"Accommodation" Restaurants in Denmark
This centuries-old half-timbered inn offers warm hospitality and garden-grown produce, alongside local meats and seafood prepared with subtle French accents. The cheese trolley is a standout.
With an enviable setting beneath the vaulted cellar ceilings of an 800-year-old castle, this restaurant champions regional produce from the surrounding Lammefjord, lifted with truffles and a subtle French touch.
On the windswept northwest coast, this serene seaside hotel offers uninterrupted sea views alongside Kenneth Toft-Hansen's honest, flavorful cooking, focused on local seafood and organic produce.
At the graceful manor hotel Scheelsminde, Bühlmann overlooks manicured gardens, presenting flavor-led, French-inspired seasonal cooking with pristine ingredients like scallops, lobster and prized morels in season.
An avenue lined with linden trees leads to this beach hotel, where light shrimp dishes are prepared with the same care as the seven-course menu, featuring caviar and treasures from the wine cellar.
In the cellar at Norsminde Kro, amid towering bottle racks and solid traditional furnishings, guests are treated to a seasonal Nordic-French tasting menu.
Head chef Frank spotlights produce from Langeland and Funen, supported by an on-site brewery and distillery, while six hectares of parkland envelop the restored Broløkke Estate, first recorded in 1512.
This half-timbered inn overlooks the sea, its walls hung with Andy Warhol prints. The refined menu balances luxurious ingredients with prized local produce, supported by a top-tier wine list.
At this royal-privilege inn dating back to 1722, chef Jakob Sullestad forages herbs, berries and crabs from the Wadden Sea marshes; the protected building stands by the dike, with beers from Fanø Bryghus on the list.
Set in a charming red-and-white timbered house overlooking the cove, crisp white tablecloths, a standout wine list and classics like Tournedos Rossini combine for an elegant, timeless dining experience.
This 18-story waterfront hotel, designed by Henning Larsen Architects, features three restaurants. The Alsik restaurant serves globally inspired dishes made with local ingredients and offers a magnificent view of the Alssund.
At this boutique hotel restaurant, reopened under new ownership in 2024, French-inspired cooking meets South Jutland produce. Six-course menus unfold in the tower dining rooms, Tårnet, with sweeping fjord views.
Set in a former textile factory beside the Skjern River, this hotel restaurant holds Denmark’s Silver Organic Cuisine Label, with a sizeable share of its 200-label wine list also organic.
Where beech forest meets the Great Belt, this hotel restaurant, built in 1967, delivers sweeping views alongside a five-course dinner, rounded out by a sommelier-curated wine list of around 300 labels.
In winter, Arnfeldt decamps from Ærø to its snug Copenhagen corner, where guests linger over bottles of natural wine and Ariel Calabrese’s seafood-focused bistronomy dishes.
Inside the richly ornamented, palace-like Nimb Hotel, brasserie diners enjoy views over Tivoli Gardens alongside ingredient-led, hearty French-inspired cooking, served from breakfast through to dinner.
Just beyond UNESCO-listed Christiansfeld, this rural inn offers both à la carte dining and an eight-course gourmet experience. Wine pairings and single bottles are selected from a thoughtfully stocked cellar.
Beautifully positioned in the rugged cliffs of Bornholm with sweeping sea views, Nordic and French techniques, gently accented by Asian influence, shape a menu centered on pristine local seafood.
This six-room boutique hotel serves a seasonal set menu built around produce from local suppliers, set within bright Nordic interiors of natural materials and soft textiles, and opens during the summer months only.
In the basement of the inner-city Phoenix Copenhagen, this contemporary brasserie blends Mediterranean, Italian and French influences in a cosy setting, complete with colorful Andalusian tiles and counter seating.