Cafe Malka: Quiet Mornings, Warm Plates, and Eilat's New Ritual
The coffee arrives before you are ready for it. A flat white, dense and velvety, set down on the marble counter while you are still blinking against the desert light outside. The door swings shut behind you and the temperature drops fifteen degrees, from Eilat's relentless glare to the cool hum of air conditioning and the soft clink of ceramic on stone. This is Cafe Malka on a weekday morning: unhurried, precise, and already smelling of butter and fresh herbs.
The cafe sits at the base of the U360 residential tower on Sderot Sheshet HaYamim, a stretch of road that most tourists never see. Shahamon is not the boardwalk, not the hotel strip, not the coral beach. It is Eilat for the people who actually live here, and Cafe Malka reads like a love letter to that audience. The fact that it welcomes visitors just as warmly is a bonus.



