk from one end of Bree Street to the other, at least one brand-new boutique will have sprung up by the time you walk back down it again. A breath of culinary fresh air compared to tourist-magnet Long Street, a couple of blocks over.
4
Fire & Ice BarProtea Hotel

Where Bree Street peters out to the south, pop over one block to the Fire and Ice bar at Protea Hotel.

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Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
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Peruse the ‘grown-up’ milkshake menu. Distrust your initial instincts; the marshmallow, caramel and pumpkin milkshake is the bomb. No, really.
5
Sushi SurpriseWilloughby and Co

This may be the first time that I’ve recommended dinner at a shopping mall restaurant.

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Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
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Always eat where the locals do, as the maxim goes. Walk past the well-heeled stores at the Gucci end of Victoria Wharf Shopping Centre (V&A Waterfront) to the weirdly sophisticated Willoughby & Co for hands down some of SA’s finest sushi. The ‘4×4 rainbow reloaded’ selection is on another level, especially the spicy and creamy rock shrimp roll. If sushi’s not your thing, try the line-fish curry. There may be a queue, but you can order (and drink) a glass of wine to make the time fly.
6
Drink in the view at Silo HotelZeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa (MOCAA)

Head back to your accommodation on the V&A Waterfront for a nightcap.

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Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
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The five-star Silo Hotel is located above the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa (which houses Africa’s largest collection of contemporary African art), in the elevator portion of a historical grain silo.
7
Pastel Houses in AfricaBo-Kaap

Working-class Bo-Kaap (literally, ‘above the Cape’) district has the prettiest gathering of pastel houses in Africa.

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Western Cape, South Africa
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Traditionally the hue of each house represented the trade of the householder (or which colour paint was on sale that day, so goes the local gag).Start your morning’s exploration of the area on a high at Harvest Cafe & Deli, an airy plant-filled space that serves beautifully presented dishes so tasty you might forget they’re good for you too. Try a signature smoothie bowl (think spirulina, avocado, lime and banana with homemade salted chocolate granola, pomegranate and coconut) or pumpkin fritters with Greek yoghurt, berries and maple syrup, a twist on a South African classic. Best enjoyed on the building’s rooftop, with its panoramic views of Bo-Kaap and beyond.
8
Visit mom & popAtlas Trading Co

Bo-Kaap, where freed Malay and mixed-race slaves settled, also happens to be its own mini food safari.

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Wale Street, Western Cape, South Africa, 8001
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The trick is to poke your nose into all the little mom-and-pop cafes and tuck shops. Atlas Trading Company is a nice education in Cape Malay spice culture. Don’t miss the wee corner shop next to Biesmiellah restaurant for a traditional koeksister (deep-fried doughnut with honey glaze).
9
Devil's Peak Brewing CompanyDevil's Peak Brewing Company Taproom

Frankly, you’d have to be an idiot not to find a quality bottle of wine in Cape Town, but traditionally the same could not be said for beer.

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Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
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Thankfully, the whole micro-brewery party is underway in earnest. On the cusp of mercurial Woodstock, you’ll find taprooms for party-starter Devil’s Peak Brewing Company, a vanguard that helped instil in South Africans that there is more to life than Castle lager. The hero of the five micro-brew-and-food pairing is the nuptial between the zesty King’s Blockhouse IPA and extra-zesty Sriracha chicken. The view over actual Devil’s Peak (mountain) becomes more intense with every sip.
10
The Woodstock RevivalWoodstock

Woodstock used to be the wrong side of the tracks (literally), a seedy side of town to say the least.

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Western Cape, South Africa
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All roads lead to cuisine-and-art-hub The Old Biscuit Mill. Shop for presents of thought-provoking homewares in its artsy shops, then take a tour of the bean-to-bar Cocoafair for some pre-dinner Fairtrade 71 per cent ginger dark choccy. Fortuitously, The Old Biscuit Mill happens to house two of South Africa’s most innovative and best restaurants, both brainchildren of chef Luke Dale-Roberts. The star is craftily designed Test Kitchen, which as the name gives away, is ‘a creative world of experimentation’. Suffice to say, whether you choose this one or the Pot Luck Club – where sharing dishes are divided into five basic tastes: salty, sour, sweet, umami and bitter – this last stop on your food safari should be booked thoroughly in advance.

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