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    Restaurant in Vogtsburg im Kaiserstuhl, Germany

    Schwarzer Adler

    650pts

    Michelin star, wine country setting, book early.

    Schwarzer Adler, Restaurant in Vogtsburg im Kaiserstuhl

    About Schwarzer Adler

    Schwarzer Adler holds a Michelin star and a Star Wine List White Star in a small Kaiserstuhl village, making it the most credentialed restaurant in the region by a significant distance. Chef Franz Keller runs a French-German kitchen alongside a hotel and winery — a combination that justifies a dedicated trip. Book four to six weeks ahead minimum; weekend slots go fast.

    Book This If You Can Get a Table

    Schwarzer Adler holds a Michelin star and the Star Wine List White Star — and it is closed Wednesday and Thursday, which compresses its weekly availability to five service windows. Weekend dinner reservations go fast. If you are planning a visit to the Kaiserstuhl wine region and want one serious meal, this is the booking to prioritise, but expect to plan well ahead.

    What Schwarzer Adler Is

    In a village of a few hundred people surrounded by volcanic hillside vineyards, Schwarzer Adler is the gravitational centre of the Kaiserstuhl dining experience. Chef Franz Keller runs a French-German kitchen here that has earned Michelin recognition, and the operation extends into a hotel and winery — meaning the property is built for guests who want to eat well, sleep on site, and drink the region's wines without getting back in the car. That combination is rare at this level in rural Baden.

    The cuisine sits at the intersection of classic French technique and German regional produce. This is not the style of cooking that chases contemporary trends. The kitchen works with precision and discipline, and the Michelin star reflects exactly that: consistent technical execution across a menu that respects classical structure. If you are arriving from a major city expecting avant-garde plating or ten-course tasting theatre, recalibrate. This is a different register , considered, grounded, and tied to the landscape around it in the way that the leading regional restaurants in France or Alsace operate.

    The atmosphere here is quieter and more formal than you might expect from a rural wine-country destination. The dining room carries the weight of a place that has been doing this seriously for decades. Evenings run from 6:30 pm and service is attentive without being performative. It is a room where conversation can happen at a normal volume, which is not a given at starred restaurants in larger cities. If you have been once before, the consistent, unhurried pace is likely one of the things you remember , and it holds on return visits.

    Winery connection matters more here than it would at a standalone restaurant. The Kaiserstuhl produces some of the most compelling Spätburgunder (Pinot Noir) in Germany, and Keller's own wines are part of that story. The wine program, recognised by Star Wine List's White Star designation in 2025, is not a general list with a few local additions , it is a serious cellar with strong regional depth. If wine is a priority in your decision to visit, that Star Wine List recognition is a meaningful credential: the White Star is awarded to a small number of properties globally for the quality of their wine offering.

    Saturdays and Sundays both offer lunch service from 12 to 3 pm, which gives you an option beyond the dinner-only format of the other open days. Lunch at a Michelin-starred restaurant in a wine region is often the smarter booking for first-timers: the light in the Kaiserstuhl through a dining room window in the afternoon is part of the experience, and the pace of a long Saturday lunch fits the setting better than a rushed weeknight dinner. For returning guests, dinner on a Friday or Saturday evening gives you the full formal version and, if you are staying in the hotel, removes any pressure around driving.

    Vogtsburg im Kaiserstuhl is a destination you come to deliberately. It is not on the way to anywhere. That changes the character of who is in the room with you , mostly guests who have made the trip for the wine, the landscape, or the restaurant itself. The Schwarzer Adler functions as the anchor that justifies the detour. Compared to Michelin-starred options in Baiersbronn (like Schwarzwaldstube) or further afield in Dreis (Waldhotel Sonnora), Schwarzer Adler offers something neither of those does: the direct, immediate connection between the restaurant, its winery, and the vineyards you can see from the village. That is a genuinely specific offer.

