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Centrum · Rotterdam · Netherlands

Falafel en Hummus

A fully vegetarian Lebanese street food spot in central Rotterdam, built on family recipes and serving handmade falafel, hummus, and Levantine staples to eat in or take away.

The essentials, at a glance

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Impact score
1 - Starting
→
Documented practices
Sustainable meat/fish plant-based kitchen
Plant-forward menu

Style
Casual
Cosy
Quick service
Cuisine
Mediterranean

The delicious details

Falafel en Hummus sits on the Botersloot in central Rotterdam, a few minutes from Blaak Station. Owner Khaled left a career in dentistry spanning Syria, Dubai, and Lebanon to follow a lifelong ambition of opening a restaurant, launching the first location in November 2019.

The menu is entirely vegetarian and predominantly vegan, centred on Levantine staples: handmade falafel served in saj bread, pita, or as a burger; smoky baba ganoush and moutabal; ful medames with broad beans and olive oil; and freshly baked manouche with za'atar. Only three of eighteen dishes contain dairy. The space is small, warm, and deliberately informal, with long opening hours and delivery options that make it an accessible everyday option in the city centre.

Menu
What's on the table, and what's left off

Fully vegetarian and 83% plant-based throughout. Handmade falafel is served in saj bread, pita, burgers, or standalone; dips like hummus, baba ganoush, and moutabal are made from whole chickpeas, grilled eggplant, and tahini. Only three dishes contain dairy (feta or mozzarella); legumes, vegetables, grains, and herbs form every other dish.

Cuisine
Mediterranean
Dietary options
Vegetarian options
Vegan-friendly
Dairy-free options
Alcohol-free
Impact score
How this restaurant rates
1 - Starting

The restaurant's strongest sustainability contribution is its fully vegetarian, predominantly vegan menu, which eliminates the environmental impact of meat and fish production entirely. The menu is built on chickpeas, broad beans, eggplant, grains, and olive oil, all inherently low-impact ingredients.

Beyond the menu composition, the restaurant does not currently communicate specific sustainability practices around sourcing, waste reduction, or energy use on its public channels.

The impact dimensions
Sustainable animal products✓
n/a
Social impact
Plant-forward menu✓

The kitchen is entirely vegetarian; this dimension does not apply to fully plant-based menus.

The restaurant serves no meat, poultry, fish, or seafood on any menu, including specials. The menu is entirely vegetarian, with only dairy (feta and mozzarella in three dishes) as animal-derived ingredients. Dimension 4 is marked not applicable per the scoring rubric and counts as a covered dimension.

Strongest sourcefalafelenhummus.nl ↗

Owner Khaled's immigrant entrepreneurship story and community-oriented philosophy shape the restaurant's social character, without named formal partnerships.

Owner Khaled's personal story of immigrating from Lebanon to the Netherlands in 2011 and building the restaurant from scratch represents a genuine narrative of refugee and immigrant integration through entrepreneurship. The about page emphasises that "food brings people together" and describes a warm, community-oriented atmosphere.

No named charitable organisations, formal community partnerships, employment initiatives, or recurring social commitments were identified in any source. The social impact is inherent in the founder's journey rather than a structured programme.

Strongest sourcefalafelenhummus.nl ↗

Fully plant-forward by design: the entire menu is vegetarian and 83% vegan, centred on chickpeas, legumes, vegetables, and grains.

The entire menu is vegetarian and approximately 83% of dishes are fully vegan. Vegetables, legumes, and grains are unambiguously the centre of the kitchen's identity: chickpeas (falafel, hummus, chickpea dishes), broad beans (ful medames), eggplant (baba ganoush, moutabal, aubergine sandwich, fattah), broccoli, quinoa, and fresh herbs dominate every dish. Animal products are limited to dairy in just three of eighteen dishes (feta cheese in quinoa salad, cheese in FH salad, mozzarella in one manouche variant).

The restaurant positions itself as "fresh vegan & vegetarian food" on Instagram. RestauPlant confirms 15 vegan dishes and 3 vegetarian dishes. No meat, poultry, fish, or seafood appears anywhere on the menu.

Strongest sourcefalafelenhummus.nl ↗
Visit & practical info
Address, price, and more
Address
Botersloot 46a, 3011 HH Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Netherlands
Open in Google Maps ↗
Price
€
Format
Eat in or take away, long hours
Hours
Monday11:00–23:00
Tuesday11:00–23:00
Wednesday11:00–23:00
Thursday11:00–23:00
Friday11:00–23:00
Saturday11:00–23:00
Sunday11:00–23:00
Style
Casual
Cosy
Quick service
Web
falafelenhummus.nl
Reviewed by My Treats
Last reviewed 15 Apr 2026
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How we score
The My Treats impact scale

Every restaurant is assessed against SEERO, our six-dimension sustainability framework — covering sourcing, seasonality, waste, animal products, social impact, and plant-forward cooking. Each finding is weighted by how strongly it is corroborated. The combined result is translated into a planet rating from 1 to 5.

The five levels

SEERO is an acronym for Starting, Engaged, Endorsed, Recognised, Outstanding:

Starting First verified signals of sustainable practice.
This place
Engaged Credible practice across two dimensions.
Endorsed Meaningful practice across three or more dimensions.
Recognised Strong practice across four or more dimensions, with independent corroboration.
Outstanding Top-tier practice, confirmed by recognised third-party audit.

How a level is reached. Each level needs two things together: a minimum number of dimensions covered, and a minimum overall strength of evidence across them. A dimension only counts once its evidence is specific and substantiated — a passing mention doesn't qualify. Meeting only one of the two keeps a restaurant a level lower.

Ratings of four or five planets require human validation and, at the top tier, an external audit. Scores are based on publicly available evidence and restaurant submissions at the time of assessment.

Full methodology→
Impact dimension
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How this dimension works
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How evidence is weighted
Self-declared Stated by the restaurant on its website, menu or in a submission. Plausible, but not yet independently corroborated.
Researched Found through independent research; one credible third-party source backs the claim.
Vouched Corroborated across more than one independent source. Some gaps may remain.
Audited Fully corroborated across independent sources or by a recognised third-party certification.
What the sourcing checkmarks mean
✓ Full check — independently verified: corroborated across more than one source, or audited / third-party certified (vouched or audited).
✓ Light check — self-declared or from a single source. Not yet independently verified.
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