Finding good Indonesian food in the Netherlands is not hard, but finding a place that feels both upscale and still very rooted in traditional Indonesian cooking is a little rarer. Café Samabe ended up standing out more than I expected because dinner felt less like ordering a single meal and more like slowly working through an entire table full of different Indonesian dishes over the course of the night.
The restaurant is known for Indonesian and Balinese dishes, especially their rijsttafel menus, which are basically designed for people like me who want to try approximately everything on the menu instead of committing to one entrée. It also feels very different from a casual Indonesian takeaway spot. The atmosphere is much more date night, slower dinner, special occasion energy while still feeling relaxed.
If you’re planning time in Haarlem, my Best Things to Do in Haarlem Netherlands guide pairs well with this since Café Samabe works very well as a dinner stop after walking around the city all day.

Café Samabe is an Indonesian restaurant located inside a historic 1899 building in Haarlem with tall ceilings, classic Dutch architecture, and a more elevated dining atmosphere compared to a lot of casual Indonesian restaurants.
The restaurant focuses heavily on traditional Indonesian flavors and shared dining experiences, especially rijsttafel.
If you’ve never had rijsttafel before, it’s essentially a large spread of smaller Indonesian dishes all brought out together so you can sample a huge variety of flavors throughout the meal. It turns dinner into more of a long tasting experience instead of a standard appetizer-and-entree situation.
Samabe also has a strong reputation behind it. Owner Richold Bakker and Chef Jiani Gritzalis previously earned seven Michelin Bib Gourmand awards at their former restaurant, and Café Samabe Haarlem has now earned Bib Gourmand recognition twice as well.
For the quality, that made the pricing feel much more reasonable than I originally expected.

We did the rijsttafel, which I would absolutely recommend if it’s your first time trying Indonesian food or if you just like variety in general.
Instead of one main dish showing up, the table slowly fills with tons of smaller plates, sauces, rice dishes, curries, meats, vegetables, sambals, and sides. One minute you’re eating slow-cooked rendang beef and the next you’re reaching for peanut satay, coconut chicken, fried noodles, pickled vegetables, spicy sambals, or rice layered with sauces you can’t stop spooning back onto your plate.
The flavor combinations changed constantly throughout dinner. Some dishes were rich and coconut-heavy, others were sweet and savory, and then a few dishes immediately humbled me in the spice department.
It also ends up being way more filling than it first looks. At one point our table looked like we ordered for six people. Which apparently is just part of the rijsttafel experience. I'm here for it.

Even though we did the shared menu, the à la carte menu also looked really good.
Some of the more popular dishes include:
The menu felt large enough that you could easily come back and order something completely different the next time.

The atmosphere was one of the biggest things that stood out to me.
The restaurant felt upscale and a little sexy without becoming overly formal. The historic building gives the space a lot of character with high ceilings and classic Dutch architectural details, but the lighting and overall setup still felt warm and comfortable instead of stiff.
Since rijsttafel naturally turns dinner into a longer shared experience, the whole restaurant had this slower pace where people were sitting around talking, sharing dishes, and staying for a while instead of rushing through dinner.

It felt like a place that worked especially well for date nights, group dinners, special occasions, or even just people wanting to try Indonesian food for the first time. The shared-style dining naturally makes the meal feel more interactive, especially if you enjoy trying a little bit of everything.
We went on a Saturday night, so it was busy, but not crazy. There were a mix of couples and larger groups, and the restaurant still felt comfortable without tables being packed on top of each other.

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If you’re driving, we parked at Parkeergarage De Appelaar and it ended up being super convenient for dinner. It was only about a 3-minute walk to Café Samabe through the city center, which made arriving on a busy Saturday night much less stressful than trying to hunt for street parking nearby.
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The pricing felt fair for both the quality and how much food comes out.
Most individual entrées are around €22–€34, while the rijsttafels start around €35.50 per person and increase depending on how extensive the menu is. The larger multi-course shared menus are closer to €46–€58 per person.
Considering this is a Michelin Bib Gourmand restaurant and the table ends up covered in food, it felt like solid value compared to a lot of upscale dining experiences that leave you stopping for fries afterward.
That was not the situation here.

