Tewa Naschmarkt
Wieden & Naschmarkt
Israeli-Levantine kitchen on the Naschmarkt's eastern row — the Saturday-lunch standby.
Haya Molcho's Israeli-Mediterranean original since 2009 — Naschmarkt corner table.
Haya Molcho opened the first Neni at the Naschmarkt's eastern end in 2009 — the family now runs Neni outposts from Paris to Berlin to Zurich, but the original Vienna stand remains the one to book. The format is shareable plates with a strong Israeli-Mediterranean register: babaganoush with pomegranate, sabich, shawarma over freekeh, Yemenite slow-braised lamb, the Sahlab milk pudding at the end. The terrace catches the morning sun and runs all day; the small back room takes evening bookings. The Molcho family's argument is that the same flavours that mean home to a Tel Aviv table read clearly to a Vienna one without any translation — and the booking volume across fifteen years has settled the point.
Order the Balagan-style shareable spread — about six plates for four people. The Molcho cookbook of the same name is one of the better Levantine cookbooks of the past decade; the kitchen reads as a working appendix to it.
Quick answers about Neni am Naschmarkt — reservations, hours, dress code, and price range.
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