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Ramadán en Mauricio: la guía del iftar para visitantes
Alrededor del 17% de los mauricianos son musulmanes, y durante el Ramadán la escena gastronómica cambia tras la puesta de sol: puestos de samosas y dátiles al anochecer, y las calles alrededor de la mezquita Jummah de Port Louis se convierten en el mejor paseo gastronómico nocturno del año.
The dusk food walk
From about an hour before sunset, the streets around the Jummah Mosque on Royal Road fill with iftar stalls: samoussas, kebabs, badja, dates and rose sherbet. Everything is sold to go; join the queue and eat standing like everyone else.
Etiquette for visitors
Mauritius is famously relaxed — restaurants stay open and nobody expects visitors to fast. Basic courtesy: don't eat ostentatiously in visibly Muslim neighborhoods in late afternoon, dress modestly near mosques, and expect Muslim-run shops to close briefly at sunset.
Daytime is business as usual
Street food in Port Louis runs normally through Ramadan days — most vendors are Hindu or Creole. Your dholl puri schedule is safe.
Eid al-Fitr
Eid is a public holiday in Mauritius. Expect closed Muslim-owned businesses, festive briani everywhere, and — if you're lucky enough to be invited — say yes.
Bueno saber
- Do restaurants close during Ramadan in Mauritius?
- No — Mauritius is multi-faith and restaurants operate normally. Muslim-run businesses may pause briefly at sunset for iftar, and close on Eid al-Fitr (a public holiday).
- Where is the best iftar street food in Mauritius?
- The streets around the Jummah Mosque on Royal Road, Port Louis, from about an hour before sunset: samoussas, kebabs, badja, dates and rose sherbet sold from dusk stalls.
Lugares de esta guía: Mamie Rose's Dholl Puri Corner