Bricks and Copper
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Bricks and Copper

2.9

10 Reviews

Review

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₱ 250 / Person

StrEat: Maginhawa Food Park

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Bricks and Copper Location

Bricks and Copper is located at StrEat: Maginhawa Food Park, Teachers Village, Quezon City. This is a Turkish restaurant near the StrEat: Maginhawa Food Park.The average price range at Bricks and Copper is around ₱ 250 / Person,and the opening hours are 8:00 - 18:00.Bricks and Copper is a well-known gourmet restaurant in the StrEat: Maginhawa Food Park area. There are different kinds of food in Bricks and Copper that are worth trying. If you have any questions,please contact +6326543741, +6326972007.

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Bricks and Copper Reviews

2.9

10 Reviews

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  • Trix Vidamo Tadeo

    3.0

    Not bad, not bad. Turkish doner kebab restaurant Bricks and Copper is one of the smallest stalls at Streat Food Park on Maginhawa, but one of the brightest. It is also the one that stays open the latest - till 1 am on Sundays. I picked up their P99 Pita Doner and it's okay. The beef is meaty, and given a big boost of cuminy flavor together with some onions and tomato; I could do with less onions. The pita comes from their Shaw Blvd branch; I think they added a bit too much yeast, which made the pita moister and fluffier, but more sour as well. We are going to try the lamb doner next. On the food park:Streat has light plexiglas roofing, which now shields eaters from rain, but there's so much litter on the ground. Maybe the park needs more trash cans and signs?  This is not their fault, but of the people who visit.

  • Meme

    1.0

    Had Doner on Rice (Shawarma on Rice). Fails on value for money. Beef seems to have extenders. Serving too small for the price of 120 pesos. Not happy.

  • Timothy Lim

    2.0

    Taking inspiration from Turkey's Ottoman Empire in which brick ovens and copper and brass bowls were common household essentials is Bricks and Copper Turkish Cuisine. While I havent been to Turkey, Ive tried pretty good Iranian food which I believe have heavy mutual influence on each other due to geographical proximity, ethnic relations and even shared empires. In short, I expected that they would deliver great tasting food. Guess I expected too much. Tried their Adana (pure beef kebab) and it just didnt make the cut for me. I was looking for the usual distinct flavor to it but ended up disappointed. It was decent but nothing special about it.

  • Siau Hwee

    3.0

    bricks and copper located in streat food park in maginhawa st. Bricks and copper caters your turkish food cravings. They have beef,lamb and chicken kebabs. I like their kebabs. Very flavorful but one comment is too much tomatoes. The kebabs supposed to have garlic yogurt sauce. But they offer it with tomato paste instead. That is my comment to this restaurant.They also have dads old fashioned rootbeer for 35 pesos. Definitely will try again to taste more dishes

  • Nil Imre

    4.0

    Last March 13, 2015, I had the opportunity of being invited to StrEat, an event organized by Maginhawa Food Park, a newly opened vacant lot turned into a food complex. The park is situated in Teachers Village, Quezon City, a location commonly known as the hub for up-and-coming restaurants, coffee-shops, and watering holes in the North.According to organizer Ms. Chesca, the place was conceptualized as a convenient and efficient use to her family's real estate reserve and as a substitute to constructing a building with numerous requirements such as permits and licenses. Admittedly, her idea was well in point with the nature of businesses in the neighborhood, and the fact that people have known the area as a food-lover's paradise. She also envisioned the concept as an open space to provide variety to an already congested Maginhawa street. She stated that open spaces are usually rare, and that more parks are needed in urban centers. Good thing her idea was also coupled with an income-generating venture. In this case, she invited food concessionaires to set up shop and provide a variety of tastes to the venue. Some of the stalls were actual food trucks; while others were made out of metal containers and easily transferable by truck. Ms. Chesca mandated these concessionaires to conform to a design that mimicked the layout of a hipster trailer park.At the day I went, the Food Park had a bonfire planned at 8pm and a live band as well. I arrived early, about 5 pm. At this point, the venue was already starting to feel up with a lot of patrons from the neighboring universities and offices. I even had a few acquaintances who were already lining up for the food there.Ms. Chesca introduced me to Atty. Arnel, one of the concessionaires in the venue. He was the proprietor of Bricks and Copper, a Turkish-inspired restaurant with a variety of Middle Eastern dishes. Atty Arnel graciously provided me and my friend with generous samples of their sumptuous Turkish fare. During the conversation, the good proprietor had a lot to say about his prior experience in the legal profession and his subsequent foray into the restaurant business. He told us that he gained the idea of starting a joint with Middle Eastern fare from his Turkish client. After tasting the latter's dishes, he told us that he immensely enjoyed the experience, and that he envisioned the idea to start his own restaurant business. Hence, Bricks and Copper was born. It was originally confined to the Shaw area in Pasig, but Atty. Arnel thought of expanding it to north Quezon City in order to reach more customers. After seeing that the slots in the food park were for rent for affordable prices, he immediately set up shop there. He also thought of the restaurant as convenient place where he could wine and dine clients in his law practice. Now that's practicality and marketing rolled into one! He also takes pride in the fact that his beef and chicken dishes are charcoal grilled, and hence, very tasty.Apart from that, the pita bread and other pastries from his establishment are baked fresh every day. Add to this the fact that most of his dishes are heavily vegetable infused and compatible with a healthy diet.As for the dishes, we were able to taste their affordable Pita Doner. At 90 pesos, it's quite a steal. The dish is an exciting variation of shawarma with an airy and chewy pita wrapper, thinly sliced strips of beef or chicken (depending on the order) and garnished with onions, cucumber, and tomatoes. It goes well with the spicy chili sauce and the standard garlic yogurt sauce. Our food tasting didn't end there. We were given a generous serving of Iskender Kebab, a mix of charcoal grilled beef with a generous helping of vegetables and chili sauce. The mix also had a good amount of pita bread as a side dish. At 250 pesos (small), the dish was very filling. We were also able to try Pita Bread with two variations of sauces. The one is with Humus, a traditional Middle Eastern dressing used in a number of countries. At 80 pesos, the sauce comes with pita bread. We were also given a spicer variant called Ezme. This sauce had a garnish of chilies and had a salsa-like texture. It also comes at 80 pesos with 4 slices of that airy and chewy pita bread. Our dishes, of course, were not complete without imported Turkish Sirma Water. According to Atty. Arnel, the sparkling drink is usually preferred by the Turks when eating traditional fare. Its sweet taste tends to offset the spicy Mideast offerings. A bottle usually costs about 60 pesos, and is a fresh deviation from the soft drinks we Filipinos are so used to. We both enjoyed the meal so much that we bought our own Pita Doner. The taste was simply very irresistible, and our experience with this restaurant completely takes away our negative stereotypes of spicy Middle Eastern food. We surely would like to come back again for a second helping.The place also offers the traditional "hookah", a pipe used by the Arabs to smoke tobacco. The variant here offers scented fruit vapors instead for 200 pesos. When we come back next week, we surely hope to try it.

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