Welcome to arguably the most popular Malta blog! Here you can read interesting blog posts about Malta and the Maltese people. Find articles written by locals, including useful lists one might need to refer to occasionally and even reviews about products, services and events. We also try to include lots of information and tips aiming to guide tourists visiting the Maltese Islands. We encourage you to actively participate on this Malta blog by leaving comments, asking questions or simply use our online chat rooms.


Mellieha & Popeye Village

Perched high on a spur, the village of Mellieha (Maltese for salt pans), overlooks the sweeping expanse of its bay and beach.

It is a busy shopping center with more character than the sprawling resorts to its east. The steep main street, lined with grocery shops, small bars and restaurants, caters for local residents as well as holidaymakers.

Besides hosting the largest sandy beach in Malta, Mellieha has a range of self-catering accommodation, including luxury villas (one area with sea views is known as The Millionaire’s Valley).

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Miss Roberta

Miss Roberta is a top female DJ and a highly respected promoter. She is without doubt the “First Lady of Maltese Dance Music”, with an exponentially growing career that has spanned over the last years.

Roberta’s career first started off back in 1999. Her dedication and hard work helped her towards achieving 2 awards in the “Club DJ Awards 2002″ as Best Female DJ and Best House DJ.

Another of Miss Roberta’s great achievements came in the same year, when Malta’s most popular radio station, 89.7 Bay appointed her to run her own radio show every Friday from 22:30 to 00:30. Through Roberta’s enigmatic charm and promotional skills she went on to form what is now widely regarded as one of the most successful Club night in the Maltese Islands’ GET FUNKY.

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Hilton Malta Portomaso

The Hilton Malta is part of a unique waterfront development in St julians, named as Portomaso. This 5 star luxury hotel surrounded by the sea is definitely one of the most popular hotels in Malta.

This deluxe accommodation comprises of 294 luxury rooms. All of these units have a terrace or balcony overlooking the Yacht Marina or the beautiful Mediterranean Sea.

The Oceana restaurant is the main restaurant for guests residing at the Hilton Malta. Within the premises, overlooking the Yacht Marina, one also finds the Blue Elephant restaurant (specializing in Thai cuisine). The hotel also hosts the Bottega del Vino and the Merkanti Beach Club.

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Entertainment & Nightlife

Nightlife in the capital amounts to no more than a drink or two in a bar or an evening trot in a horse-drawn karrozzin round the city’s floodlit ramparts. However, there is plenty of action in resorts to the northwest.

Those seeking the bright lights should head to the small area of St Julian’s known as Paceville. Here you will find scores of discos, pubs and late-night bars. In summer the neon-lit streets are crammed with action-seekers. St Julian’s is also home to Malta’s casino – the only place where the nightlife could be described as glitzy. Beyond the headland, St George’s Bay has a growing number of fashionable discos. Lesser concentrations of bars with live music, and the occasional discos, can be found in Sliema and in the St Paul’s area, around Buggiba and Qawra.

Discos open early in the evening for the benefit of the young (and not-so-young) Maltese visiting from the countryside who have to catch the last bus home at around 9 or 10 pm. For the rest, the music throbs on into the early hours of the morning. The older generation of visitors to Malta are usually quite content with hotel entertainment, which take the form of folk nights, cabarets and possibly discos. These events are normally open to non-residents.

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Food in Malta

Food in Malta may not rank as gourmet cuisine, but it is very reasonably priced and there are plenty of places to choose from. Beyond the proliferation of pizzerias, pasta houses and snack bars, there are occasional gourmet restaurants and a good range of places serving fresh fish. The latter can be anything from family-run seaside cafés to fully-fledged restaurants which entice you in with their tanks full of live lobsters. Menus are almost always translated into English. The following are a few of the local dishes which you may come across if you happen to eat in restaurants serving Maltese cuisine.

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