Restaurant in Gentofte, Denmark
Jordnær
2,340ptsThree Michelin stars, outside Copenhagen. Book early.

About Jordnær
Jordnær holds three Michelin stars, a World's 50 Best ranking of #56, and 99 La Liste points for 2026 — making it one of Denmark's most credentialled tasting menu restaurants. Chef Eric Kragh Vildgaard's Nordic-Japanese cooking is precise and technically demanding. The room is intimate, the booking difficulty is near-impossible, and the price is €€€€. Plan at least two to three months ahead.
Pearl Verdict
Jordnær is not a Copenhagen restaurant that happens to be outside the city centre. It is a destination in its own right, and the distinction matters when you are deciding whether to make the trip to Gentofte. Three Michelin stars, a 2025 World's 50 Best ranking of #56, and 99 points from La Liste in 2026 place it among a small group of restaurants in the world where the credential stack is so dense it removes almost all uncertainty from the booking decision. The question is not whether it is worth it. The question is whether you can get a table.
About Jordnær
The most common misconception about Jordnær is that its location in a quiet suburb north of Copenhagen signals a low-key, neighbourhood-scale experience. It does not. This is a formal, technically demanding tasting menu restaurant operating at the level of Europe's most decorated rooms. The spatial experience reinforces that: the dining room is intimate in scale but considered in every detail, designed to focus attention on the food and on the people you are dining with rather than on the surrounding noise of a city-centre address. For explorers who have eaten at Geranium or Koan, the register will be familiar, but the particular combination of Nordic precision and Japanese influence gives Jordnær its own character within that group.
Chef Eric Kragh Vildgaard trained at Noma and has been running Jordnær since opening in 2017 alongside his wife Tina. The kitchen's signature moves, documented in the awards data, include combinations like asparagus with Royal Belgian caviar and black currant, scallops with Nashi pear and yuzu, and walleye with wild garlic and onion flowers. These are not fusion gestures. They reflect a consistent philosophy: Nordic ingredients treated with Japanese-influenced precision and restraint. The 4.8 Google rating across 263 reviews is a reliable signal that the experience holds up at the table, not just on paper.
Timing matters here. The restaurant's tasting menu format and intimate room size mean the experience is season-dependent in a meaningful way. Spring and early summer, when Nordic ingredients are at their most expressive, is the period most frequently cited by the restaurant's peer set as the optimal window for this style of cooking. If you are planning a trip specifically around Jordnær, a late April to June booking is worth targeting. Autumn is the second strong window. Midsummer and deep winter bookings are perfectly valid, but you will get the fullest expression of what the kitchen does leading in those shoulder months.
The private dining question is worth addressing directly for groups. The main room at Jordnær is small. If you are considering a private or group booking for a special occasion, contact the restaurant early and ask specifically about options, because a room of this size and calibre has finite flexibility. For groups of four to six who are willing to plan well in advance, this is one of the more coherent special-occasion choices in the wider Copenhagen area precisely because the intimacy of the space works in your favour rather than against you. For larger groups, the logistics become harder and the experience may be less consistent than at a venue with a dedicated private room structure. For pairs and solo diners, the counter or smaller table configurations typically deliver the most direct version of what Jordnær does leading. Geranium in Copenhagen has a comparable awards profile and slightly more room infrastructure for groups, which is worth weighing if group logistics are a priority.
For context on how Jordnær sits within Danish fine dining more broadly: the country's three-star tier is small and competitive. Frederikshøj in Aarhus, Henne Kirkeby Kro in Henne, and Kadeau Bornholm in Åkirkeby each represent different expressions of Nordic cooking at a high level. Jordnær's specific position in that group is defined by the Japanese influence and the particular intensity of the tasting menu format. If you are building a Denmark dining itinerary and want range, pairing Jordnær with LYST in Vejle or Alimentum in Aalborg gives you geographic spread and stylistic contrast without overlap. You can also explore ARO in Odense, Domæne in Herning, Dragsholm Slot Gourmet in Hørve, Frederiksminde in Præstø, and MOTA in Nykøbing Sjælland for further breadth across the country's top tier.
Explore more options with our full Gentofte restaurants guide, or plan the wider trip with our Gentofte hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
Booking
Jordnær is near-impossible to book at short notice. The combination of a small room, a dense awards profile, and word-of-mouth demand from international diners means tables move fast. Plan a minimum of two to three months ahead for a standard reservation. If you have a fixed travel window, set a calendar reminder for when the booking window opens and act on it immediately. Waiting to see if a table opens at short notice is a viable strategy only if you have genuine schedule flexibility.
