Restaurant in Liège, Belgium
Como en Casa
100ptsSeasonal Organic Provenance

About Como en Casa
On Rue Hors-Château in Liège's old quarter, Como en Casa has built a reputation as the city's most committed vegetarian and vegan table, sourcing from certified organic producers across the region. Beetroot tartare with dill, cider-vinegar celeriac, and mushroom carpaccio from a named local farm define a menu where the supply chain is as considered as the plate. A colourful, convivial room rounds out the picture.
Where the Food Comes From First
In Belgian restaurant culture, provenance language can often function as decoration: a chalkboard mention of a farm name, a seasonal flourish on a menu that changes little. At Como en Casa, on the cobbled stretch of Rue Hors-Château in Liège's Hors-Château quarter, the sourcing logic runs deeper than that. The kitchen operates on a framework of certified organic produce drawn from regional agriculture, and the menu is built around what that supply chain actually delivers rather than what a standard vegetarian repertoire might suggest. This is not a venue that arrived at plant-based cooking through trend; it arrived through a specific philosophy about what food should be made of.
The Hors-Château street itself sets the register before you reach the door: a narrow, ascending lane lined with 18th-century façades, connecting the lower city to the Citadel hill, with the kind of worn-stone atmosphere that resists the generic. Approaching Como en Casa along this route, the context is already one of local character rather than commercial polish. Inside, the room is described consistently as joyful and colourful — not in the sense of deliberate design theatrics, but in the way that spaces accumulate warmth when the people running them have a clear sense of purpose.
The Regional Supply Chain in Practice
Belgium's Walloon region has a well-developed network of small organic producers, and Como en Casa draws on it with a specificity that goes beyond a generic farm-to-table framing. Named producers appear in the context of actual dishes: Theo Jodogne at Eben-Emal supplies mushrooms for a carpaccio preparation; chestnuts accompany them. The local orchard at Warsage provides apples that appear alongside celeriac dressed with cider vinegar. Beetroot tartare arrives with dill.
These combinations illustrate something worth noting about ingredient-led vegetarian cooking at this level. When the sourcing is genuinely constrained by region and season, the menu cannot default to global pantry ingredients or year-round staples. The result is a cooking style that has to solve different compositional problems from a conventional vegetarian menu — acidity, texture, and depth of flavour need to come from what the local landscape produces, not from imported umami boosters or pantry shortcuts. The cider vinegar on the celeriac, the earthiness of the mushroom carpaccio, the natural sweetness of local apples: these are solutions to real culinary problems, not decorative touches.
This approach places Como en Casa in a small but growing tier of European restaurants where the supply chain is itself the editorial position. That tier operates differently from mainstream organic dining: it requires relationships with producers, acceptance of seasonal gaps, and a kitchen willing to build technique around what arrives rather than sourcing to fit a fixed menu. Across Belgium, very few vegetarian restaurants operate at this level of supply-chain discipline. For context, Belgium's most decorated kitchens , Hof van Cleve in Kruishoutem, Boury in Roeselare, Zilte in Antwerp , operate within omnivore fine-dining frameworks. Como en Casa occupies a separate and largely uncontested niche in Liège specifically.
Liège's Vegetarian Table, Placed in Context
Liège's dining scene has a character distinct from Brussels or Antwerp. The city's food culture is rooted in Walloon tradition , gaufres de Liège, boudin, lapin à la liégeoise , and the arrival of a rigorous vegetarian restaurant represents a genuine expansion of the city's table, not simply an import of a format established elsewhere. Within Liège's current restaurant range, Como en Casa sits at an angle to most of its neighbours. Creative cooking in the city tends toward French-influenced bistro formats: Héliport Brasserie works in the creative French register at the €€€ tier; ¡Toma! pushes into creative territory at the €€€€ level; Au Moriane and Caudalie work within French contemporary and creative French frames respectively. Al Piccolo Mondo covers the Italian corner. None of these share Como en Casa's specific axis of fully plant-based cooking anchored to certified organic regional sourcing.
