Tuesday 17 March 2009

The Mango Café

The renovated premises of The Mango Café are a vast improvement over the old cafe: 2 stories now, air-conditioned, with a pleasant balcony along one side, and lots of glass and light. The atmosphere is relaxed and informal; the decor: muted.


Mango café offers breakfast, lunch and dinner menus ... and a sandwich bar. Whilst we've tried the lunch menu (the burgers and pasta dishes are good), this review is mainly concerned with their all-day breakfast menu.


Big Breakfast is hearty, but a little on the expensive side at almost $15.


A good bruschetta, available in vegetarian (shown above), chicken and bacon versions. The recipe is localised by way of a large hunk of long loaf as the base. This is the largest bruschetta I've ever seen, though the recipient feels a half-loaf would be appropriate given the long wait for service.


Eggs benedict with salmon: divine! Again, a little touch of Fiji in the form of long loaf slices instead of English muffin.


Italian eggs ... Kania Tiko praises these as the best scrambled eggs he has had in a long time. The sausage (cabanosi?) adds a nice contrasting taste and visual.


These coffee cups are beautiful, but a real ergonomic pain ... to the point of being a bit silly. Form follows function (or should for kitchenware); it's difficult to drink from this cup, and novelty of the design doesn't make up for that.


This little item is on the kid's breakfast menu as 'Toad in the hole'. If you come from British stock and know what a real toad in the hole looks like: redirect your righteous anti-American anger into hunting down the multitude of other names for the 'Egg in the hole/basket/nest'.

Whilst we have nothing but praise for the food, the front-of-house staff always seem to give us pause. The first time we were offered an iced drink on the house as an apology for delayed service only to have the offer withdrawn a minute later: "Sorry; that was meant for the next table."

The second time there was an ordering problem involving too many dishes and items that had been excluded from the order. This took 2 attempts to disentangle. Whilst we're a little puzzled as to why the waiter thought 4 dishes per child was a sensible interpretation of the order, the issue was solved to everyone's satisfaction with a minimum of fuss ... but it still took about 45 minutes for all the food to appear.

We're withholding a thumbs-up until the service issues sort themselves out, but the good food and pleasant atmosphere mean a thumbs-down would not be justified either.

In Summary

The Mango Café
Ratu Sukuna Rd, Nasese
Opening Hours:
Mon - Sun: 6:30am - 9:00pm
Spend:
$7 - $20 per person

4 comments:

Wilson said...

Thats a funky coffee cup. I'm curious - any pics showing your attempts at holding said funky cup? :D Having trouble trying to picture a hand grabbing the handle lol

Picky Eater said...

Wilson: I actually did take a picture of a hand 'holding' the cup.

It's quite awkward, and keeping it upright places an insane amount of pressure on your thumb.

The coffee in the cup is not bad: probably at least the equal of anything the coffee franchises in the city centre have to offer.

Amy Cooper said...

I love this blog! I recently moved to Suva and am enjoying eating at different places around town. Keep up the good work!

Anonymous said...

You guys are making me hungry. I was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Suva in the early 1980s. We always found the best places to eat at the lowest prices. I haven't seen any restaurants that I recognize, but you are so lucky to have all of those great curry shops to choose from. For lunch we usually just ate at the FIT Canteen, and seemed to survive.