    Google reviewers rate it 4.6 across 403 reviews, which is a dependable signal at this volume. A score that high with that many data points at a €€€€ price point suggests the kitchen delivers consistently, not just on special occasions.

    For guests planning a broader trip through the region, see our guides to restaurants in Vogtsburg im Kaiserstuhl, hotels in Vogtsburg im Kaiserstuhl, bars, wineries, and experiences in the area.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Book as far in advance as possible , at least three to four weeks for weekend slots, more in summer when the Kaiserstuhl draws wine-region visitors from across Europe. This is a hard booking at peak periods. Hours: Monday, Tuesday, Friday 6:30–11 pm; Saturday and Sunday 12–3 pm and 6:30–11 pm; closed Wednesday and Thursday. Price: €€€€ , budget accordingly for a full dinner with wine. Cuisine: French-German, Classic French. Setting: Restaurant, hotel, and winery combined on one property.

    How It Compares in the Region

    See the full comparison section below for peer options at lower price points in Vogtsburg im Kaiserstuhl, including Die Achkarrer Krone, Steinbuck Stube, and Winzerhaus Rebstock.

    Pearl Picks: If You Like Schwarzer Adler

    For similar French-German fine dining with Michelin recognition elsewhere in Germany, consider Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn and Waldhotel Sonnora in Dreis. For a different register of German fine dining, Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach and Schanz in Piesport are worth knowing. If you are travelling more broadly, Aqua in Wolfsburg, JAN in Munich, ES:SENZ in Grassau, CODA Dessert Dining in Berlin, and Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg represent the wider field of ambitious German restaurants worth benchmarking against. For international context, Le Bernardin in New York City shows what long-running classical technique looks like at the highest level.

    FAQ

    • Is lunch or dinner better at Schwarzer Adler? Lunch on Saturday or Sunday is the better entry point for first visits. The 12–3 pm window gives you a relaxed pace without the formality of a full evening service, and wine-country light through a dining room in the early afternoon is one of the reasons to come here at all. Dinner is the choice for returning guests who want the fuller experience , longer service, more wine, and the option to stay in the hotel.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Schwarzer Adler? The Michelin star and 4.6 rating across 403 reviews suggest the kitchen consistently delivers at the €€€€ price point. That is the clearest signal available that the investment holds up. At this tier in a rural German wine region, you are also paying for the combined offer of the restaurant, the winery, and the setting , not just the plate.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Schwarzer Adler? No specific bar seating or counter dining information is available in the database. Contact the venue directly before visiting if this is important to your booking decision.
    • What are alternatives to Schwarzer Adler in Vogtsburg im Kaiserstuhl? Die Achkarrer Krone (€) is the practical choice if you want regional Baden cooking without the fine dining price. Steinbuck Stube (€€) sits in the middle ground , classic cuisine at a more accessible price point. Winzerhaus Rebstock (€€) is the pick if you want regional food with a wine-country atmosphere at half the spend.
    • Does Schwarzer Adler handle dietary restrictions? No specific dietary policy is available in the venue data. Given the classical French-German menu format, contact the restaurant directly before booking if you have significant restrictions. A kitchen at Michelin level is generally equipped to accommodate with advance notice, but this needs to be confirmed with the venue.
    • How far ahead should I book Schwarzer Adler? Four to six weeks for weekend slots during the main season (spring through autumn) is a reasonable minimum. The combination of a Michelin star, limited weekly opening hours (five service windows), and the venue's position as the marquee dining destination in the Kaiserstuhl means availability is genuinely constrained. Book as soon as your dates are confirmed.
    • Is Schwarzer Adler good for a special occasion? Yes. The Michelin star, the hotel-and-winery setting, the quiet dining room, and the serious wine program create the conditions for a special-occasion meal that does not feel staged or performative. It is better suited to a dinner for two than a large group celebration , the atmosphere is formal without being stiff, which fits anniversaries or landmark dinners rather than birthday parties.
    • Is Schwarzer Adler worth the price? At €€€€ with a Michelin star, a Star Wine List White Star, and a 4.6 Google rating at volume, yes , the credentials justify the spend. The honest caveat is that the value equation is strongest if you are staying on the property or making a dedicated trip to the Kaiserstuhl. If you are looking for a single starred meal in Germany on a tight itinerary, somewhere more central , like JAN in Munich or Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg , may make more logistical sense.

