"A wine cellar carved into Rabat's rock with red-wine rabbit stew — the most honest traditional Maltese dinner inside the Mdina perimeter."
Grotto Tavern is carved into the rock below Rabat, in a network of caves that originally served as a wine storage for the hilltop. The tavern has operated in this location for over three decades. The interior is genuine cave — limestone walls, natural temperature, and a depth that muffles conversation perfectly.
The kitchen cooks traditional Maltese — stuffat tal-fenek (rabbit stew in red wine, the reason to come), fenek moqli (fried rabbit), bragioli, and a whole grilled lampuki in season. The portions are large. The stuffat is the dish to order; it is slow-cooked for six hours and served with the bread that has been used to thicken the sauce — a technique that is quietly disappearing from Maltese restaurants.
The wine list concentrates on Maltese producers (Marsovin, Delicata, Meridiana) with a short selection of Sicilian and Italian reds. The bottled Maltese vermentino is the correct white choice.
Service is family-run and unhurried. This is not a fine-dining experience; it is a genuine neighbourhood institution with a cave instead of a dining room.
For a first date where you want to differentiate yourself from the obvious Mdina choices, Grotto Tavern's cave format and rabbit stew are unusual enough to become a shared memory. The pace invites conversation. The rabbit enforces participation.
The rabbit stew is as good as any I have eaten in a Maltese home. She laughed when the plate arrived. We stayed three hours.
Sat at the corner table with a Marsovin red and the full stuffat. Two hours of quiet. The cave temperature is perfect in August.
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