Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

How is the food and drink when you fly Qatar Airways Qsuite business class?

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

This is my review of the food and drink available in Qatar Airways Qsuite business class, based on a recent flight on the A350-900.

The introductory article in this series, which reviewed the Qatar Airways Premium Lounge at London Heathrow Terminal 4, is here.  Our two articles reviewing the Qsuite business class seat start here.  Our look at the Al Maha VIP arrivals and departures service is here.  Our review of the Al Mourjan business class lounge in Doha is here.

As a reminder, Qatar Airways gave me a return Business Class flight from London Heathrow to Doha.  Head for Points paid for all of its other expenses including hotel, transfers and meals.

Qatar Airways qsuite business class breakfast review

Qatar Airways business class food and drink

I decided to write a separate article covering the food and drink options on my flight because I got to experience breakfast on the outbound and lunch on the inbound.

In general I don’t like reviewing aircraft breakfasts because there is very little you can do to liven them up.  A lunch or dinner gives an airline a far better chance to show what it can do.  Luckily I got to try both.

Qatar Airways business class breakfast

I should mention first that, of course, you receive the usual pre-take off champagne if you want it.  Qatar Airways is currently serving Pommery alongside a Canard-Duchene Charles VII rose.  Both retail for around £35-£40.

Qatar Airways offers genuine ‘dine when you want’ and there is absolutely no pressure to order at any particular time.  As it happened, with a breakfast flight and a lunchtime flight, I chose to eat immediately after take-off on both occasions as did the majority of passengers.  It’s worth noting that the airline is happy to serve you another lunch or even another breakfast later in the flight if you don’t want anything from the snack menu!

The breakfast menu was:

Fresh orange juice or carrot juice

Starters:

Seasonal fresh fruits

Greek yoghurt, strawberry compote and toasted granola with nuts

Choice of breakfast cereals

Assiette of cold cuts (smoked salmon, cheddar and rocket leaves)

Mains:

Traditional Arabic breakfast

Cheese and tomato omelette with beef medallion, potato cake and bearnaise sauce

Steel-cut oats served with berries and cream

Bread selection

There is also a ‘light options’ menu. In theory this can be substituted for breakfast but is better enjoyed later in the day – mixed garden salad, gnocchi with spinach and mild blue cheese sauce, afternoon tea, mini sliders (beef and chicken) or a cheese plate.

There was also a separate ‘snack platter’ inserted into my menu as an extra page.  This was promoting a ‘one tray’ snack, available at any time, containing smoked salmon with dill mayo, a feta and watermelon skewer, chicken with apricot and pistachio brochette, pastilla lamb, mixed pepper with turmeric crostini and Battenberg cake.

Before I come to the food, let’s talk about presentation.  Like Etihad, Qatar Airways nails this.  Everything just looks ‘right’. 

This is part of the breakfast setting.  Note the little battery powered candle at the top right which is a signature feature.  Note the smart bread basket with inlay, the cutlery, the butter plate.  None of this is expensive – certainly not setting it up correctly for the customer, which costs nothing except training – but so few airlines get this right.

Qatar Airways qsuite business class breakfast review

I took the Greek yoghurt:

Qatar Airways qsuite business class breakfast review

….. and the omelette:

Qatar Airways qsuite business class breakfast review

I’ll be honest.  I didn’t read the small print on the omelette, which explained that it came with a chunk of beef.  I don’t have anything against beef, but not at 9am.

Is ‘omelette with beef’ a Middle Eastern thing?  It was a new one on me.  There was nothing wrong with the beef – cooked enough, tender enough – but it wasn’t what I was expecting for my breakfast.

There really isn’t much else to say, which is why I don’t like reviewing breakfasts!  On the other hand, omelettes are not easy to prepare on an aircraft so the fact that this one tasted fine is a positive.

