Restaurant in Fürstenau, Switzerland · Inside Schloss Schauenstein
Schloss Schauenstein
2,270Pearl PointsThree Michelin stars, one very remote castle.

About Schloss Schauenstein
Schloss Schauenstein holds three Michelin stars, ranks #52 on the World's 50 Best, and sits in a restored castle in a Graubünden village of a few hundred people. The tasting menu format is non-negotiable and booking is near impossible, but for a milestone occasion or a serious return visit with private dining, it is the strongest case for a destination restaurant in Switzerland.
Is Schloss Schauenstein worth the journey to Fürstenau?
Yes — decisively. Schloss Schauenstein holds three Michelin stars, ranks #52 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants (2025), sits at #5 in Opinionated About Dining's European ranking, and scores 98 points on La Liste. It is among the most credentialed restaurants in Switzerland, and the setting — a restored 18th-century castle in a village of a few hundred people in the Graubünden canton , makes it one of the more unusual fine-dining destinations on the continent. If you are deciding whether to make the trip: yes, book it, but go in with clear expectations about what this experience is and is not.
The Space
The castle at Obergass 15 is not a backdrop , it is the entire proposition. Dining rooms occupy historic interiors with stone walls, low ceilings, and intimate scale. This is not a grand ballroom situation; rooms are small, seating is close, and the architecture does most of the atmospheric work. For a return visitor deciding what to experience next, the private dining option within the castle is worth pursuing. The main dining rooms seat small parties in rooms that feel genuinely historic rather than hotel-refurbished-historic. A private room at Schauenstein gives you the castle without sharing it , for a significant occasion, a proposal, or a table of four to six who want complete separation from other diners, it is worth asking about availability when you book. The spatial experience of the private room is materially different from the main room: more intimate, quieter, and more focused. Given the booking difficulty at this property, if private dining is a priority, flag it at the earliest possible stage of your reservation.
The Food
Andreas Caminada has been the driving force here since 2003, now working alongside Marcel Skibba. The cuisine is Modern European with a strong vegetable focus , La Liste notes that vegetables receive creative interpretation and that Caminada's pure vegetable dishes are a house strength, not an afterthought. This is relevant for guests with dietary preferences: the kitchen's instinct toward vegetables means plant-forward eating is genuinely integrated into the menu rather than accommodated reluctantly. The format is a tasting menu. There is no à la carte option to cherry-pick; you are committing to the full experience. For a return visitor, the question is less whether the food is good , the awards answer that , and more whether the menu has evolved since your last visit. Given the kitchen's reputation for seasonal and regional sourcing in Graubünden, returning in a different season will yield a materially different menu.
Lunch vs. Dinner
The restaurant opens for lunch Thursday through Sunday (from 12pm) and for dinner Wednesday through Sunday (from 7pm). Lunch at a three-star property of this nature tends to offer the same kitchen at a slightly different pace. If you are travelling from Zurich or elsewhere in Switzerland, the Thursday-to-Sunday lunch window makes a day trip feasible without an overnight stay , though the village of Fürstenau and the broader Graubünden region reward staying longer. Dinner on a Friday or Saturday is the peak experience by atmosphere, but also the hardest to book.
Practical Details
Reservations: Near impossible , book as far in advance as the reservation system allows, which for three-star Swiss restaurants typically means two to three months minimum, often more for weekend dinner. Hours: Wednesday dinner from 7pm; Thursday through Sunday lunch from 12pm and dinner through 11pm; closed Monday and Tuesday. Price: €€€€ , tasting menu territory, so budget accordingly for the full per-head cost including wine pairing. Dress: Not specified in available data, but three-star castle dining in Switzerland warrants smart formal attire. Getting there: Fürstenau is a small village in Graubünden; most guests arrive by car or via train to Thusis or Chur followed by a short transfer. Factor travel time into your plan.
How It Compares
Worth Booking If
- You are looking for a three-star tasting menu experience in a genuinely historic setting rather than a purpose-built fine-dining room.
- You are a return visitor wanting to use the private dining option for a group of four to six.
- You are willing to plan the trip around the restaurant , this is not a venue you happen to walk past.
- You want a vegetable-forward tasting menu at the leading level of the category in Switzerland.
Consider Alternatives If
- You want à la carte flexibility , this is a tasting-menu-only kitchen.
- Booking difficulty is a constraint: for a more accessible Caminada experience, IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada in Zurich operates in a sharing format and is easier to book. For Swiss three-star dining with different profiles, Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl in Basel and Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier are the relevant comparisons.
- You are in the Alpine region and want strong alternatives: Memories in Bad Ragaz, 7132 Silver in Vals, and Da Vittorio in St. Moritz are all within the broader region.
While you are planning time in Fürstenau, the village also has OZ (Vegetarian) and Casa Caminada , both connected to the Caminada operation and worth factoring into a multi-meal visit. See our full Fürstenau restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide for the full picture.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Schloss Schauenstein handle dietary restrictions?
