Marrakech has always known how to seduce. But El Fenn does something rarer — it surprises. Tucked inside the medina, this riad-turned-institution has spent years quietly redefining what it means to eat somewhere, shop somewhere, exist somewhere.
The result is less a destination than a fully formed argument about how life could be lived, if only we paid more attention.



The colour hits you first. That deep, unapologetic crimson — bleeding across walls, wrapping courtyards, pooling in corners — is not a design choice so much as a declaration. El Fenn did not inherit the red of Marrakech; it claimed it.
Where the city’s ochre and terracotta speak of age and earth, El Fenn’s encarnado speaks of something sharper. Intention. Confidence. A refusal to blend in.
Dinner begins on the terrace, where the esplanade opens the evening up in the way only Marrakech evenings can — warm air, low light, the city’s rooftops dissolving into the dusk around you. It is the kind of setting that makes whatever you are about to eat taste better before it has even arrived.
Then, when the night deepens and the mood shifts, a spiral staircase — encarnado against stark white walls — winds you upward to the rooftop terrace. The climb is brief but theatrical: a deliberate transition between one version of the evening and the next. Up here, white and red lanterns hang overhead, casting the kind of light that makes everyone look like they are exactly where they are supposed to be.
The menu is where El Fenn earns its keep, night after night. The kitchen works the line between Moroccan tradition and cosmopolitan confidence with real sureness of touch. Starters read like a considered edit — lobster ravioli with yuzu-infused cream sitting alongside vitello tonnato with red harissa oil, or a beetroot carpaccio with coriander and cumin vinaigrette that manages to feel entirely of this place.



For mains, the slow-cooked lamb shank with turmeric and roasted almonds is the dish that reminds you where you are, while sole fillets with chermoula and asparagus and a mhemssa risotto with prawns and mussels from Oualidia speak to a kitchen with ambition well beyond its postcode. Desserts follow with the same logic — a crème brûlée infused with Taliouine saffron, a beldi tiramisu with almond crumble and fleur de sel. Nothing here is safe. Nothing is careless either.
And then the shop. If Fashion Clinic is the benchmark for curated retail done properly, El Fenn’s concept store is what Fashion Clinic looks like on steroids — relocated to North Africa and left to evolve on its own terms for a decade. Jewellery, ceramics, textiles, objects: all of it chosen with the same eye that chose the art on the walls and the lanterns on the terrace. Nothing here is souvenir. Everything here is considered.
You will not find a tagine keyring. You will find pieces that make you question why your home looks the way it does.



This is what El Fenn has always understood: that Marrakech at its most modern, most assured, most itself, looks nothing like the guidebooks.
It looks like this.
Crimson walls, a winding staircase, white lanterns glowing against a dark sky, and a plate of food that has no interest whatsoever in disappointing you.






















































