Restaurant in Vreeland, Netherlands
De Nederlanden
480ptsTerroir-driven Michelin star; book ahead.

About De Nederlanden
De Nederlanden holds a Michelin star and an OAD top-325 ranking, but its real argument is place: a riverside former country hotel in Vreeland where Wilco Berends cooks Dutch terroir — oysters, eel, lamb, regional cheese — with classical technique and genuine seasonal rotation. Book four to six weeks out minimum, consider staying in the guestrooms, and arrive at lunch if you want the River Vecht view in full.
Who Should Book De Nederlanden — and When
De Nederlanden is the right choice if you want a Michelin-starred meal that feels grounded in place rather than performance. This is a restaurant for couples celebrating something meaningful, for food travellers making the detour from Amsterdam to eat at a genuinely Dutch table, and for anyone who wants to sit beside a working drawbridge on the River Vecht and eat produce that actually comes from the surrounding region. At the €€€€ price point, it competes directly with the Netherlands' top tier — and it earns its place there.
The Experience: What to Expect on a First Visit
The building carries real character: a former country hotel with historical architecture tempered by contemporary interior work. The atmosphere leans calm and considered rather than theatrical. The open kitchen means you can watch chef Wilco Berends and his team at work, which adds quiet energy to the room without tipping into noise. The River Vecht view , drawbridge included , does the rest. Expect a room that feels composed, not hushed to the point of formality. The service has been noted for its warmth, which distinguishes De Nederlanden from Dutch restaurants where technical correctness can feel cooler than the food.
For a first-timer, the most useful thing to know is that De Nederlanden is not trying to be an urban fine-dining destination transplanted to the countryside. It is specifically, deliberately a regional restaurant. Berends' cooking draws on Dutch terroir , lamb, eel, cheese, oysters , and the kitchen's credibility is tied to how well those ingredients are sourced and treated, not to how many imported luxury products appear on the plate. If that regional focus appeals to you, this is one of the stronger arguments for booking. If you are looking for a broader European fine-dining register, venues like Ciel Bleu in Amsterdam or Parkheuvel in Rotterdam will feel closer to that mode.
What to Order and How the Seasons Shape the Menu
Berends' terroir focus means the menu shifts with what the region is producing. Oysters are cited as a house speciality and a reliable entry point regardless of season , start there. The slow-cooked cod served on crispy fennel brunoise with cockles, mussels, and a jus built from the shellfish cooking liquid is the kind of dish that communicates exactly what this kitchen does well: classic technique used to extract maximum flavour from modest, local ingredients rather than to dress up expensive ones.
The seasonal logic here matters practically. Lamb from the region will be at its leading in spring and early summer. Eel is a freshwater Dutch classic most associated with autumn and the cooler months. Dutch cheese, while available year-round, often anchors richer autumn and winter menus. If you are planning a visit specifically to eat the leading version of a particular ingredient, align your booking with the season in which that product peaks. Spring and early summer offer the widest seasonal produce rotation; late autumn tends to reward diners who want the kitchen's richer, more deeply flavoured preparations. There is no wrong time of year to come, but there is a right time for whatever you most want to eat.
The Michelin inspector's note points explicitly to oysters as the recommended opening move. Take that advice. Beyond that, trust the menu's most regionally specific options over anything that reads as an interpolation from outside the Dutch pantry.
Lunch vs. Dinner: Which Service to Book
De Nederlanden runs lunch Thursday through Sunday (12 PM to 4:30 PM) and dinner Wednesday through Saturday (6 PM to midnight). Monday and Tuesday are closed. The River Vecht view is better appreciated in daylight, which gives the lunch service a genuine atmospheric advantage for first-timers. Dinner runs later than most Dutch fine-dining restaurants, with service extending to midnight on open days , useful if you are travelling from Amsterdam and want time to arrive without rushing.
Sunday lunch is the only service that spans a full weekend afternoon with no dinner follow-on, which tends to make it the most relaxed pacing of the week. If your schedule allows it, that is the booking to target.
