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CuisineIsraeli
Executive ChefYossi Shitrit
LocationTel Aviv, Israel
Opinionated About Dining
La Liste

Mashya on Mendele Mokher Sfarim Street brings chef Yossi Shitrit's refined take on Israeli cuisine to one of Tel Aviv's most considered dining addresses. Recognised consecutively by La Liste and Opinionated About Dining since 2023, the restaurant holds a Google rating of 4.4 across more than 5,000 reviews. The kitchen works a weekly dinner schedule with Friday and Saturday brunch service added to the programme.

Mashya restaurant in Tel Aviv, Israel
About

Where Mendele Street Meets the Modern Israeli Table

The stretch of Mendele Mokher Sfarim Street that runs through the older residential fabric of central Tel Aviv is not where you expect to find a restaurant with consecutive La Liste entries and a following deep enough to sustain over 5,000 Google reviews. The building frontages here are quieter than the louder corridors of Rothschild or the northern restaurant belt around HaArba'a Street, and the neighbourhood retains a human scale that the city's more aggressively commercial dining strips have largely lost. That relative quiet is part of Mashya's register. The restaurant belongs to a cohort of Tel Aviv addresses that chose a residential or transitional address over a flagship location, and in doing so signalled something about what the cooking would prioritise: precision and intention over footfall and spectacle.

Israeli cuisine at this level no longer needs to justify its ambition by explaining itself. What began as a cuisine of necessity, built from the intersecting waves of Mizrahi, Ashkenazi, Arab, and Mediterranean traditions, has in the past fifteen years hardened into one of the world's most self-assured culinary identities. Tel Aviv's better kitchens now operate with the same fluency that once required a Parisian address to be taken seriously. Mashya fits inside that confidence. The cuisine is Israeli without qualification, and the technique behind it is what the awards record reflects.

The Awards Trajectory and What It Signals

A consecutive run on La Liste — 84 points in 2025, 83 in 2026 — alongside three straight years of Opinionated About Dining recognition, moving from Recommended (2023) to a ranked position (#674 in 2024, #687 in 2025), maps a restaurant operating at a consistent level rather than riding a single wave of attention. The slight adjustment in both lists year-on-year is not a story of decline; La Liste's scoring and OAD's ranking methodology both account for field-wide changes, and sustained presence in both systems at these tiers is a mark of durability. For context, OAD's Casual in Europe list draws from a global panel of frequent diners, and Israeli restaurants have grown their representation on that list substantially as the country's dining scene has matured internationally.

The 4.4 Google rating across 5,161 reviews carries a different kind of weight. At that volume, the score is not a self-selecting hospitality industry signal , it reflects a broad, recurring local audience that returns and recommends. That combination of professional panel recognition and high-volume local satisfaction is exactly the pattern you want to see before committing an evening to a restaurant you have not visited before.

Chef Yossi Shitrit and the Broader Israeli Kitchen Evolution

The editorial angle here is not Shitrit's biography as such, but what his presence at Mashya represents in the wider arc of Israeli restaurant cooking. A generation of Israeli chefs came up through European kitchens or through the intense academic environment of the country's better culinary programmes, then returned to apply those disciplines to local ingredients and inherited flavour memory. The result, across the better tables in Tel Aviv, is a kind of cooking that knows the grammar of French technique and classical structure but uses it entirely in service of Israeli pantry logic: the acidity of pomegranate, the depth of slow-cooked lamb, the brightness of fresh za'atar, the weight of tahini working against something sharp and fermented.

Shitrit's position at Mashya places him inside that generation, and the awards consistency suggests the kitchen has not settled into a formula. The progression from Recommended to ranked on OAD over three years implies a programme that has continued to develop, which in the current Israeli dining environment means working in a field that includes Ha'Achim, Habasta, Port Said, and Alena at The Norman at the upper end of a genuinely competitive city. Mashya's consecutive recognition alongside those addresses positions it in the serious tier of Tel Aviv dining rather than simply in the broader category of creditable neighbourhood restaurants.

Format, Service Windows, and How to Plan Your Visit

Mashya operates Tuesday through Thursday on evenings only, opening at 6 pm with Thursday extending to 11 pm for those who want more time. Friday and Saturday each carry a dual format: brunch from 8 am to 1 pm, then dinner service from 5 pm (Friday) or 6 pm (Saturday) through to 10 pm on both nights. Sunday and Monday are closed. That Friday and Saturday brunch window is a useful entry point for visitors who have not yet secured an evening booking, and it aligns with the Tel Aviv rhythm of extended weekend morning meals that function more like an afternoon occasion than a quick service. The address at Mendele Mokher Sfarim 5 places the restaurant within walking distance of the hotel and cultural infrastructure concentrated around the Ben Gurion and Ibn Gabirol axis, making it direct to incorporate without significant transport logistics.

For broader orientation in the city's dining ecosystem, our full Tel Aviv restaurants guide maps the full range of the scene, while our Tel Aviv bars guide, hotels guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the surrounding infrastructure. Those building a wider Israel itinerary might also consider Abu Hassan in Jaffa for contrast at the other end of the formality register, or Chakra in Jerusalem and Pescado in Ashdod for regional range.

Israeli Cooking Beyond Tel Aviv

The export of Israeli culinary vocabulary to international cities has been consistent enough over the past decade to constitute a genuine diaspora dining category. In New York, 12 Chairs, Balaboosta, and Miznon represent different registers of the same tradition, from neighbourhood casual to refined shareable formats. Ash'Kara in Denver, Berta in Berlin, and Etzel Itzek in Miami extend the map further. None of these are substitutes for the source, but they illustrate how far the underlying flavour logic has travelled. Eating at Mashya, or at its Tel Aviv peers like Ha'Achim and Port Said, is the original context for a cuisine that the rest of the world is now reading in translation.

Practical Details

Mashya sits at Mendele Mokher Sfarim 5 in central Tel Aviv. Service runs Tuesday to Thursday evenings, Friday and Saturday as brunch and dinner, with Sunday and Monday closed. No phone or booking link is listed in current venue records; the most reliable approach is to check for reservations through the standard Israeli booking platforms or arrive for the brunch window on Friday or Saturday when walk-in availability tends to be more predictable than on weekend evenings. Price range data is not currently published, but positioning within the OAD Casual tier and the residential address context suggest a mid-to-upper casual bracket rather than a formal tasting menu price point.


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