While Dubai’s restaurants stock up on tiramisu and load Valentine’s menus with Italian classics, VAGA is pushing grilled Chilean seabass and wagyu beef instead. The Bluewaters Island venue rolls out its four-course Armenian-Middle Eastern fusion menu on 14 February, priced at AED 499 per couple.
The setting sits directly beneath Ain Dubai, framed by the Dubai Marina skyline.
Signature dishes anchor the sharing-style evening alongside the seabass and wagyu mains, building toward a dessert designed for two. Soft drinks come included in the price. A live singer performs throughout service, threading entertainment between courses from the opening toast through to the final plate.
The restaurant describes the experience as a “journey of discovery”—a sequence where Armenian culinary traditions collide with broader Middle Eastern flavours in contemporary form.
For Valentine’s bookings across Dubai, Italian menus and chocolate-heavy finales dominate the landscape. VAGA’s bet on Armenian fusion marks a departure. The cuisine remains relatively uncommon in the emirate’s dining scene, where Lebanese, Persian and Turkish flavours command far greater visibility. Armenian techniques—often characterised by grilled meats, herb-forward preparations and pomegranate-based accents—rarely feature as the headline attraction.
Bluewaters Island has emerged as a competitive dining destination since opening, with venues competing for occasion dining traffic beneath the observation wheel. February bookings typically surge around the 14th, with restaurants banking on couples seeking skyline views and curated menus.
VAGA operates daily from noon until 1am, positioning itself as both restaurant and bar. The venue opened on The Wharf section of the island, leaning into what management calls “opulent, statement interiors” and an atmosphere built around escapism. The kitchen’s approach pairs heritage-driven recipes with modern plating, targeting what the restaurant terms “food lovers and experience seekers.”
The four-course structure spreads the meal across multiple sharing plates rather than individual portions—a format that’s gained traction in Dubai’s upscale casual dining segment over the past three years. Sharing menus allow kitchens to showcase range while keeping table energy collaborative rather than segmented.
The wagyu and seabass anchor the mains, though VAGA hasn’t detailed the full four-course lineup beyond confirming signature dishes will appear and the dessert arrives as a shared finale. That lack of granular menu transparency leaves some questions for diners weighing their options—particularly those with dietary restrictions or ingredient preferences.
Still, the pitch is clear: step away from predictable Valentine’s formulas. Swap spaghetti for seabass. Trade Chianti for Middle Eastern spice profiles. Let Armenian techniques do the talking while a singer handles the soundtrack.
Whether couples bite remains the question. Dubai’s dining scene moves fast, and February tables fill faster. By mid-month, the verdict will be in.
