"Barrier-free" Restaurants in Canton Bern
The "Myle" was recently reopened and is now run by Markus Arnold and his team, formerly of the "Steinhalle". The ambience is spacious, elegant and modern. Water and an aperitif are quickly brought to the table, followed by an aperitif with fresh bread and various snacks. The motto is "Cuisine Voyage" and Arnold drew inspiration for the current menu from a trip to São Paulo. Before the first course, the sommelier asks if we would like a wine pairing, but we choose the non-alcoholic pairing - a good decision! The yellowtail mackerel with tamarillo and aji amarillo is accompanied by a drink with apple, lime and pepper. A fresh combination that leaves you wanting more. The second course consists of black hake with herb mole and hollandaise, accompanied by asparagus with lardo - and a drink made from pear, kombu seaweed and rice vinegar that tastes surprisingly like sake. The Norwegian king crab with beurre blanc, garden peas, cocoa and preserved pumpkin is paired in a rather wild but exciting way with lots of turmeric. For the main course, braised beef rib meets Belém pepper jus and a cabbage wrap, while a beef tartare with sweet corn polenta and pitanga chilli is served in a separate bowl. The desserts - a crème with cocoa fruit and passion fruit and guava with dark chocolate, Samaroli rum and açaí ice cream - are a perfect end to an enjoyable evening. Another nice touch is the personal touch: the dishes are presented by the chef, Arnold himself enjoys chatting with the guests and the service staff are extremely attentive and friendly.
The ambience is best compared to a French country house. Kurt Mösching's modern French style of cooking is a perfect match. The dishes are delicately plated and served by the charming hostess Iris Mösching and her team.
At the "Hotel Seepark Thun", the youngest star chef in Swiss gastronomy invites his guests on a culinary journey in "Centric Dining". Sascha Spring starts his tasting menu "In the glow of the first hour" with a poached oyster, green apple, celery and sudachi. This is followed by a beignet - filled with Amsoldinger fondue, topped with fried onions - and a cannelloni canapé, which he has been serving since his first menu, filled with veal, served with ponzu, sour clover and kimizu. We are impressed. The bread course celebrates old craftsmanship: organic Gantrisch sourdough bread, with flower-shaped cheese butter, grape jam and Stockhornmutschli. Susu, as Sascha Spring is also known, used to eat this for breakfast. And we confess: It really does go well together. The amuse-bouche and tartare showcase the regional products that Spring uses: Aemme shrimp as ceviche, a Simmental beef as tartare. There is absolutely nothing to complain about with either course. For the intermediate course, a fluffy Steffisburg mashed potato with confit egg yolk, leek and Loïta's autumn truffle is served. These ingredients are a perfect match, and not just because of the fall season. For the main course, we enjoy a perfectly crafted pigeon breast from Bresse with parsnip and cassis whey. The dessert is a tribute to Susu's aunt's chestnut cake: served as a financier, with sea buckthorn, vanilla miso and oolong tea - a surprising composition of sweetness and spice. We end Susu's personal and passionate menu with a cannelé, grandmother's Spitzbuben and kalamansi with Maracaibo chocolate.
The Cayenne in the Panorama Hartlisberg is a family-run gourmet restaurant with a view of Thun and the Alps. From Fridays to Sundays, the kitchen celebrates four- or five-course menus that are reduced to the essentials - thanks to honest products and regional flavours.
A theater takes place on the upper floor. The Salon d'Or is full. Every chair at the bar is taken and the elegant "casino" is buzzing. We are seated and start with bread, whipped butter, champagne and Negroni. Bill Stooss, Stefanie Siegenthaler and Samuel Dober are in charge of the kitchen. The surprising start: white chocolate in the starter! This velouté is poured into a cauliflower mousse ring, topped with cauliflower shavings, grapefruit fillet, pickled jalapeño rings and pea shoots, accompanied by a cauliflower sorbetto on a bed of almond slivers. This course showcases all the pleasures of the palate: we taste bitter, sour, crunchy, nutty, buttery, cold, warm, salty, sweet and herbal. The main course is a succulently prepared saddle of pork with leek, deep-fried leek greens and a jus made from 13-year-old aceto. Then comes the vegetarian stunner: a pumpkin millefeuille with black garlic, candied ginger, cut-out napkin dumplings, glazed pumpkin rondelles, spicy pumpkin chutney, black salsify puree and a vanilla-ginger foam. This course is far more complex than the meat. Finally, there are works of art by patissier Samuel Dober: vanilla pannacotta, sablé breton, cinnamon blossom ganache and hibiscus cream are layered on an almond financier, accompanied by a blood orange and hibiscus sorbet. The second dessert is no less complex: the tree nut sablé is accompanied by caramel cream, white chocolate leaf and rosemary ganache, with Granny Smith apple balls and an apple and rosemary sorbet on top of the puff pastry hips.
The young team offers guests dishes inspired by travels through Japan and Scandinavia and characterised by French gastronomic craftsmanship. Local, high-quality products and collaboration with regional producers are a top priority.
