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July 24th, 2007

Gastronomy

Soon enough I will be able to make recommendations based on my dining experiences. Until then, here are some guides to dining in Berlin:

Fodor Picks

Frommer Picks

Yahoo! has a decent guide where you can sort by cuisine, neighborhood or atmosphere

New Berlin Magazine

Time Out highly recommends Malatesta for (and here are “The Ten Best” Italian Restaurants)

Where to brunch

Seven exotic restaurants

Sumo is highly recommended Japanese food (and affordable)

Get your California Burritos here

I don’t know if the Bangkok Restaurant is good. However, I do know that it is in my hood and cheap.

Here are some more dining establishments in my hood. These are in Freidrichshain and these are in Kreuzberg. Any recommendations for me?

I know that my grandma would recommend these kosher places.

3 Responses to “Gastronomy”

  1. felix Says:

    some of my recommendations:

    1) Miseria e Nobilta, Kopernikusstr. 16, Friedrichshain
    Nice little italien restaurant. i can highly recommend the plate with assorted appetizers. the menu is in italian only and written on a little chalkboard. the pasta dishes are okay, but slightly overpriced. fish and seafood are usually very good.

    2) Weltrestaurant Markthalle, Kreuzberg
    Good place for southern german / austrian food. You need to get Schweinebraten mit Weinsauerkraut und
    Semmelknödel (goes together well with a Bernauer Schwarzbier), since that is what
    Herr Lehmann
    used to eat there.

    3) Weinstein, Lychener Straße 33, Prenzlauer Berg
    Great wine selection and serious german food. And once a week (i don’t remember the day) they do an 8 courses menu with only german and mostly local specialties.

    4) Il pane e le rose, Am Friedrichshain 6, Prenzlauer Berg
    Great handmade pasta (try the linguine with vongole). i once had lamb cutlets with fennel seeds and potatoes- sigh.
    when the summer comes back, you should go there at lunch time for the 3 courses menu and sit outside on the patio.

    5) Germers, Friedrichshain
    Small Austrian Restaurant. Schnitzel, Wine and Schnaps. And very friendly service. What else do you need?

    6) Il Ritrovo, Wühlischstraße 29, Friedrichshain
    Good authentic italien pizza, very unfriendly service.

  2. Dan Lazar Says:

    Thanks Felix–you are my new best friend in Berlin. Dearest readers (if you exist) listen to Felix’s recommendations as he is a long-time Berliner who knows food and, rumor has it, can bust it out in the kitchen as well. More to come on Felix’s mastery in the kitchen after 14 August…

  3. Dan Lazar Says:

    The Time Out Guide bills Kreuzberg’s Sumo Restaurant (http://www.s-u-m-o.com/start.php) as, “quick fresh Japanese food and intense flavors…masterful sushi…the feeling is modern Japanese food toned down for German tastes.”

    Sumo certainly holds its own on Kreuzgberg’s Bergmanstrasse (number 89) amidst a sea of tragically hip dining opportunities. Thought we chose to eat outside, the inside dining is really well designed–intimate tables on two stories with nearly perfect lighting. The modern kitsch Japanese art, fun and mostly modern, lend to an amiable vibe.

    Truth be told, “Time Out” is accurate in their assessment of Sumo. Simply put, it is great sushi for the price. The wine selection is weak, offering perhaps eight wines in sum. We had a lively resingly for 13 euros. We bypassed the salads but enjoyed a miso soup with some character and spicy salmon soup–both for about 2 euros. They offer a dozen sampling plates, with about eight rolls, four sashimi and an understated but tasty salad with sweet sesame dressing for between 10 and 18 euros. Of course, one can also choose to order individually.

    If you are in the neighborhood and have a hankering for sushi, Sumo comes highly recommended.

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