Nolita (ul. Wilcza 46, Warsaw) – located in downtown Warsaw, this high-end restaurant serves a variety of fine dishes, such as roe deer carpaccio with cranberries and chestnut; Tournedos Rossini (dainty pink meat, black truffles and foie gras), tuna nicoise, and white truffle risotto. This along with some fine desserts, and a decent wine list.
Milk Bar Pod Barbakanem (Mostowa, Warsaw) – despite its name, a “milk bar” in Warsaw serves traditional Polish meals at budget prices. In such restaurants, you can feel the atmosphere of communist Warsaw. Milk bars were originally created in the sixties to serve cheap meals for the working class. They attract mostly students and senior […]
National History Museum (16 Vitoshko lale Street, Sofia) — founded in 1973, the National Museum of History in Sofia contains more than 680,000 exhibits and is one of the largest history museums on the Balkans. The aim of the museum is to provide a comprehensive view on Bulgarian history from the prehistory to present, in […]
Latawiec (Armii Ludowej 12, Warsaw) – this restaurant serves mainly breakfast and lunch food – ranging from an English breakfast, to traditional Polish meals (hams, cheese, marmalade and bread), and scrambled egg dishes. A local crowd often comes here, including hipsters from nearby Zbawiciela Square.
National Gallery for Foreign Art (#1, 19 February Street, Sofia) — the National Gallery for Foreign Art in Sofia is the only one of its kind in the Balkans. The Gallery holds over 10,000 museum items – graphic works, paintings, sculptures, fine arts.I The Gallery is unique with the character of its collection – the […]
Kawiarnia Kafka (Oboźna 3, Warsaw) – located between Warsaw University and its library, this restaurant is great for breakfast and lunch — serving sandwiches, soups, pastas, salads, and breakfast foods like pancakes, French toast, and yogurt with muesli & fruits. The presence of books throughout the restaurant’s shelves gives diners the impression this is an […]
National Art Gallery (1 Alexander I Square, Sofia) – locally known as “the Bulgarian Louvre”, the National Art Gallery houses over 50,000 pieces of Bulgarian art. It is located on Battenberg Square in the capital city of Sofia, occupying most of the historic and imposing edifice of the former royal palace of Bulgaria. Admission: 6 […]
National Academy of Art (1 Shipka Street, Sofia) — today the former Drawing School is called National Academy of Art, which till this very day is still considered to be the most prestigious Bulgarian institution for training professional artists in the field of fine and applied arts, design, conservation and restoration and history and theory […]
Museum of Sofia University (15 Tsar Osvoboditel Blvd., Sofia) — The St. Clement of Ohrid University of Sofia (or Sofia University) is the oldest higher education institution in Bulgaria, founded on 1 October 1888. The university’s edifice was constructed between 1924 and 1934 with the financial support of the brothers Evlogi Georgiev and Hristo Georgiev, […]
Monument of Bulgarian Volunteers (Aleksander Nevsky Square, Sofia) — The monument of the Bulgarian volunteer units (so called “opulchentsi”) who fought with the Russian Army against Ottoman Turkey in the Bulgarian Liberation War of 1877-78 is located behind the Military Club. It is a seven-meter high bronze monument – a copy of the famous painting […]