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The Hotel Skt Petri’s equally stylish in-house bar has gained a loyal following in C[open]hagen’s fashion crowd this year. Bar Rouge is one of a tiny minority of city watering holes to offer table service, and the bar’s capable staff know their way around any cocktail or colada. Other popular features are the bar’s sultry Monday evening tango nights and sets by local DJs on Fridays and Saturdays.
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If wine is your tipple of choice, then drink to your health at Bibendum. This urban sommelier serves all wine, all the time, and with more than 100 different labels to choose from (half available by the glass), there’s plenty to go around. Bibendum’s kitchen serves light tapas dishes from 6pm-10pm.
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There’s a real working man’s atmosphere in this English expat-owned pub, even though the regulars are as likely to be well-heeled professionals. The mood is unpretentious and friendly, but make no mistake, Charlie takes his ale seriously. This is the only pub in Denmark ever to receive the prestigious Cask Marque.
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Brand-new nightspot Emma is C[open]hagen’s first attempt at a smokeless club. The club itself is situated in a converted loft apartment on Lille Kongensgade, across the street from the Magasin department store, so it has the intimate feel of a good friend’s flat. If you just can’t resist the urge to light up, step out onto the covered balcony.
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Leopold’s is typical of many in-spots in the city right now—during the late afternoon hours it serves as a café and morphs into a swinging nightclub after dark. The cocktail menu is fair and the drinks are all glibly named. Try the champagne-elderflower concoction Plenty O’Toole. A good spot for sizing up the opposite sex.
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