N’Djaména offers a fair selection of restaurants serving mainly French and African food.
Standard European-style service is normal. Outside the capital, restaurants tend to be cheap and cheerful and there is an acute shortage of some foodstuffs. Visitors should exercise caution with street market food.
National specialties:
• Peanut sauce over rice, often eaten in Southern Chad.
National drinks:• Chad's excellent beer,
Gala, is brewed in Moundou and is widely available in the non-Muslim parts of the capital.
•
Karkanji, a drink made from
Hibiscus flowers.
Tipping: 10 per cent is normal for most services (US Dollars are the preferred currency).
NightlifeLively dancing and music is to be found in the capital, where there is an increasing number of nightclubs.
Pari-matches take place on most Saturdays and Sundays in N’Djaména (non-Muslim areas): groups of women hire bars and sell drinks all day. Outside N’Djaména, nightlife is limited, although bars and open-air dancing can generally be found.
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