Restaurant in Freidorf, Switzerland
Mammertsberg
1,375Pearl PointsTwo Michelin stars in a small Swiss commune.

About Mammertsberg
Silvio Germann's two-Michelin-star kitchen in Freidorf is one of eastern Switzerland's most credible special occasion bookings, with consistent OAD Top 226 and La Liste 85.5pt recognition. The cooking is Modern European with a genuine vegetable focus that tracks the seasons. Book six to eight weeks ahead minimum — availability is near impossible at short notice.
Pearl Verdict
Mammertsberg is the right booking if you are planning a serious special occasion meal in eastern Switzerland and want two-Michelin-star cooking from a chef the industry is watching closely. Silvio Germann holds two Michelin stars (2024 and 2025), an OAD Top 226 ranking in Europe for 2025, and 85.5 points on La Liste 2025. For a €€€€ restaurant in Freidorf, that is a strong return. Book well in advance — availability is near impossible to secure at short notice.
About Mammertsberg
Mammertsberg sits at Bahnhofstrasse 28 in Freidorf, a small Swiss commune that punches above its size in the fine dining conversation. Chef Silvio Germann has built a two-star kitchen around Modern European and Creative cuisine, with vegetables playing a notably prominent role across the menu. La Liste's jury flagged this directly in their 2026 commentary, noting that plant-forward thinking is already well embedded in the cooking and predicting the kitchen could take it further. That is not a throwaway observation — it signals a kitchen with genuine seasonal discipline, where what grows nearby and what is at peak ripeness shapes the plate.
Seasonality is the strongest reason to time your visit carefully. A kitchen that takes vegetables seriously runs its menus close to the harvest calendar. Autumn through early winter tends to favour root vegetables, mushrooms, and preserved preparations; late spring and summer open up softer, greener produce. There is no published seasonal menu to reference here, but a kitchen at this level does not hold the same dishes year-round. If you are booking months out, consider what the season will offer and discuss it with the restaurant when you confirm. This is the kind of detail that separates a good visit from a great one.
The hours are worth internalising before you plan. Mammertsberg is closed Monday and Tuesday. From Wednesday to Sunday, lunch runs 12:00 to 2:30 pm and dinner runs 6:30 pm to midnight. Wednesday dinner only (no lunch service). That midnight closing time is generous for a two-star kitchen and suggests the restaurant is built for long, unhurried meals rather than two-seating efficiency , which matters for a special occasion booking where you do not want to feel pushed through.
For a celebration dinner, the format works well. The combination of a late kitchen, a creative menu with seasonal grounding, and a chef receiving consistent upward momentum in European rankings gives the meal a sense of occasion. Google reviewers rate it 4.8 from 230 reviews, which at that volume is a reliable signal rather than a statistical anomaly. For context, a 4.8 at 200-plus reviews is rarer than it looks , most high-end restaurants in this tier settle in the 4.5 to 4.7 range once volume builds.
Booking is the main practical obstacle. With two Michelin stars, a rising OAD ranking, and what appears to be a relatively intimate dining room (seat count is not published), demand consistently outstrips availability. Plan a minimum of six to eight weeks ahead for dinner, longer for a specific date around a milestone occasion. There is no published booking platform or phone number in available data, so approach via the restaurant directly once you locate their current reservation channel.
Dietary restrictions and group logistics are topics worth raising directly with the restaurant before you book. The creative, vegetable-forward cooking style suggests reasonable flexibility, but at €€€€ per head you should confirm in advance rather than arrive and hope. Groups should ask about private dining or table configuration , the format here is not confirmed, and assumptions at this price point are avoidable with one conversation.
For other top-tier options in the broader Swiss fine dining circuit, Memories in Bad Ragaz, Einstein Gourmet in Sankt Gallen, and Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau are the natural reference points. See also Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl in Basel and Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier for the leading end of the Swiss bracket. Further afield, Hiša Franko in Kobarid and Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach draw a comparable creative European profile. For more dining and travel options in the region, browse our full Freidorf restaurants guide, our full Freidorf hotels guide, our full Freidorf bars guide, our full Freidorf wineries guide, and our full Freidorf experiences guide.
Recognition
- Michelin 2 Stars (2024, 2025)
- La Liste Leading Restaurants 85.5pts (2025), 83pts (2026)
- Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Europe , Ranked #226 (2025), #270 (2024)
- Opinionated About Dining Leading New Restaurants in Europe , Recommended (2023)
- Google rating: 4.8 (230 reviews)
Practical Details
| Detail | Mammertsberg |
|---|---|
| Address | Bahnhofstrasse 28, 9306 Freidorf, Switzerland |
| Price | €€€€ |
| Cuisine | Modern European, Creative |
| Chef | Silvio Germann |
| Hours (Wed) | Dinner only, 6:30 pm–12 am |
| Hours (Thu–Sun) | Lunch 12–2:30 pm; Dinner 6:30 pm–12 am |
| Closed | Monday, Tuesday |
| Booking difficulty | Near impossible at short notice , book 6–8 weeks minimum |
Also Worth Considering
Frequently Asked Questions
Is lunch or dinner better at Mammertsberg?
