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    Restaurant in Belgrade, Serbia

    Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic

    390pts

    Serbian classics, real history, fair price.

    Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic, Restaurant in Belgrade

    About Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic

    Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic is the clearest answer in Belgrade for traditional Serbian cooking with genuine historical atmosphere. Open since 1946 and holding a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, it sits at the €€ price tier with a 4.5 Google rating from over 2,400 reviews. Book it for a special occasion or your one heritage-dining night in the city.

    Is Klub Književnika Worth Booking for a First Visit to Belgrade?

    Yes — with one condition. If you want Serbian cooking served in a room that carries genuine historical weight, Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic on Francuska 7 is the clearest answer in the city. It holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, it has been open since 1946, and the kitchen takes the cooking seriously enough that some dishes require a 25-minute wait. For a first-timer in Belgrade looking to eat something distinctly Serbian without sacrificing atmosphere or execution, this is the right booking.

    What to Expect When You Walk In

    The room does a lot of the work here. You enter a space that has hosted Yugoslav authors, journalists, and politicians for the better part of eight decades — the name translates directly as the Writers' Club, and the dining room feels like it. The visual tone is formal without being stiff: expect a winter garden option alongside the main dining room, with live music accompanying meals during colder months. This is not a casual drop-in spot. The setting signals that this is an occasion, and the kitchen meets that expectation on the plate, with clear attention to presentation and plating detail that goes beyond what the price tier would typically suggest.

    For a first visit, book the dining room rather than treating this as a quick lunch stop. The experience is calibrated for a full meal, and the room earns the time investment. If you are visiting Belgrade for a week, this makes sense as your one Serbian-heritage dining night rather than a repeat booking.

    The Food: Serbian Classics, Done With Care

    The menu is a patriotic Serbian lineup, and that is a strength, not a limitation. The Krempita dessert has been on the menu since the restaurant opened in 1946 , a custard slice that has survived every regime change and ownership transition the city has seen. The Gibanica, a savoury pastry dish, comes with a 25-minute wait, which tells you it is made to order rather than held in a warmer. That kind of kitchen discipline at a mid-range price point (€€) is worth noting. The chef, who has been leading the kitchen since 2019, adds occasional personalised touches without disrupting the traditional character of the menu. Sustainability and food waste reduction are stated priorities of the kitchen, which is unusual for a restaurant of this vintage and positioning.

    For a first-timer, ordering the Gibanica is the clearest signal of what the kitchen does well. The 25-minute wait is a feature, not a flaw , tell the server upfront and time the rest of the meal around it. For dessert, the Krempita is the obvious choice: it is the dish most directly connected to the restaurant's history and gives you a reference point for Serbian pastry work that you will not easily find matched elsewhere in the city at this price.

    The Wine Program

    The assigned editorial lens here is wine, and it is worth addressing directly: the database does not carry specific wine list details for Klub Književnika, so specific bottle recommendations or list depth cannot be confirmed. What can be said with confidence is that a Serbian restaurant of this heritage and Michelin recognition, operating at €€ pricing, is well-positioned to carry Serbian regional wines , particularly from Šumadija and the Negotin Krajina region, both of which produce reds that pair logically with the rich, fat-forward character of traditional Serbian cooking. If wine matters to your booking decision, it is worth calling ahead or checking on arrival whether the list skews toward domestic producers. Serbian wine has developed considerably as a category over the past decade, and a kitchen this committed to Serbian culinary identity would be unusual if the wine list did not reflect the same orientation. For deeper wine-focused dining in Serbia, Fleur de Sel in Novi Slankamen is worth a separate trip if you are willing to travel outside the city.

    Cultural Events and Ongoing Programming

    Klub Književnika continues to host exhibitions and concerts alongside its dining operation. This is not incidental to the experience , it is part of what the space has always been. If you are visiting during a cultural event, the atmosphere shifts accordingly. Check in advance if you want a quieter dinner; if you want the full Writers' Club experience with live music or an exhibition opening, timing the visit around programming adds a dimension that no other restaurant in Belgrade at this price point offers.

    For context on what Balkan-heritage restaurants look like at higher price points internationally, 21 Grams in Dubai, Çka Ka Qëllu in New York City, and Esthiō in Athens each interpret the Balkan tradition in very different contexts. Klub Književnika sits at the origin point of that tradition rather than at its diaspora end.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: Francuska 7, Belgrade 11000, Serbia
    • Price range: €€ (mid-range)
    • Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025
    • Google rating: 4.5 from 2,472 reviews
    • Cuisine: Serbian / Balkan
    • Booking difficulty: Easy
    • Live music: Available during colder months in the dining room
    • Seating options: Main dining room or winter garden
    • Key dish tip: Order the Gibanica early , it carries a 25-minute preparation wait
    • Cultural programming: Exhibitions and concerts held on-site; check schedule if noise level matters to you

    How It Compares

    Belgrade Dining Context

    For a broader view of where Klub Književnika sits in the city's restaurant scene, see our full Belgrade restaurants guide. If you are planning the wider trip, our Belgrade hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city. For other traditional Serbian cooking in a similar register, Bela Reka offers a lower-cost entry point, while Na Ćošku is worth knowing as an alternative neighbourhood option. For something more contemporary in the same city, Comunale Caffè e Cucina covers the Italian end of the market, and The Square handles modern cuisine at a comparable price point.