Staying Over
De Nederlanden has guestrooms. If you are travelling from outside the region, the case for staying is direct: the restaurant runs late, the village of Vreeland is not built for late-night transport, and sleeping on-site means you can commit to the full meal without a fixed departure time. The Michelin listing specifically flags the guestrooms as worth booking. That is not generic hospitality advice , it is a practical signal that the overnight experience is integrated enough with the restaurant to be worth the upgrade.
Ratings and Recognition
- Michelin: 1 Star (2024)
- Opinionated About Dining (OAD): Ranked #325 in Classical Europe (2024)
- Google: 4.7 from 377 reviews
Booking De Nederlanden
Booking here is hard. The combination of a small-town location, a Michelin star, and limited operating days (closed Monday and Tuesday, lunch service only four days a week) means demand consistently exceeds availability. Book as far in advance as your plans allow , four to six weeks minimum for weekend lunch, and more for specific dates around holidays or long weekends. If you are flexible on date, weekday dinner services (Wednesday and Thursday) are your leading chance at a shorter lead time.
There is no walk-in culture at this level in Vreeland. Treat this as a reservation-first venue and plan accordingly. For more on what else to do in the area while you are there, see our full Vreeland restaurants guide, our Vreeland hotels guide, and our Vreeland experiences guide.
Practical Details
| Detail | De Nederlanden | Aan de Poel (Amstelveen) | De Bokkedoorns (Overveen) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price tier | €€€€ | €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Michelin stars | 1 Star (2024) | Check Pearl listing | Check Pearl listing |
| Lunch service | Thu–Sun | Check listing | Check listing |
| Dinner service | Wed–Sat (to midnight) | Check listing | Check listing |
| Closed days | Mon–Tue | Check listing | Check listing |
| Setting | Riverside, former country hotel | Urban waterside | Coastal dune setting |
| Booking difficulty | Hard | Hard | Hard |
| Guestrooms available | Yes | No | No |
For other regional reference points, see Aan de Poel in Amstelveen, De Bokkedoorns in Overveen, Inter Scaldes in Kruiningen, De Groene Lantaarn in Staphorst, and De Treeswijkhoeve in Waalre.
FAQs
- How far ahead should I book De Nederlanden? Four to six weeks minimum for weekend lunch; six or more weeks for peak dates. The combination of Michelin recognition, a small-town location, and a limited operating schedule (closed two days a week, lunch-only on four days) makes this one of the harder bookings at the €€€€ tier in the Netherlands. Weekday dinner services in mid-week offer the leading chance of a shorter lead time.
- What should a first-timer know about De Nederlanden? This is a regional Dutch restaurant first, a fine-dining destination second. Chef Wilco Berends builds his menus around local terroir , lamb, eel, oysters, regional cheese , so expect the kitchen to reflect what the Dutch countryside and its waterways actually produce. Start with the oysters, which Michelin flags as a house speciality. The River Vecht view and the riverside setting are part of the experience; arriving in daylight (lunch service) makes the most of both. If you are driving from Amsterdam, allow time: Vreeland is a small village and this is not a venue you drop into without a plan.
- Is lunch or dinner better at De Nederlanden? Lunch, for most first-timers. The view of the River Vecht and the drawbridge is better in daylight, the pacing tends to be more relaxed, and Sunday lunch in particular runs without the time pressure of a dinner that follows. That said, dinner has its own case: service runs to midnight on open nights, which allows a longer, more unhurried meal if you are staying over in one of the guestrooms. At the same €€€€ price point, the quality of cooking does not change between services , choose based on your travel logistics and how much of the setting you want to see.
- Can I eat at the bar at De Nederlanden? There is no confirmed bar-dining option in the available data. At this price tier and in this setting , a former country hotel in a small village , the experience is built around reserved tables in the main dining room, with the open kitchen as the secondary focal point. Do not count on a walk-in bar option. Book a table.