Nearer to landing into Doha I had the afternoon tea.  Again this is a relatively simple thing, but take a look at the photo below and compare it to a British Airways effort.  It is worth noting that catering from London is done by DO&CO who are the British Airways catering company.  BA could serve a literally identical product if it chose to spend enough.

Qatar Airways qsuite business class breakfast review

Qatar Airways business class lunch service

The lunch menu for my return flight gave the airline a better chance to shine.

We started off with an amuse bouche:

Qatar Airways qsuite business class breakfast review

I chose to pass on the soup course and went straight for the appetisers.  The options were:

Signature Arabic mezze

Prawn and scallop with olive oil and lemon, with black quinoa and pickled red onion

I took the latter which was impressive – a surprisingly complex dish:

Qatar Airways qsuite business class breakfast review

There were three choices of mains, which came with ‘a selection of artisan breads’:

Grilled veal fillet, with morel mushrooms, asparagus, garlic confit and saffron mashed potatoes

Seafood tagine with raisin and parsley couscous, mixed vegatables and smoked paprika

Smoked cheese tortellini with roasted cherry tomatoes, Parmesan tuilee and smoked cheese sauce

Here is the tagine (note the smart plate):

Qatar Airways qsuite business class breakfast review

I rarely have dessert wine on the ground, so this flight was a good excuse to crack open a Tokaji Aszu 2008 5 Puttonyos, which retails at around £35 for a half bottle.  A 20 year old Tawny Port from Taylor’s is also available.

Qatar Airways qsuite business class breakfast review

Dessert choices were:

Date and walnut pudding

Fresh berries with rose water syrup

Gourmet ice cream selection

I went with the ice cream, which was substantially classier than you would have the right to expect.   You can probably see a theme emerging here – in general, what you get is a classier and more complex dish than the menu would have you believe.

Qatar Airways qsuite business class breakfast review

I gave the cheese plate a miss (Oxford, Manchego and goat chive cheese) but was happy to take a couple of Godiva chocolates to have with my coffee.

Whilst I didn’t need a second meal, I could have chosen from two light bites (the afternoon tea again, or mini sliders).  There was also the daily snack platter menu.

The wine selection

We covered the champagne options above.  I didn’t drink any standard white or red wine during either flight.

The white selection included a Truchard Napa Valley chardonnay (2017) and a Chilean Duette Indomita sauvignon blanc (2017).  The Truchard sells for around £30 which is very high end for a Business Class wine list, although the Duette is around the £15 level.

The three reds included a Chateau Larrivet Haut-Brion (2012), another £30 bottle, and a Stump Jump Shiraz (2016) from Australia which is a lot cheaper at around £11.

Conclusion – how did I find Qatar Airways business class food and drink?

Some people find the food to be the weakest part of the Qatar Airways business class proposition.  I don’t agree.

Presentation is excellent.  The genuine ‘dine on demand’ service is excellent.  The drinks list contains some gems alongside some averagely priced products.  The food, in itself, was very well put together and perfectly cooked.

The only thing which didn’t hit the mark, for me, were the menu choices themselves.  Serving beef with an omelette was odd.  Similarly, a lunch selection of veal fillet, seafood tagine or tortellini is going to leave some people cold.  In terms of taste, style and presentation, however, I was a happy man.

If you missed the first two parts of my Qsuite flight review, published earlier in the week, click here.

The Qatar Airways Qsuite website is here.

Coming up, I will take a look at the Al Maha VIP arrivals and departure service at Hamad International Airport in Doha, and the Al Mourjan business class lounge.

Comments (80)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • A concerned cow says:

    Beer and chicken sliders?!

  • Blue Mountains says:

    Re: the omelette with beef. Obviously the beef medallion is there to substitute pork sausage/bacon (not allowed due to religion of the Qatari region) or chicken sausage (which usually lacks flavour and can be dull). Not sure why they didn’t go for a beef sausage (which is both allowed by religion and can have flavour) or some nice quality mushrooms. I guess they were trying to be novel/cutting edge and failed?