I’d absolutely go back, although probably more for the experience itself than as my personal go-to favorite restaurant.
This feels like a great place for a fun dinner with friends, a date night, or celebrating something without needing a super formal atmosphere. It also works especially well if you’ve never tried Indonesian food before since the rijsttafel lets you sample a huge variety of dishes throughout the meal instead of just one entrée. The slower shared-style dining also makes the meal feel like part of the night itself instead of just a quick dinner stop.
The combination of the atmosphere, the shared dining style, and the huge variety of flavors made it stand out from a lot of standard restaurant dinners during our Netherlands trip.
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10 stops. One very full day. Zero regrets. Amsterdam has one of the best food scenes I’ve experienced anywhere in Europe, but the honest caveat is that some of the viral spots come with lines that will genuinely test your character. I skipped a few. I regret nothing.
Here’s what actually made the cut on my self-guided Amsterdam food tour:
Fresh stroopwafels at Hans Egstorf: made right in front of you, warm caramel, no line. This one won.
Lourens cookie croissant: flaky outside, gooey chocolate inside. Did not share.
Café Winkel 43 apple pie: one of the rare viral places that fully lives up to the hype.
Davie’s Amsterdam for the Lelie sandwich: pastrami, pickles, marbled bread. Deceptively simple. Absolutely excellent.
De Kaaskamer to end the day: 400+ cheeses, grilled cheese with what they call ketchup (it’s not ketchup, and it’s better), and bunker cheese aged in underground military bunkers.
The full route covers 10 stops through Jordaan, the 9 Streets, the canal district, and the flower market area with a Google Map included so you can just follow along.
Full guide with every stop, tips for beating the lines, and what I’d skip vs. do again | link in bio.
#amsterdam #visitamsterdam #netherlands #travel #visitnetherlands #traveleurope
There’s a version of Gatlinburg that’s all fudge shops and tourist crowds, and then there’s the version that actually makes you want to come back.
Here’s everything worth doing downtown, in the order I’d do it: 🏔️
✨ Start at @gatlinburgskypark before the crowds hit
✨ Walk the strip mid-morning when it’s still manageable
✨ @googooclusters stop (see my post from Tuesday: don’t skip it)
✨ Dinner at one of the local spots off the main drag
✨ Wander back out at night when the lights are on and it gets actually pretty
This isn’t your overscheduled Smoky Mountain itinerary. It’s more of a “here’s what I’d actually do if I had one solid day” kind of list.
Full downtown Gatlinburg guide linked in bio. 🔗
If someone told me I’d spend five hours at SkyPark, I would not have believed them. And yet. 😅
Gatlinburg SkyPark sits above the strip and it’s one of those places that looks like a quick stop on paper and turns into most of your afternoon. The SkyBridge alone is worth it — longest pedestrian suspension bridge in North America, and yes, you will look down.
✨ SkyBridge (longest pedestrian suspension bridge in North America)
✨ SkyLift ride up with views of the Smokies
✨ Walking trails with mountain views in every direction
✨ Way less crowded than downtown
Fair warning: if heights genuinely freak you out, the bridge might not be your thing. The rest of the park is still 100% worth it. Full guide with tickets, tips, and what to skip linked in bio. 🔗
I walked into Goo Goo Cluster in downtown Gatlinburg thinking I’d spend five minutes and leave with a small piece of candy. I was wrong on both counts. 😅
You build your own chocolate cluster at a kiosk: caramel, sea salt, pretzels, cocoa pebbles, you name it, and then watch them make it right in front of you. The whole thing takes about 15 minutes and costs $15.
The caveat? This is not a snack. This is a full-size brick of chocolate that I was still eating two days later.
If you’re already walking the Gatlinburg strip, this is an easy yes. Especially if you have absolutely no self-control around caramel. (Asking for a friend.) Full experience breakdown linked in bio. 🔗
Your Knoxville Airport survival guide, from someone who’s flown through TYS 100+ times is now up on my blog🛫
Parking, TSA wait times, where to grab food before your flight, rental cars, all of it, from someone who actually knows this airport. No guessing, no googling at the last minute.
TYS is small, easy to navigate, and honestly one of the less stressful airports I’ve been through. You just need to know a few things going in.
Full guide linked in bio. 🔗
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