Social Expat - Variety of Togetherness: Ramadan Feast at Mövenpick Jakarta

Variety of Togetherness: Ramadan Feast at Mövenpick Jakarta

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Just minutes before sunset, the dining room at Mövenpick Hotel Jakarta City Centre settles into a gentle hush. Glasses are filled.

Dates are arranged neatly on small jars. The anticipation is collective and almost ceremonial. When the Adzan finally echoes through the space, the first sip of water feels less like routine and more like release.

A warm welcome from Movenpick Hotel during the media gathering for the official launch of the “Feast of Togetherness” Ramadan program. (Monday, 23 February 2026) Source: Doc. Social Expat

Social Expat was invited to experience the Mövenpick Hotel Jakarta City Centre’s Ramadan buffet, themed “Ramadan: Feast of Togetherness,” and what unfolds each evening at Ginger Flower Restaurant is a carefully composed portrait of warmth, scale, and cultural plurality.

Ramadan in Jakarta is often about movement,  traffic before Maghrib, crowded streets, and last-minute errands. Inside Mövenpick, the pace shifts. Lantern-inspired décor and subtle Arabian melodies soften the atmosphere, creating what feels like a contained world of its own. Conversations overlap in low tones, punctuated by laughter and the clink of cutlery. Families gather across long tables; colleagues loosen their formality; friends reconnect after long days of fasting.

The centrepiece of the experience is the Ramadan Iftar Buffet at Ginger Flower, a wide-ranging culinary spread that moves comfortably between continents. The hotel positions the offering as a meeting point of Middle Eastern, Asian, and Indonesian traditions, and the execution is deliberate rather than decorative.

Social Expat - Variety of Togetherness: Ramadan Feast at Mövenpick Jakarta
Source: Doc. Mövenpick Hotel Jakarta City Centre

In The First Sip: Sweet Traditions of Takjil

The opening chapter of the evening is devoted to sweetness and restoration. Bowls of chilled cendol shimmer in shades of green and coconut white. Mango sago offers tropical brightness, its soft pearls catching the light. Nearby, hot desserts, bubur sumsum draped in palm sugar syrup and kolak with banana and sweet potato,  provide warmth after a long day of fasting.

A row of gorengan, Indonesia’s beloved fritters, disappears quickly: crisp bakwan, fried tofu, and savory bites that feel inseparable from Ramadan evenings in Jakarta. The takjil station sets the tone,  generous, nostalgic, and deeply rooted in local custom.

Set of Selected Delicacies

From sweetness, guests transition into the richer center of the buffet, where Mediterranean and Middle Eastern influences dominate. At that one end of the buffet, three rice variations, Mandhi, Kebuli, and Kabshah, sit in polished chafing dishes, their spiced aromas rising into the air. Shawarma is carved to order, while Kambing Guling, tender and richly seasoned, draws steady queues. Bowls of Fatoush and other Arabian salads provide brightness and crunch, balancing the deeper notes of the meats.

Further along, the buffet shifts toward Indonesia’s culinary heartland.

A Nasi Padang spread displays tunjang, rendang, and gulai in thick, spice-laden gravies. The familiar sight of Indonesian condiments,  sambal, acar, and crispy shallots feels grounding.

Furthermore, Western and broader Asian options complete the selections. Freshly baked pizza slices rest beside sushi rolls and steaming bowls of ramen. Peking duck, carved with precision, adds another layer of theatre to the evening. The variety is wide, yet the arrangement avoids excess for its own sake; the buffet feels curated rather than crowded.

Throughout the evening, live Arabian music threads through the space. The performance is restrained, allowing conversation to remain central. It functions less as entertainment and more as atmosphere, a reminder of the month’s spiritual roots, even amid abundance.

More Than a Meal: Exclusive Discounts and Offers

Mövenpick is also extending a limited-time Buy 1 Get 1 dining offer during the promotion period, positioning the experience as accessible for larger gatherings. For the first week, from 23 February to 1 March 2026, the Iftar is priced at IDR 618,000++ per person. From the second week onward, the price adjusts to IDR 688,000++ per person. In a city where Ramadan dining can quickly become exclusive, such promotions appear calibrated to encourage communal attendance.

Buy 1 Get 1 Exclusive Offers

Social Expat - Variety of Togetherness: Ramadan Feast at Mövenpick Jakarta
Source: Doc. Mövenpick Hotel Jakarta City Centre
  • Week 1 (23 February – 1 March 2026)
  • IDR 618,000++/ pax
  • (Week 2 onwards IDR 688,000++/pax)

Beyond the buffet, the hotel has introduced a Ramadan Hampers Collection aimed at corporate gifting and personal sharing. Priced at IDR 718,000 net, with a 10 percent early-bird discount available for a limited time, the hampers arrive in elegant Ramadan-themed packaging. Inside are premium festive staples: nastar, kastengel, biscotti, and white chocolate cranberry cookies. The assortment reflects both Indonesian tradition and contemporary taste,  suitable for family exchanges or business courtesies.

Exclusive Ramadan Hampers

Social Expat - Variety of Togetherness: Ramadan Feast at Mövenpick Jakarta
Source: Doc. Mövenpick Hotel Jakarta City Centre
  • IDR 718,000 nett
  • With an exclusive 10% early-bird discount available for a limited time

For those seeking a fuller immersion, the Ramadan Staycation Package combines accommodation with the culinary programme. Starting from IDR 1,611,000++ per room per night, the package includes Sahur and Iftar Buffet for two adults and one child. A complimentary shuttle service to Istiqlal Mosque offers practical convenience for guests wishing to perform prayers at Southeast Asia’s largest mosque.

Exclusive Room Package

Social Expat - Variety of Togetherness: Ramadan Feast at Mövenpick Jakarta
Source: Doc. Mövenpick Hotel Jakarta City Centre
  • Starting from IDR 1,611,000++ /room per night,
  • Includes:
    • Sahur and Iftar Buffet for 2 adults and 1 child
    • Complimentary shuttle service to Istiqlal Mosque

What distinguishes the Ramadan offering at Mövenpick Jakarta City Centre is not simply the breadth of dishes, but the pacing. The Mövenpick hotel appears conscious that Iftar is as much about transition as consumption, that shifts from restraint to replenishment, from solitude to shared presence.

As plates are gradually cleared and conversation poured once more, the room regains its conversational rhythm. Lean back, linger, and unwind for a moment, while outside, Jakarta resumes its usual tempo.

Ginger Flower Restaurant at Mövenpick Hotel Jakarta

Reservations and enquiries:

WhatsApp: +62 811-9007-1107

Website: www.mjcc-hotel.com

Find this article helpful? Check out our other articles from Social Expat for more Hotel and Restaurant recommendations in Indonesia!

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