Compare Jordnær
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jordnær | La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 99pts; Eric Vildgaard is a veteran of Noma and has been in charge of Molskroen since April 2017. His dishes are an example of the new Nordic cuisine, light and daring, with surprising combinations such as asparagus with Royal Belgian caviar and black currant; Scallops with Nashi pear and yuzu and also walleye with wild garlic and onion flowers.; World's 50 Best Restaurants #56 (2025); Les Grandes Tables Du Monde Award (2025); La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 97.5pts; Chef: Eric Kragh Vildgaard Eric Vildgaard is a Danish chef renowned for his unique approach to Nordic cuisine. Born with a turbulent past, he found stability and purpose through cooking, which became his passion and a means of transformation. After some years in various kitchens, including Noma, Vildgaard’s career took a significant turn when he met his wife, Tina. Together, they opened Jordnær in 2017, a restaurant that blends precision Nordic cooking with influences from Japanese cuisine. The restaurant, located in Gentofte on the outskirts of Copenhagen, quickly gained international recognition for its commitment to quality and innovation.Vildgaard’s culinary style emphasizes respect for ingredients, perfection in execution, and a refined yet understated approach to dining. His commitment to quality and his unique philosophy of leadership in the kitchen—focused on respect and action rather than fear—has earned him a place among Denmark’s elite chefs; Michelin 3 Stars (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #17 (2024); Michelin 3 Stars (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top New Restaurants in Europe Ranked #14 (2023); World's 50 Best Restaurants #57 (2023); World's 50 Best Restaurants #38 (2022) | €€€€ | — |
| Geranium | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Noma | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Alchemist | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Koan | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| a|o|c | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Jordnær good for solo dining?
It works for solo diners, but Jordnær is a tasting menu format in a small, intimate room — not a counter-style setup designed around single seats. At €€€€ pricing and with the level of service that comes with 3 Michelin stars and a #56 World's 50 Best ranking, solo diners do well here, but should book early and confirm seating arrangements directly, as the room is small and demand is high.
What should a first-timer know about Jordnær?
Jordnær is a destination restaurant in a quiet Gentofte suburb north of Copenhagen — plan your evening around the meal, not around proximity to the city. Eric Vildgaard's cooking draws on his Noma background and blends Nordic precision with Japanese influence, producing dishes like asparagus with Royal Belgian caviar and black currant. The format is tasting menu only, the room is small, and the awards profile (3 Michelin stars, World's 50 Best #56, La Liste 99pts in 2026) means walk-ins are not realistic.
Does Jordnær handle dietary restrictions?
Jordnær is a precision tasting menu restaurant with a small kitchen team — dietary accommodations are possible but should be flagged at the time of booking, not on arrival. Given the complexity of dishes such as scallops with Nashi pear and yuzu, last-minute changes are difficult to absorb at this level. Contact the restaurant well in advance and be specific about your requirements.
Is Jordnær good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it is one of the stronger cases for a special occasion dinner in the greater Copenhagen area. Three Michelin stars, a Les Grandes Tables du Monde award, and a #56 World's 50 Best ranking give the evening weight. The Gentofte location also means a quieter, more focused setting than you get at comparable city-centre restaurants — better suited to a dinner that should feel like an event rather than a scene.
What are alternatives to Jordnær in Gentofte?
There are no direct Michelin-starred alternatives in Gentofte itself. For comparable Nordic fine dining in the Copenhagen area, Geranium (also 3 Michelin stars) is the main peer, though it operates in a different format and setting. Alchemist offers a more theatrical, multi-act experience if immersive dining is the draw. Koan and a|o|c sit at different price points and are better suited to diners who want serious cooking without committing to a full tasting menu at €€€€.
Is Jordnær worth the price?
At €€€€, Jordnær is expensive by any measure, but the credentials are verifiable: 3 Michelin stars held through 2024 and 2025, World's 50 Best #56 in 2025, and a La Liste score of 99 points in 2026. For diners who want precision Nordic cooking at the top tier of European fine dining, the price is justified. If you are looking for a high-end meal without the full commitment, a|o|c or Koan give you serious cooking at a lower cost.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Jordnær?
The tasting menu is the only format Jordnær offers, so the question is really whether the format suits you. Eric Vildgaard's approach — Nordic technique, Japanese influence, dishes like walleye with wild garlic and onion flowers — is built for this format, and the Opinionated About Dining #17 Europe ranking reflects that it reads consistently well with serious food audiences. If you find tasting menus passive or you prefer à la carte flexibility, this is not the right room; if the format works for you, the execution here is at the level the awards suggest.
Recognized By
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