    FAQ

    • What should I wear to Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic? Smart casual is the safe call. The room has formal visual weight , it has hosted politicians and literary figures since 1946 , and the Michelin Plate recognition suggests the kitchen takes itself seriously. You will not be turned away for jeans, but you will feel underdressed against the room. Err toward the smarter end, particularly for evening visits.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic? No bar seating is confirmed in the available data. Klub Književnika operates as a full-service restaurant with dining room and winter garden seating. If counter or bar dining is a priority in Belgrade, Langouste or The Square may offer more flexible seating formats, though you should confirm directly.
    • What are alternatives to Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic in Belgrade? For traditional Serbian cooking at a lower price point, Bela Reka is the obvious comparison , less heritage atmosphere but easier on the budget. For modern cuisine at the same €€ price tier, The Square offers a contemporary French and modern cuisine format. If you want to step up in ambition and budget, Salon 1905 at €€€ is the next rung. For an entirely different direction, Taj Mahal in Dubrovnik shows how Balkan cooking translates to a tourist-heavy Adriatic context, which is a useful contrast.
    • Can Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic accommodate groups? The venue has been hosting cultural events, exhibitions, and concerts since 1946, which implies meaningful capacity. Specific group booking details , including private dining options or minimum spends , are not confirmed in the available data. Contact the restaurant directly via the address at Francuska 7 to arrange group reservations. Booking is rated easy overall, so a group inquiry should not be complicated.
    • Is Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic good for a special occasion? Yes , this is one of the stronger special-occasion choices in Belgrade at the €€ price tier. The room carries real historical and cultural weight, live music is available in winter months, and the Michelin Plate recognition gives the kitchen independent credibility. For a birthday or anniversary dinner where atmosphere matters as much as food, it is a better fit than Bela Reka (which is more casual) and a more authentically Serbian choice than Salon 1905's modern format.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic? No tasting menu is confirmed in the available data. The kitchen operates on a traditional Serbian à la carte format. If tasting menus are your format in Belgrade, Langouste at €€€€ is the more relevant booking. At Klub Književnika, focus instead on anchoring the meal around the Gibanica and Krempita, which are the dishes most clearly tied to the kitchen's identity and history.
    • Is Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic worth the price? At €€ with a Michelin Plate and a Google score of 4.5 across more than 2,400 reviews, the value case is direct. You are paying mid-range prices for a room and a kitchen that would justify a higher bracket in most European cities. The main caveat is that this is not the place for contemporary or experimental cooking , if you want modern Serbian or international cuisine at this price, The Square is the alternative. For what Klub Književnika actually offers , traditional Serbian cooking in a historically significant room , the price is fair.

    Compare Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic

    Is Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic€€Easy
    Langouste€€€€Unknown
    The Square€€Unknown
    IstokUnknown
    Salon 1905€€€Unknown
    Bela RekaUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic?

    The room has carried a literary and political crowd since 1946, and the dining experience reflects that heritage — dress neatly but not formally. A Michelin Plate recognition and a history of hosting cultural events suggest the venue takes itself seriously, so jeans and trainers will feel out of place. Think collared shirts, blouses, or a simple dress rather than black-tie.

    Can I eat at the bar at Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic?

    Bar seating details are not confirmed in the venue record. The dining setup centres on a winter garden and a main dining room, both of which are destination spaces in their own right. If bar access matters to you, call ahead — the address is Francuska 7, Beograd.

    What are alternatives to Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic in Belgrade?

    For a more contemporary take on Serbian cooking, Salon 1905 and Istok are the closest comparisons worth considering. Bela Reka suits diners who want a more relaxed setting. Klub Književnika's advantage over all of them is its documented cultural history and the continuity of dishes like the 1946 Krempita — no other Belgrade restaurant in this price range offers that combination.

    Can Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic accommodate groups?

    The venue has two distinct spaces — a winter garden and a main dining room — which gives it more flexibility than most Belgrade restaurants at the €€ price point. Groups planning to attend a cultural event or concert alongside dinner should book well in advance, as the room fills during programmed evenings. For large parties, check the venue's official channels at Francuska 7.

    Is Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic good for a special occasion?

    Yes, it is a practical choice for a special occasion in Belgrade. The combination of a Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025), live music during colder months, and a room steeped in Yugoslav literary history gives it a sense of occasion that is hard to find at €€ pricing. It works better for a meaningful dinner between two or a small group than for a loud celebration.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic?

    Specific tasting menu details are not confirmed in the venue record, so a direct verdict on format or price is not possible here. What is confirmed: certain dishes require patience — the savoury Gibanica carries a 25-minute wait — and the kitchen's focus is on traditional Serbian cooking with deliberate plating. That approach suits a tasting format more than a quick-turn à la carte meal.

    Is Klub Književnika by Branko Kisic worth the price?

    At €€, yes. Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) at a mid-range price point is a strong signal. You get a room with verifiable history, a Krempita that has been on the menu since 1946, and a kitchen led by a chef who has been in post since 2019. For Belgrade, that combination of cultural depth and cooking quality at this price is genuinely hard to match.

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