In Belgian terms more broadly, the comparison is to a handful of Brussels addresses , including those in and around the scene documented by venues like Bozar Restaurant , where ingredient sourcing has become a primary editorial signal rather than a secondary one. Internationally, this model has precedent in kitchens like Willem Hiele in Oudenburg and Bartholomeus in Heist, where the surrounding environment shapes what lands on the plate. Como en Casa works from a different geography and at a more accessible price register, but the underlying logic , local, seasonal, honest , runs in the same direction.
The Cooking and What to Expect on the Plate
The menu at Como en Casa operates in a register that the venue's documentation describes as balancing finesse and creativity. That framing is useful: this is not health-food-counter vegetarianism, and it is not the kind of plant-based cooking that tries to mimic meat. The dishes mentioned in the venue record , beetroot tartare with dill, celeriac with cider vinegar and local apple, mushroom carpaccio with chestnuts , point toward a kitchen working in composed, technique-conscious formats. Tartare as a preparation requires precision in cut, seasoning, and acid balance whether the base ingredient is tuna or beetroot. Carpaccio of mushrooms requires attention to variety selection and slice thickness. These are not simple preparations dressed up with organic credentials.
The seasonal and organic constraint also means the menu shifts. A dish built around apples from the Warsage orchard exists within a harvest window. Mushrooms from Theo Jodogne at Eben-Emal have a production rhythm. Diners arriving at different points in the year should expect the menu to reflect that reality rather than offer a fixed canon of signature preparations throughout all twelve months.
Planning Your Visit
Como en Casa sits at Rue Hors-Château 76, in a part of Liège that rewards exploration on foot. The Hors-Château quarter connects directly to the Montagne de Bueren staircase and the hillside above the old city, making it a natural anchor for an afternoon that moves between the lower city and the Citadel. The restaurant's colourful, convivial character suits a relaxed meal rather than a formal occasion, and the fully plant-based menu makes it a reliable choice for mixed groups where dietary requirements need to be accommodated without compromise on cooking quality. Booking ahead is the sensible approach, particularly for weekend sittings, given the restaurant's reputation as one of the city's more distinctive addresses in the sustainable-dining category. For a fuller picture of what Liège offers beyond this address, the EP Club Liège restaurants guide covers the range. The city's hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences are also documented there.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Como en Casa child-friendly?
- The room's described atmosphere , colourful, joyful, convivial , is consistent with a relaxed environment that accommodates families. Liège's mid-range dining generally trends informal, and a plant-based kitchen without elaborate tasting-menu formats is well-suited to mixed-age groups. That said, specific family facilities are not documented, so it is worth confirming directly when booking.
- What should I expect atmosphere-wise at Como en Casa?
- The venue is positioned as a convivial table rather than a formal dining room. Rue Hors-Château sets a characterful, historic tone, and the interior is consistently described as colourful and warm. It reads as a neighbourhood restaurant with a clear point of view rather than a destination venue designed for occasion dining. Among Liège's creative addresses , including the higher-spend tiers occupied by ¡Toma! , Como en Casa sits at the more relaxed, accessible end of the scale.
- What's the leading thing to order at Como en Casa?
- The kitchen's documented strengths lie in composed vegetable preparations using named regional producers: the mushroom carpaccio sourced from Theo Jodogne at Eben-Emal and the beetroot tartare with dill are both representative of the cooking style. Given the seasonal menu rotation, the more useful guide is to order dishes built around whatever the kitchen is currently receiving from its organic supply network rather than seeking a fixed signature. Ask what is freshest on the day.
- Do I need a reservation for Como en Casa?
- Como en Casa is described in Liège's dining conversation as one of the city's most notable sustainable tables. Restaurants in that tier with a small, loyal following tend to fill weekend covers quickly. Booking in advance is advisable, particularly for Friday and Saturday evenings. Midweek visits may offer more flexibility, but given the absence of live booking data, confirming availability directly is the practical approach.
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