Restaurant Teranga Beku Azul is a Senegalese halal spot in Santa Maria, serving wood-fire meat and chicken with bold flavours and fair prices. Simple setting, no alcohol, and food cooked to order. Go after 7:30 pm and don’t miss the bissap.
When it doesn’t look like much… and that’s exactly why it works
Teranga Beku Azul doesn’t win you over with looks. No seductive façade, no attempt to pretend it’s something else. And in Santa Maria, that often works in its favour. You come in because someone recommended it, because you need halal food, or because you catch an interesting smell while walking past.
Then you eat, and you understand why people keep coming back.
A Senegalese halal restaurant, no alcohol
This is an authentic Senegalese restaurant with halal cooking — something hard to find on the island. No alcohol is served, and the menu revolves around wood-fire meat and chicken, traditional recipes, and food cooked to order.
In the evening, they also add more “universal” options —spaghetti, burgers— for families and mixed groups, but the core of the place is still unmistakably West African.
Bold flavours, cooked with patience
Reviews agree on a few key points:
– Very tasty meat and chicken, well cooked, with deep flavour.
– Generous portions and fair prices.
– The bissap (hibiscus drink) is repeatedly called the best in town, natural and refreshing.
The food is made to order, with no shortcuts. That explains both the quality… and the occasional long wait if you arrive too early.
Street-food energy, warm people
The vibe feels closer to good street food than a formal restaurant. Locals, families, travellers looking for something different. Service is often described as very kind and welcoming, especially once the place is fully in rhythm.
But this is not a stop for rushed dinners or stopwatch plans.
Here, the kitchen is in charge. Not the clock.
Timing and expectations
There’s one very negative review mentioning dirt and poor attention, but it’s clearly a minority compared to a large majority of excellent experiences.
The point that does repeat —even in positive reviews— is simple:
– Don’t go too early.
Before 7:00–7:30 pm, the kitchen may not be fully operational and waits can stretch. Once the place hits its stride, everything moves faster.
How to enjoy it properly
Go from 7:30 pm onwards.
Choose Senegalese dishes over the Western options.
Try the bissap —non-negotiable.
Don’t expect alcohol or a touristy vibe.
And arrive hungry: portions aren’t shy.
For people who want something different (and real)
Teranga Beku Azul isn’t for everyone. And that’s part of the charm. It’s for anyone who wants halal food, real Senegalese flavours, a break from the usual circuit, and the acceptance that good cooking doesn’t always happen fast.
If you’re looking for something different, you don’t need to look any further.


