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Hospitality

A ROMANTIC VALENTINE’S EVE CELEBRATION AT MAUSAM, DUBAI MALL

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This Valentine’s Eve, Mausam at Dubai Mall invites couples to celebrate love with an exclusive four-course set menu, thoughtfully curated for an intimate evening. Priced at AED 500 per couple, the experience includes a welcome glass of non-alcoholic sparkling wine, soft beverages and water, along with a rose stem beautifully set on each table creating the perfect setting for a memorable night.

The specially designed menu showcases Mausam’s contemporary take on Indian cuisine, beginning with a refined amuse-bouche of char-grilled strawberry with smoked cumin and tangy chutney. Highlights from the courses include indulgent vegetarian creations such as Kandhari Paneer Tikka and Bengali Chenna Kofta Curry, alongside signature non-vegetarian dishes like Peshawari Gosht Chop, Jodhpuri Murgh Tikka, and the aromatic Bharwan Dum Ka Murgh. The experience concludes on a sweet note with the decadent Red Velvet Delight, layered with white chocolate, cream cheese, and rabri sauce.

Set within the elegant surroundings of Dubai Mall, Mausam offers a warm yet sophisticated ambiance, blending rich Indian heritage with contemporary design. Soft lighting, refined décor, and attentive service come together to create a romantic atmosphere making it an ideal destination for couples seeking a refined Valentine’s celebration in the heart of Dubai.

Available on 14th February 2026

  • Offer: Valentine’s Day 4 course set menu
  • Date: 14th Feb 2026
  • Time: 6:00 PM onwards
  • Location: Mausam Dubai Mall
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Hospitality

CELEBRATE EID AL ADHA WITH A SPECIAL BUFFET AT PURANI DILLI

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Celebrate the spirit of Eid with a specially curated dinner buffet at Purani Dilli, Bur Dubai, offering guests a festive dining experience inspired by rich Indian flavours and traditional favourites. Perfect for family gatherings and festive get-togethers, the Eid Al Adha Special Buffet promises a warm ambience, indulgent dishes, and a memorable celebration during the Eid holidays.

Available for three nights only from 27th May to 29th May, the dinner buffet is priced at AED 95 per guest, making it an ideal choice for both residents and visitors looking to enjoy an authentic Eid feast in the heart of Bur Dubai.

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Hospitality

CELEBRATE EID AL ADHA WITH MEDITERRANEAN DINING AT ERGON AGORA

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You do not have to travel to Greece this Eid Al Adha to enjoy Mediterranean flavours and long lunch or dinner gatherings. Located in Downtown Dubai, ERGON Agora brings together a warm Greek dining experience with dishes designed for sharing, making it an ideal spot to celebrate the long weekend with family and friends.

Perfect for both lunch and dinner, the menu features a  rich mix of traditional Greek favourites and comforting dishes, from the Shrimp Saganaki with tomato sauce and Feta cheese, to the Grilled Octopus with fava dip and the Slow Cooked Beef Cheeks served with sautéed trahana and goat cheese. Guests can also enjoy freshly made Peinirli, seafood orzo, grilled seabass, and a selection of homemade spreads served with sourdough flatbread.

With its warm atmosphere and Mediterranean inspired setting, ERGON Agora is a great option for a lavish Eid lunch or dinner in Downtown Dubai.

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Hospitality

 HIDDEN CHAMPIONS: SMALL KITCHENS, LOYAL TABLES

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Attributed by Lucas Xie, General Manager of Keeta UAE.

18,000+ repeat orders from a single Dubai outlet on Keeta. That kind of number reflects the power of consistency, customer trust, and loyalty earned quietly over time.

The UAE’s food scene is vast, diverse, and always moving. But beneath the buzz, some of its most devoted customer relationships are being built in the quietest corners, small, independent restaurants that have spent years perfecting a handful of dishes for a following that simply never leaves.

These are not always the restaurants at the center of the loudest conversations, but they are often the ones quietly building the strongest customer loyalty. They are the rice kitchen in a residential neighbourhood whose customers return for the same dish week after week. The family-run restaurant with regulars who have been showing up for years. The cafeteria that has become a familiar gathering place for a close-knit community far from home. Across these businesses, repeat order rates can reach as high as 95% for everyday favourites like coffee, reflecting a level of familiarity, consistency, and trust that keeps customers coming back.

Food as Familiarity

What unites these restaurants is not a category or a cuisine, it is an understanding of their customer. Where larger concepts must be designed for breadth, these restaurants have been built for depth. Their menus are often short, their recipes rarely change, and that consistency is precisely the point. For their customers, ordering is less a decision than a ritual.

In some cases, the ritual becomes almost absolute; some dishes even show a 100% success rate, where every customer who ordered once came back again. It is this kind of behavioural loyalty that defines these smaller kitchens far more than scale ever could.

This dynamic carries particular weight in the UAE, where food is one of the most powerful threads of identity, memory, and belonging in a country of hundreds of nationalities. For many residents, whether long-settled expatriates or newer arrivals, the discovery of a restaurant that tastes like home is not a small thing. It is a point of anchor in a transient city. And once found, it is rarely let go.

Take Bannu Gul Beef Pulao in Dubai, where a single dish has built thousands of loyal repeats from one outlet. Or Nahdi Mandi Restaurant, a small Saudi kitchen in the same city, where a charcoal-grilled Al Faham Mandi keeps drawing the same customers back. And Ummi Sharifa in Ras Al Khaimah, an Emirati home cooking spot whose regulars return with a quiet, unmistakable consistency.

Small Scale, Lasting Impact

The story of these restaurants is also a story of resilience. Independent restaurants have historically relied on word of mouth, a slower, harder road to discovery, but one that tends to produce a particularly committed audience.

When that word-of-mouth customer becomes a delivery customer, something interesting happens. The ritual moves into the home. The frequency can increase. In some cases, this shift is reflected in exceptional repeat behaviour, such as Matcha Strawberry reaching a 93% repeat order rate. And the relationship between restaurant and regular deepens, even without a physical encounter.

What the UAE’s most loyal independent restaurant customers suggest is that there is an appetite, perhaps a growing one, for food with a story behind it. For restaurants where the owner’s family recipe is the entire menu. For dishes that exist nowhere else, because they were never designed to scale.

Platforms as Connectors

This is where platforms like Keeta play a meaningful role. By extending the reach of independent restaurants beyond their immediate neighbourhoods, Keeta gives restaurants like Bannu Gul, Nahdi Mandi, and Ummi Sharifa access to an audience that would otherwise never find them. For the kitchen that has been quietly perfecting its dishes for a decade, digital delivery has become a genuine growth lever, not simply a convenience layer.

As the UAE’s food delivery ecosystem matures, the opportunity for independent restaurants continues to expand. Platforms that surface smaller operators give customers a more complete picture of what the country actually eats, and allow loyalty, to be the currency of discovery. For the restaurants building that loyalty one reorder at a time, that visibility changes everything.

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