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    Restaurant in Aschau im Chiemgau, Germany

    Brasserie Tafern

    150pts

    Classic-Mediterranean Alpine Brasserie

    Brasserie Tafern, Restaurant in Aschau im Chiemgau

    About Brasserie Tafern

    A tavern has occupied Kirchplatz 1 in Aschau im Chiemgau since the early fifteenth century, and Brasserie Tafern carries that continuity forward under Executive Chef Daniel Pape with classic and Mediterranean cooking that sits a deliberate register below the formal fine dining of its sister restaurant, Epicures. The à la carte format, Alpine terrace views, and afternoon opening hours make it one of the more considered casual options in this corner of Bavaria.

    A Bavarian Alpine Setting With Six Centuries of Hospitality Behind It

    Kirchplatz 1 in Aschau im Chiemgau is not a new address for hospitality. Documentary records trace a tavern on this site to the early fifteenth century, which means the ground beneath the Bergterrasse has been receiving guests — farmers, travellers, traders — for roughly six hundred years. Brasserie Tafern takes its name directly from that lineage: "Tafern" is an archaic term for a tavern, and the choice to keep it is a statement about continuity rather than nostalgia. In a small Chiemgau market town where the Kampenwand ridge closes off the southern horizon, that kind of rootedness reads as authentic rather than decorative.

    The physical position of the brasserie, attached to the Boutique Hotel Residenz Winkler and opening onto a terrace with direct sightlines to the Chiemgau Alps, locates it firmly within a tradition of Alpine hospitality where the view is considered part of the meal. In fine weather, the Bergterrasse earns its name: the mountains are present, not peripheral. It is the kind of setting that shapes what you order and how long you stay.

    Where the Food Comes From, and Why the Format Is Deliberate

    The editorial angle on any kitchen in this part of Bavaria runs, almost inevitably, through the question of sourcing. The Chiemgau sits within one of the more agriculturally coherent regions of southern Germany: dairy farming on the foothills, market gardens in the valley floors, and proximity to the Inn and Chiemsee waterways that have historically supplied freshwater fish to local tables. Classic Bavarian brasserie cooking , the kind that includes a dish like Senfrostbraten, a pork roast with mustard and rainbow vegetables , is legible precisely because it reflects those regional supply chains. Mustard-braised pork is not a chef's invention; it is a format built around what local farms reliably produce.

    Executive Chef Daniel Pape runs both Brasserie Tafern and the hotel's fine dining room, Epicures (Modern French), which means the two kitchens share a sourcing framework even as their register diverges sharply. At Tafern, that shared infrastructure expresses itself in the lightness and finesse noted across the menu: this is not heavy brasserie food built for volume, but cooking where the Mediterranean strand , artichoke consommé with tomato concassé, for instance , asks for produce quality to carry the dish without architectural complexity. A consommé is among the most transparent preparations in a classical kitchen; there is nowhere to hide in a clear broth.

    The seasonal daily specials function as the most direct signal of what the kitchen is working with at any given time. In the Chiemgau context, that means the menu shifts with Alpine agricultural rhythms: spring brings different vegetables to the terrace than autumn, and a kitchen that lists daily specials alongside its à la carte card is, in effect, publishing a running commentary on regional supply. For the reader planning a visit, that specificity argues for checking the current specials rather than anchoring expectations to a fixed menu.

    How Tafern Sits Relative to the Wider German Fine Dining Scene

    Germany's high-end restaurant tier has, over the past decade, consolidated around a relatively small number of multi-Michelin-starred addresses. Places like Aqua in Wolfsburg, Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn, Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach, and JAN in Munich represent one tier of that scene, as does ES:SENZ in Grassau, which sits close enough geographically to make a direct comparison reasonable. Further afield, Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg, Schanz in Piesport, Victor's Fine Dining by Christian Bau in Perl, Waldhotel Sonnora in Dreis, and the format innovation of CODA Dessert Dining in Berlin all operate in a register where tasting menus, long booking windows, and dress expectations shape the experience in advance. Internationally, addresses like Le Bernardin in New York City and Emeril's in New Orleans illustrate how differently the chef-driven restaurant concept has evolved in other contexts.

    Brasserie Tafern operates in a completely different register from all of these. The à la carte format, afternoon opening, and brasserie classification place it in a category where the criteria for success are accessibility, consistency, and a sense of place , not innovation or formal technique for its own sake. That is not a lesser ambition; it is a different one, and it is worth naming clearly. The brasserie format, done well, is harder to sustain than a tasting menu operation because every table must feel like a considered choice rather than part of a choreographed sequence.

    Planning a Visit: Hours, Access, and Context

    Aschau im Chiemgau is a small market town in the Chiemgau foothills, accessible from Munich in under an hour and a half by train via Prien am Chiemsee, with connections that make it a credible day-trip or weekend base. The town sits within easy reach of the Chiemsee lake to the north and the Kampenwand cable car to the south, which means Brasserie Tafern functions practically as either a midday or early-evening anchor for a day in the mountains. The kitchen opens at 3pm on weekdays and at noon on Sundays, a scheduling logic that fits the area's hiking and day-visitor patterns. Anyone arriving from a morning on the Kampenwand will find the Sunday noon opening particularly convenient.

    The brasserie is attached to the Boutique Hotel Residenz Winkler. For those staying at the hotel, Tafern and Epicures represent two distinct options under the same roof , the former for evenings when the Alpine air and a direct plate of Senfrostbraten make more sense than a formal tasting menu, the latter when the occasion calls for it. For visitors not staying at the hotel, the Bergterrasse remains accessible, and in a region where independent restaurants are relatively sparse, Tafern fills a gap in the mid-register that the area needs.

    For a broader picture of what the town and surrounding area offer, see our full Aschau im Chiemgau restaurants guide, our full Aschau im Chiemgau hotels guide, our full Aschau im Chiemgau bars guide, our full Aschau im Chiemgau wineries guide, and our full Aschau im Chiemgau experiences guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Would Brasserie Tafern be comfortable with kids?
    The brasserie format and à la carte menu make it considerably more family-adaptable than the fine dining room next door at Epicures. In a Bavarian Alpine town like Aschau im Chiemgau, where families arrive specifically for outdoor activities, a brasserie with a terrace and accessible classic dishes sits well within that demographic. There is no published pricing data to confirm specific family pricing, but the format and setting suggest a relaxed approach to table management.
    How would you describe the vibe at Brasserie Tafern?
    The atmosphere sits at the intersection of Bavarian tradition and considered informality. The Alpine terrace sets a tone that is simultaneously relaxed and scenic, while the kitchen's touch , lightness, finesse, Mediterranean details alongside regional classics , prevents it from tipping into heavy rural rusticity. In a town of Aschau's scale, and relative to the formal register of Epicures upstairs, Tafern reads as the place you return to on the second and third visit, not just the first.
    What do people recommend at Brasserie Tafern?
    The dishes cited most consistently in available documentation are the artichoke consommé with tomato concassé on the Mediterranean side, and the Senfrostbraten , pork roast with mustard, rainbow vegetables, and red onion , on the classic Bavarian side. Both sit within the kitchen's stated emphasis on finesse and lightness. Chef Daniel Pape's dual responsibility for both Tafern and Epicures means the technical baseline is meaningfully higher than the brasserie format might suggest. The seasonal daily specials are worth checking at the time of booking, as they reflect the most current expression of the kitchen's sourcing.

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