At the three-Michelin-star level, yes — dietary restrictions are standard practice. The kitchen under Andreas Caminada and Marcel Skibba is already vegetable-forward, with pure vegetable dishes a deliberate part of the menu, which works in favour of plant-based diners. check the venue's official channels at the time of booking to declare any restrictions; at €€€€ price point, the team expects and accommodates these conversations.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Schloss Schauenstein?
For the right diner, yes. Schloss Schauenstein holds three Michelin stars, ranks #52 on the World's 50 Best (2025), and scores 98 points on La Liste — credentials that put it among a very short list of restaurants operating at this level in Europe. The cuisine emphasises simplicity, harmony, and vegetable-driven precision rather than maximalist showmanship, so if you want theatrical excess, look elsewhere. If you want technically rigorous cooking in a historic castle setting, the tasting menu is the reason to make the trip.
Is lunch or dinner better at Schloss Schauenstein?
Lunch is the sharper argument for most visitors. The restaurant opens for lunch Thursday through Sunday from 12pm, and a midday sitting at a three-star property typically offers the same kitchen at full strength with better natural light through the castle interiors. Dinner runs Wednesday through Sunday from 7pm and delivers the more atmospheric, candlelit version of the experience. If you are travelling specifically for this meal, book lunch and give yourself the afternoon to appreciate the setting rather than driving back in the dark.
What are alternatives to Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau?
There are no direct alternatives in Fürstenau itself — the village is small and Schloss Schauenstein is the reason to be there. The nearest comparable fine dining in Switzerland would require travel to Zurich or beyond. IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada is the same chef's more accessible, sharing-format restaurant in Zurich, and a sensible fallback if you cannot secure a table at the castle.
Is Schloss Schauenstein good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it is one of the strongest cases in Europe for milestone dining. Three Michelin stars, a historic castle at Obergass 15, and a track record on the World's 50 Best stretching back to 2010 combine to make the occasion feel genuinely earned rather than manufactured. The remote Fürstenau setting also means the meal becomes the centrepiece of a trip, not a restaurant stop between other plans — which suits anniversaries, significant birthdays, or proposals well.
Is Schloss Schauenstein good for solo dining?
It works for solo diners, but it is not optimised for them. The castle format and tasting-menu structure suit couples and small groups better. That said, serious solo diners who travel for three-star cooking regularly eat alone at this level without issue — the service quality at a property with Michelin three-star and World's 50 Best #52 credentials means solo guests are handled attentively. Ask at booking whether counter or bar seating is available if you prefer not to occupy a full table alone.
What should I order at Schloss Schauenstein?
This is a tasting-menu restaurant — you do not order à la carte in the conventional sense. The kitchen sets the format, with Andreas Caminada and Marcel Skibba driving a Modern European menu where vegetables receive particular creative attention. Specific dishes are not documented here, and the menu changes seasonally, so arrive without fixed expectations and let the kitchen lead.
Location
Obergass 15, 7414 Fürstenau, Switzerland
Compare Schloss Schauenstein
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Schloss Schauenstein | €€€€ | Near Impossible | — |
| Memories | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Einstein Gourmet | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| focus ATELIER | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| La Table du Lausanne Palace | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
How Schloss Schauenstein stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Memories — Modern Swiss, €€€€
- Einstein Gourmet — Modern European, Creative, €€€€
- focus ATELIER — Modern Swiss, Creative, €€€€
- IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada — Sharing, €€€€
- La Table du Lausanne Palace — Modern French, €€€€
At the €€€€ tier in Switzerland, Schloss Schauenstein occupies a different position from its closest peers. Memories in Bad Ragaz and Einstein Gourmet in Sankt Gallen operate at comparable price points, but neither carries the same award density — Schauenstein's consistent World's 50 Best presence since 2010 and its 98-point La Liste score put it in a different bracket for credential-focused diners. focus ATELIER in Vitznau offers a lakeside setting that competes on atmosphere, but Schauenstein's castle context is harder to replicate.
For diners weighing Schauenstein against IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada: IGNIV is the easier book, the more accessible format (sharing rather than set tasting menu), and sits in a major city. If you want Caminada's cooking without the destination-restaurant logistics, IGNIV is the practical answer. Schauenstein is the answer when the journey and the setting are part of the point.
Against Memories specifically: both are Alpine destination restaurants at the top of the Swiss fine-dining tier, but Schauenstein's ranking trajectory and award consistency make it the stronger choice if you can only do one. If booking difficulty is your constraint, Memories in Bad Ragaz may offer a shorter wait and is worth considering as a primary target rather than a fallback. La Table du Lausanne Palace sits in the Modern French category and serves a different purpose — city dining with hotel infrastructure — rather than a direct substitute for a Schauenstein visit.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- 7–11 pm
- Thursday
- 12–11 pm
- Friday
- 12–11 pm
- Saturday
- 12–11 pm
- Sunday
- 12–11 pm
Recognized By
Explore Fürstenau
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