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Belgian

Café Vlissinghe

Address
Blekersstraat 2, Brugge

Café Vlissinghe is the real thing — a bar with documented roots stretching back to the 1600s, still serving the same neighbourhood crowd and curious travellers who find it. The room is intimate and unhurried, the beer selection takes Belgian brewing seriously, and the bartender pours without ceremony. You're not paying for decor (though the wood and mirrors are genuine); you're paying to sit where Bruges has been sitting. It works best on a quiet evening when you can actually hear the person across the table. Weekends draw tourists, which is fine, but the soul emerges on weekday nights when it's mostly locals and people who know the place.

Directions

Rating data via Belgium Impulse editorial. Always check the venue’s own channels for opening hours, reservations and prices before you go.

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Belgian

A La Mort Subite

Address
Rue Montagne aux Herbes Potagères 7, Brussels

A La Mort Subite has been pouring gueuze and Belgian beer since the 19th century, and the place wears that age honestly—no renovation gloss, just long wooden tables, mirrors, and the permanent hum of Bruxellois life. This is not a craft-beer bar or a gastro-temple; it's a neighbourhood watering hole that happens to serve some of Belgium's best-known lambics and a straightforward Belgian menu. The room fills naturally throughout the day: locals at lunch, after-work drinkers in the early evening, tourists later on. Order a gueuze or a kriek and some chicory coffee; don't expect fuss, expect authenticity. The main drawback is obvious: it's central and old, so weekend evenings and midday tourists are unavoidable. But come on a weekday afternoon and you'll feel like you've ducked the city entir

Rating data via Belgium Impulse editorial. Always check the restaurant's own channels for current hours, pricing, and booking.

Belgian

Brasserie Cantillon

Address
Rue Gheude 56, Anderlecht

Cantillon is a genuine working lambic brewery, not a tourist theatre. You sit among the fermentation tanks, drink beer that is still conditioning, and eat simple Belgian snacks—the opposite of polished. The brewery has been family-run for over a century, and that continuity shows in every detail, from the worn wooden tables to the staff who know the product intimately. This is the place to go if you want to taste what lambic tastes like before it's blended or aged further, and to understand why some people travel specifically for Cantillon's Gueuze or Kriek. The room is small and gets busy on weekends; a weekday visit gives you space to breathe and ask questions. Fair warning: it's a working brewery first, restaurant second, so don't expect haute cuisine or comfort—you come for the beer an

Rating data via Belgium Impulse editorial. Always check the restaurant's own channels for current hours, pricing, and booking.

Street foodBelgian

Maison Antoine

Belgium's most famous frites stand — Place Jourdan, EU quarter, since 1948.

Address
Place Jourdan 1, 1040 Bruxelles, Brussels
Hours
Daily 11:30–24:00 (Fri & Sat until 01:00).
Price range
Phone
+32 2 230 54 56

Maison Antoine has stood on Place Jourdan since 1948 and is the indisputable reference for Brussels frites. Double-fried in beef fat, served in a paper cone with a choice of 30+ sauces (andalouse, samouraï, américaine). Open late, takeaway only — eat them at the bars on the square that allow customers to bring their frites in.

Good for

CasualQuick lunchWalk-inBudgetLocal gemOpen lateBelgian

Rating data via Belgium Impulse editorial, DLJ News editorial. Discovered via DLJ News editorial. Always check the restaurant's own channels for current hours, pricing, and booking.

Belgian

Maison Dandoy Tea Room

Address
Rue Charles Buls 14, Brussels

Maison Dandoy has been making Belgian waffles and selling them from this same Grand Place-adjacent location since the 19th century. It is not trendy, not Instagram-lit, and not trying to be anything other than what it has always been: a place where locals and visitors queue for warm pastry and coffee in a room that smells of butter and history. The waffles are thick, the portions are large, and the tea is strong. It is genuinely busy most hours, especially weekends, so arrive early or accept a wait. The room is small and informal—you may share a table, and the staff move fast. Go for the unvarnished Brussels experience, not for quiet or legroom.

Rating data via Belgium Impulse editorial. Always check the restaurant's own channels for current hours, pricing, and booking.

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