Lunch is the more accessible entry point: Thursday through Sunday, service runs 12–2:30 pm, giving you daylight and typically a shorter commitment than a full evening. Dinner runs until midnight, which suits a longer tasting format. If you want the full Silvio Germann experience at a two-Michelin-star level without a late finish, lunch is the smarter call. Evening is worth it if pacing through multiple courses is the priority.
Can Mammertsberg accommodate groups?
Mammertsberg is a serious fine dining room in a small Swiss commune, which usually means limited capacity — check the venue's official channels via their website or address at Bahnhofstrasse 28, 9306 Freidorf to discuss group arrangements. For larger parties, give as much advance notice as possible; two-Michelin-star kitchens with precise tasting menus rarely flex easily for groups of six or more. Private dining options, if available, should be confirmed at booking.
What should I order at Mammertsberg?
Mammertsberg operates as a tasting menu format under chef Silvio Germann, so there is no à la carte selection to navigate. La Liste noted in 2025 the kitchen's sensitivity with vegetables and flagged a plant-forward direction as a future possibility, so expect produce to feature prominently alongside the broader modern European cooking. Commit to the full menu rather than trying to shorten it — the two Michelin stars are awarded for the complete format.
Does Mammertsberg handle dietary restrictions?
Specific dietary accommodation policies are not documented in available venue data, but two-Michelin-star restaurants in Switzerland routinely ask about restrictions at the time of booking. Contact Mammertsberg directly at Bahnhofstrasse 28, 9306 Freidorf well in advance — at €€€€ pricing, any kitchen at this level should be able to adjust with sufficient notice. Flag requirements clearly when reserving, not on arrival.
Is Mammertsberg good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it is one of the stronger cases in eastern Switzerland for exactly that. Two Michelin stars (held through 2024 and 2025), an OAD Top 226 ranking in Europe for 2025, and Silvio Germann's La Liste recognition collectively make this a credible destination for a significant meal. The small-commune setting in Freidorf means it is quieter than a city-centre restaurant, which works in favour of occasions where you want the room, not a scene. Book well ahead.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Mammertsberg?
At €€€€ pricing with two Michelin stars, the tasting menu is priced at the top of the Swiss fine dining range but is consistent with what the awards justify. OAD ranked Mammertsberg #226 in Europe in 2025, which places it in solid company at this price level. Compared to Schloss Schauenstein, the other Swiss benchmark at a similar tier, Mammertsberg offers a less destination-resort format and a more focused restaurant experience. If the tasting menu format suits you, the credential base supports the spend.
Location
Bahnhofstrasse 28, 9306 Freidorf, Switzerland
Compare Mammertsberg
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Mammertsberg | €€€€ | — |
| Schloss Schauenstein | €€€€ | — |
| Memories | €€€€ | — |
| focus ATELIER | €€€€ | — |
| IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada | €€€€ | — |
| La Table du Lausanne Palace | €€€€ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Schloss Schauenstein — Modern European, Creative, €€€€
- Memories — Modern Swiss, €€€€
- focus ATELIER — Modern Swiss, Creative, €€€€
- IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada — Sharing, €€€€
- La Table du Lausanne Palace — Modern French, €€€€
At the €€€€ tier in Switzerland, Mammertsberg sits closest to Memories and focus ATELIER in terms of ambition and format. If you are deciding between them, the key differentiator is chef trajectory: Germann is still building his critical profile, which means securing a table now carries a different kind of value than booking an already-celebrated name. Schloss Schauenstein has the deeper reputation and the castle setting, making it the stronger choice if heritage and established prestige matter more than discovery.
For diners who want a more convivial, sharing-based format at the same price point, IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada is the practical alternative — easier to book, more flexible for groups, and better suited to tables that want variety over a linear tasting progression. La Table du Lausanne Palace appeals if you want a hotel dining room with Modern French anchoring rather than a standalone creative kitchen.
Mammertsberg is the call if you want a two-star kitchen with genuine seasonal and vegetable-forward thinking, and you are willing to plan ahead for a near-impossible reservation. For the broadest view of your options, see our full Freidorf restaurants guide.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- 6:30 pm–12 am
- Thursday
- 12–2:30 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
- Friday
- 12–2:30 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
- Saturday
- 12–2:30 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
- Sunday
- 12–2:30 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
Recognized By
Explore Freidorf
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