    Compare Schwarzer Adler

    How Easy to Book: Schwarzer Adler vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Schwarzer AdlerFrench - German, Classic French€€€€Hard
    Die Achkarrer KroneRegional CuisineUnknown
    Steinbuck StubeClassic Cuisine€€Unknown
    Winzerhaus RebstockRegional Cuisine€€Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Schwarzer Adler?

    Lunch is the harder seat to get and arguably the better value context: Saturday and Sunday are the only days it is offered (12–3 pm), which makes weekend lunch the most sought-after slot. Dinner runs Friday through Tuesday (6:30–11 pm) and gives you more scheduling flexibility. If you can land a Saturday lunch, take it — the Kaiserstuhl light through vineyard country is a practical bonus, not a brochure cliché.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Schwarzer Adler?

    At €€€€ and with a Michelin star held in 2025, Schwarzer Adler is priced at the top of the Baden fine-dining tier — so the tasting menu format is where the kitchen makes its case. The French-German cuisine under Franz Keller is the draw, and a multi-course format is how that style of cooking is best experienced here. If you are coming this far into the Kaiserstuhl for a single meal, the tasting menu is the correct order of business.

    Can I eat at the bar at Schwarzer Adler?

    Bar dining is not documented in the available venue data for Schwarzer Adler. Given the restaurant-hotel-winery format and the Michelin-starred positioning, this is a reservation-first venue — walk-in or counter dining is unlikely to be the primary format. check the venue's official channels to confirm seating options before arriving without a booking.

    What are alternatives to Schwarzer Adler in Vogtsburg im Kaiserstuhl?

    Die Achkarrer Krone and Steinbuck Stube are the two most cited local alternatives for visitors who want regional cooking without the €€€€ outlay. Winzerhaus Rebstock is a lower-key option oriented more toward wine-country dining than fine-dining ambition. None carry a Michelin star, which makes Schwarzer Adler the obvious choice for a special occasion, but the alternatives are sensible if you are eating multiple meals in the area across a stay.

    Does Schwarzer Adler handle dietary restrictions?

    Dietary accommodation detail is not listed in the venue data. For a Michelin-starred kitchen producing French-German tasting menus, advance notice of restrictions is standard practice across this tier of restaurant in Germany — contact Schwarzer Adler directly when booking and state requirements clearly. Last-minute requests at €€€€ fine dining are rarely well served.

    How far ahead should I book Schwarzer Adler?

    Book at least three to four weeks out for a standard weekend slot, and push that to six to eight weeks in summer when the Kaiserstuhl wine region draws visitors from across Germany and neighbouring Switzerland and France. The venue is closed Wednesday and Thursday, compressing availability to five service days per week, which tightens the window further. Saturday lunch is the hardest slot to secure.

    Is Schwarzer Adler good for a special occasion?

    Yes — a Michelin star, a Star Wine List White Star (ranked #1 in 2025), and a Franz Keller kitchen in a historic wine-country hotel is a strong combination for a milestone dinner. The setting in Vogtsburg-Oberbergen adds weight to the occasion without requiring you to be in a major city. For anniversaries or significant birthdays in the region, this is the credentialed choice.

    Hours

    Monday
    6:30–11 pm
    Tuesday
    6:30–11 pm
    Wednesday
    Closed
    Thursday
    Closed
    Friday
    6:30–11 pm
    Saturday
    12–3 pm, 6:30–11 pm
    Sunday
    12–3 pm, 6:30–11 pm

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