    • Nick says:

      Beat me to it BM. Exactly as you say, but, IMHO beef sausages or beef bacon are definitely, like chicken sausages, an aquired taste at best! 🙂

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Steak and eggs is a perfectly normal breakfast.

      Prefer turkey bacon if they are going to substitute pork

  • letBAgonesbe says:

    The BA long-haul afternoon tea served in CW looks as good as this IMHO (if not better)….

    • Rob says:

      Last time I had one the sandwiches came in a plastic air tight bag which I had to open myself.

      • letBAgonesbe says:

        I doubt that was in CW, catered by DoCo out of LHR.

        • Rob says:

          No, not DO&CO – this was on a Gate Gourmet route.

          Crew could still have opened the plastic packet and plated it of course …..

          • Russ says:

            Exactly. Sometimes I come back from Doha on QR then on a BA flight into LHR, having afternoon tea on both. BA just doesn’t have the ‘we’re here to serve’ mentality wear as QR is more ‘what can we do to show you your important to us’. They could both be serving the same food and QR would still be miles ahead.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Agree. BA CW is catching up to Qatar. When it comes to onboard food.

      Quite enjoyed my last flights on 747 upper deck, except my seat was dirty when I boarded 😡

  • Nick says:

    I’ve nothing at all against steak and eggs for breakfast so this seems to be a classy twist on that. I’d eat it.

    • John says:

      +1

      I had this on AKL-DOH but the funny thing is QR felt it was appropriate to have breakfast at 2100 Doha time. I swapped the “recommended” meals around.

      • tony says:

        +2 not sure what the ‘beef’ is with steak & eggs for breakfast????

        Popular enough on menus i’ve seen on the ground in the US and I recall being served the combination on an SQ flight in business one morning, too.

    • Lady London says:

      Champagne or Guinness with the breakfast steak as well.

  • Rob Mc says:

    The worst is Iberia. Terrible service and the food is worse than BA economy!
    I did 6 business class flights with them this year, the last one I had to wait to use the restroom as the crew were “ahead of me” in the line, and then I had to climb over an attendant who had his feet out in the galley whilst reading his book..

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Have to be honest after a trip earlier this year. Unless it’s a smashing deal or somewhere BA doesn’t fly id rather use my Avios in Club any day.

    • Andy says:

      I just refuse to fly Iberia long haul. Luckily there is enough choice to avoid them. The cheaper Avios prices do not make up for the shoddy service and lack of food.

  • Nick G says:

    Does anyone know what food I could expect on the 10.55 from FRA to DOH next week. I assume lunch since it will be more midday by the time they start?

    Rob. I don’t expect you to order/review of course but is there anyway you could include briefly what the children’s meals are on any of your flight reviews? I’m always left scratching my head when planning ahead and ordering a child’s meal. If Ba is anything to go by next week it will have more chocolate than actual food……

    • geORge says:

      Indeed, lunch. The lounge has a very decent breakfast

    • Rob says:

      Problem is that they are special order so unless my kids are there I don’t see them.

      I can tell you that BA Club Europe kids meals are now proper food instead of junk, but unfortunately that means less of it gets eaten than before …

    • ankomonkey says:

      Flew TG economy recently and was very impressed with the amount of fruit/veg in the child meals.

  • The Original David says:

    Is a “steel-cut” oat better than any other sort of oat? That dish sounds rather dry, unless they actually mean porridge?

    • Rich says:

      Yes – steel cut oats are higher quality / slightly healthier / more expensive than the rolled oats you usually buy / get

      • Rhys says:

        Rob and I were wondering this in the office yesterday….now we know!

      • Andrew says:

        Although you can then go for premium steel cut (also known as pinhead) that are then stone rolled.

        Oatmeal is a complex thing.

  • John says:

    I don’t get why people like to eat after takeoff especially if you gorged yourself in the lounge. I guess on a 7 hour flight with DoD they won’t run out of food but especially BA likes to fatten you up at the start then barely anything at the end.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.