- Is De Nederlanden good for a special occasion? Yes, and it is genuinely well-suited to it. The Michelin star provides the credibility benchmark, the riverside setting adds atmosphere that urban restaurants cannot replicate, and the guestrooms mean a special-occasion dinner can become an overnight. The warmth of service noted in the Michelin write-up matters here: this is not a cold or transactional fine-dining environment. For couples or small groups marking something significant, De Nederlanden delivers more setting and intimacy than comparable €€€€ restaurants in Amsterdam, at the cost of requiring more travel planning.
Compare De Nederlanden
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| De Nederlanden | €€€€ · Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | De Nederlanden bears its name well. The decor, the charming service and the culinary style lend this former country hotel a quintessentially Dutch atmosphere. This building has plenty of character, combining historical charm with contemporary sleekness. From your table you can either watch the chefs at work in the open kitchen or take in the delightful view of the River Vecht and the drawbridge.It is clear from the menu that Wilco Berends loves his terroir. When it comes to produce such as lamb, eel and cheese, rest assured that the chef will serve you the very best the region has to offer. Be sure to try his oyster dishes – a speciality and a great start to your meal! What follows is the result of a blend of classic expertise and contemporary playful creativity. A shining example is the slow-cooked cod that chef Berends presents on crispy fennel brunoise, combined with cockles and mussels, and finished off with a sublime buttery jus based on the cooking water from the cockles and mussels.One final tip: If you want to experience De Nederlanden to the fullest, book one of the magnificent guestrooms.; Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe Ranked #325 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024) | Hard | — |
| De Librije | €€€€ · Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| 't Nonnetje | €€€€ · Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| De Lindehof | Contemporary Dutch, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| De Nieuwe Winkel | €€€€ · Organic | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Fred | €€€€ · Creative French | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Vreeland for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book De Nederlanden?
Book at least four to six weeks out. De Nederlanden holds a Michelin star, operates only four days a week for dinner and runs lunch Thursday through Sunday — that tight schedule compresses demand significantly. If you have a fixed travel date, book the moment your plans are confirmed; last-minute availability is rare for a restaurant of this profile in a small village like Vreeland.
What should a first-timer know about De Nederlanden?
The restaurant is a former country hotel on the River Vecht with an open kitchen, so expect a setting that is as much about place as plate. Chef Wilco Berends builds the menu around regional produce — lamb, eel, cheese, and oysters are the anchors — and the Michelin inspectors flag the oyster dishes specifically as a standout entry point. Rated #325 in the Opinionated About Dining Classical Europe list (2024), this is a kitchen rooted in technique rather than spectacle. Factor in the village location: you will need a car or to plan transport from Amsterdam, roughly 20 km north.
Is lunch or dinner better at De Nederlanden?
Lunch is the more practical entry point, especially if you are visiting from Amsterdam for the day — the 12 PM to 4:30 PM service runs Thursday through Sunday and lets you make the most of the River Vecht setting in daylight. Dinner runs later (until midnight, Wednesday through Saturday) and suits an overnight stay, since the restaurant has guestrooms on-site. If this is your first visit and you are not staying over, book lunch; if you want the full experience without a curfew, stay the night and do dinner.
Can I eat at the bar at De Nederlanden?
Bar seating is not documented in the available venue data for De Nederlanden. The restaurant is described as having an open kitchen counter where you can watch the chefs at work, but whether that translates to walk-in bar dining at €€€€ pricing is not confirmed. check the venue's official channels before assuming walk-in options exist — given the limited operating days and Michelin-star demand, counter availability without a reservation is unlikely.
Is De Nederlanden good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it works particularly well for occasions where setting matters as much as the meal. The River Vecht views, drawbridge, and former country hotel character give it a sense of occasion that a city restaurant at the same €€€€ price point rarely matches. The Michelin star (2024) and OAD Classical Europe ranking provide the credibility; the guestrooms mean a birthday or anniversary can extend into a proper overnight. For a large group celebration, verify private dining availability when booking.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- closed
- Wednesday
- 6 PM-12 PM
- Thursday
- 12 PM-4:30 PM 6 PM-12 PM
- Friday
- 12 PM-4:30 PM 6 PM-12 PM
- Saturday
- 12 PM-4:30 PM 6 PM-12 PM
- Sunday
- 12 PM-4:30 PM
Recognized By
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