Nomad
1 Derb Aarjane, Marrakesh 40000, Morocco
Price
€€
Alcohol
No
Cuisine Type
Moroccan
Experience
Stunning Setting, Family-friendly, Culinary Excellence
Features
Rooftop
Perfect For
Lunch
Overview
Nomad opened in 2014 inside a restored 1960s carpet store on Derb Aarjane, overlooking the Rahba Kedima spice square, and has since become one of the most requested tables in the medina. The building rises four floors, with several indoor dining rooms and two levels of open terraces. The upper rooftop is the draw: at sunset, the view stretches across the medina's layered rooftops to the Atlas Mountains, and a table up there at that hour requires booking well in advance. The kitchen works under the banner of modern Moroccan, which in practice means traditional flavours lifted, lightened, and rearranged. Courgette and feta fritters have become a signature, crisp and well-spiced enough to order on every visit. Sardine tart, vegetarian pastilla stuffed with goat cheese and tomato confit, and grilled lamb chops carry the main courses, while a flourless orange cake with cardamom and ginger closes things cleanly for anyone avoiding gluten. The menu reads short and seasonal, built around what the nearby souks deliver each morning. There is no alcohol. Mocktails and fresh juices fill the role, and the absence barely registers once the food arrives. The design leans into a yellow-and-black palette with 1960s accents, contemporary without trying to hide the building's past life. Nomad belongs to the Atlas Collection alongside Café des Épices and Le Jardin, a group that has shaped much of the medina's modern dining identity. It remains the kind of place where visitors and long-term residents end up in the same room, which says more about its staying power than any review can.























