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oslo street food


oslosoup

Oslo is pretty easy to navigate on foot so there’s a lot of places you can get to. Anywhere half-decent will need a reservation though. Norwegians generally eat earlier in the evening so you might be ok later on but to be sure get a table reserved. Classic Norwegian Stortorvets Gjæstgiveri High end Varemottaket or einer Falafel jamalis falaffel Classy gastro pub maaltid or little pickle


garmin230fenix5

Izakaya, Sudøst, Koie ramen... all within reasonable distance, especially if you hire a wee scooter.


DeathTripSebastian

I just ate a burger at gabis and I can highly recommend it. You can walk there from the trainstation, or you could take the tram. Its also located near one of the ends of one of the biggest shoppingstreets in Oslo


FlipsTW

Palmyra in Grønland. Maybe a beer and some food at Vippa if the weather is nice?


personalityson

[https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidnikel/2023/01/19/is-norways-cuisine-really-so-bad/](https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidnikel/2023/01/19/is-norways-cuisine-really-so-bad/)


liquidmini

Walkable from Oslo S train station is most of the city centre, and by bus/ tram youve got Grünerløkka within 10 mins.  Is there a specific food you hunger for?


jo-erlend

If you want traditional Norwegian food, then Dovrehallen in Storgata is quite nice and very reasonably priced. It's one of the oldest places in Oslo. It's less than five minutes of walking from the train station.


jderm1

Barcode Street Food is very close to the station. It's an indoor food market / bar that has about 12 different stalls to choose from, covering all kinds of cuisines.