Eat & drink · Vegetarian/vegan
Anokhi Cafe
Opening hours
- Monday: 10:00 AM – 8:00 PM
- Tuesday: 10:00 AM – 8:00 PM
- Wednesday: 10:00 AM – 8:00 PM
- Thursday: 10:00 AM – 8:00 PM
- Friday: 10:00 AM – 8:00 PM
- Saturday: 10:00 AM – 8:00 PM
- Sunday: 10:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Images provided by Google Places
Small, relaxed cafe offering global eats like pizzas, pastas & salads prepared with organic produce.via Google
An organic cafe sourcing ingredients directly from local farms, offering a clean, western-style menu in a calm courtyard.
- Signature
- Organic Pomegranate and Feta Salad
Reviews from Google
Nice place to stop while shopping. Relaxing place to chill a bit with chairs in the traditional block print fabric. I ordered a darjeering tea with banana oat biscuit. And my little one had hot chocolate. All are solid. Hot chocolate is excellent.
This place was suggested as I was browsing through Google maps. I would say it is okay, not bad. Most tables caters to groups of 3-4. There is a small outdoor space for solo diners. It can get crowded so plan your visit. Seats are comfortable and food is okay. The cold coffee is great I would say. Surprisingly they do not have wifi.
‘Anokhi’ is certainly a catchy name, and the place has an unmistakable charm. However, it is also undeniably expensive. I have visited a few times, trying to understand what justifies the pricing. The coffee cake and carrot cake are truly excellent, but most other items feel disproportionately costly. The high prices may be linked to the steady flow of tourists brought in by local guides and operators who market the shop as a destination for “authentic” cotton garments. The clothes are well made, but they remain out of reach for the average local customer. My greatest disappointment, though, was the food. The pasta and pizza, especially the mini pizza, were underwhelming. The pizza resembled a small Indian roti topped with red sauce, some greens on the side, and mustard sauce—more novelty than flavour. The overall experience made me wish the café would also consider the preferences and expectations of its neighbourhood patrons. I hope Anokhi can balance its tourist appeal with greater value and quality for the broader community.
Heard a lot about their cakes so went to try some... Ended up trying banana cake and coffee cake... but tbh they both tasted pretty mid. Coffee cake didn't even have a hint of coffee, it was a chocolate fudge cake with biscoff frosting lmao Not sure about the hype :/
We ordered corn fritters - which were below average with no flavours and super oily and still the best thing we ate, next was falafel in pita pockets - very bland and dry and the Tahani was the worst, very acidic, then the creamy mushroom pizzeta was pathetic, I have never seen such a tasteless and weird pizza in my life and lastly the quinoa wrap - it was sweet honestly felt like Dalia in roti. In all, it was the worst experience of eating outside ever. The service was so bad that no one offered water, the waiters were watching their mobile phones and the manager was so unprofessional and disinterested. The ambience is so cluttered. The food was overpriced and the quality is supremely degraded in taste as well. The same vinegrette sauce was served with all the four dishes which was acidic and had no flavour profile. In my opinion, please avoid this cafe by all means, unless you want to spend 250 on a pot of tasteless tea.