Cooking has been taking place in a former work yard in Liebefeld for five years. The restaurant of the same name is run by chefs Fabienne Lüdi, Michael Früh and Dylan Sanden, who has taken over from Rafael Hänni, who has left the business. We start by breaking bread, a sourdough bread made from three wholemeal flours to be precise, and dip it in thyme butter. We are served a plate full of delicacies: Salad asparagus with rhubarb, smoked carrots, kohlrabi ravioli with fava beans and cream cheese, buttered radishes with their own greens, roasted beetroot with beetroot and melon vinaigrette. A roasted aromatic firework, only the somewhat stubborn goat's cheese could have done with a warning. The vegetarian starter is roasted and sliced fennel with woodruff vinaigrette, fir shoots, roasted Swiss stone pines and wood sorrel. The meat eater gets lamb from Langnau, black lentils from Worb and snow peas from waiter Tobi Kramer's garden. The main course is a duo of Limousin beef, served with jus from the bones, wild garlic capers, asparagus from Thörishaus, melted potatoes and tarragon espuma. The veggie course: Bernese bramata and sautéed turnips, pickled autumn trumpets, parsley puree and chive blossoms. The courses are generous and tasty. The predessert - a blackthorn blossom ice cream with meringue and bee pollen - heightens the anticipation of the sweet finale: strawberry sorbet with elderberry oil, crumble, caramel, yoghurt foam and pickled elderberry. So simple, so sweet, so seasonal.
The Glacier in Grindelwald focuses on modern design and ambitious cuisine. Finely balanced courses bring out the best in local produce. The alpine backdrop and the creative signature make the Glacier a place for contemporary gourmet enjoyment.
The Hohliebestübli is a gastronomic gem hidden in a 300-year-old farmhouse. The Schranz family cooks wonderful, seasonal menus on a simple wood-burning cooker - with milk, butter and eggs from the farm. Attention to detail, informal and of a high standard.
Jack's Brasserie is a Bernese institution with classic French cuisine and legendary schnitzel. The Art Nouveau architecture creates an elegant setting that is reminiscent of the great brasserie tradition and characterises the restaurant's special character.
Alpine elegance and hospitality come together at the Waldhotel Doldenhorn. Several parlours and lounges provide the perfect setting for a varied cuisine that uses regional products impeccably and whose gastronomic appeal extends far beyond Kandersteg.
The name lives up to the restaurant's name: it is beautiful and green around the "Schöngrün". We start with a greeting from Alexis Jauregui's kitchen. The salmon appetizer is topped with yuzu sesame and finely chopped herbs. The starter follows soon after: a gazpacho of yellow tomatoes, smoked labneh and basil sorbet. Perfect for the summer month of July. The companion is also happy with the French toast with tomatoes, Freiburger mozzarella and sunflower seeds. Although the kitchen is understaffed - when we arrive, two cooks are working to feed the whole restaurant - we are served an intermediate course: a cool cucumber and melon aguachile and summery pepperoni gnocchi. Both bites are terrific. Our companion finds the veggie main course - falafel made from Swiss lentils - a little dry, but still delicious when dipped in courgette sauce and pico de gallo. The brioche burger is elegantly small and accurately presented: The plucked Duroc pork goes well with the blackberry BBQ sauce, rocket, pickles and cabbage. Then a predessert: Jauregui loves tea, which is why she has turned an iced tea into a dessert. It goes like this: peach compote and sorbet, Earl Grey panna cotta, lemon and thyme gel and mint fritters. Creative, refreshing and good. Two childhood memories come together for dessert: picking cherries from the tree in summer and munching on cinnamon rice pudding in winter. The rice is topped with sugar and flamed, the fruit - halved and as coulis - are literally the cherries on the cake.
At the Essort restaurant, Ben and Sara Jann's team are guided by the seasons. The small menu guarantees the freshness of the dishes. Guests choose whether they want their menu with or without meat and whether it should consist of three, four, five or six courses.
An historic country house dating back to 1671 stands on the outskirts of Bern. The elegant parlour and rustic rôtisserie serve seasonal cuisine, such as entrecôte in herb butter foam or grilled dishes under old plane trees. There's live music in the attic.
High above Biel, Repas combines bistro, restaurant and rooftop bar. Corentin Rérat serves French bistronomy: chicken liver parfait, kingfish and short ribs. From lunchtime, you can sit outside with a view of the lake basin, while sharing dishes and Negroni are served in the evening.
The Schmitte in Grindelwald, built over a hundred years ago as a smithy, today offers traditional Swiss dishes in a rustic ambience, prepared from fresh, regional ingredients. An unmistakable place in the midst of the fascinating Alpine landscape.
If you love fine French cuisine, Chez Meyer's is the place for you. The dining room is elegant and has a spectacular view. This is where chef Frédéric Kempf serves up his delicacies. There is also an exciting wine list.
We are greeted with a tuna tataki and cream cheese, an orange-colored wine from Anne-Claire Schott from Twann shimmers in the glass. We start the evening at the "Spettacolo" in the luxurious "Lenkerhof" in Lenk. Unlike usual, you can visit chef Anja Jungo's gourmet restaurant here every evening. The menu consists of around 15 courses, from which you can put together your own multi-course meal. We think it's brilliant and are spoiled for choice. We start with Engadine venison with Jerusalem artichokes and truffles. Then celeriac is served as a puree and in whole slices, steamed and grilled. Served with Piedmont hazelnuts. Surprisingly, the venison is served cold, which takes some getting used to, but tastes good. The celeriac homage tastes full-bodied, also thanks to the smoky aromas. On the menu, the local dishes are known as "Lenk classics". One of these is the deep bouillon with vegetable brunoise, in which a fine, fluffy egg filling floats. For the main course, the companion opts for another classic: veal with blue mountain potatoes from the Albula Valley and Borettane onions. For the test eater, there is a Frutiger sturgeon with Oona caviar. Accompanied by a sloppy risotto that lacks a bit of bite. At the cheese counter, the whole region gets its stage thanks to the 35 varieties, so irresistible that it invites you to overfill your plate. We pull ourselves together because we really want to eat the last classic: Mango with sesame ice cream and dark chocolate from Felchlin. A real spectacle at the end.
In the modern Hotel Bergwelt, which opened in 2021, BG's Grill Restaurant is the centrepiece of the gastronomy. Here, Urs Gschwend and his team combine craftsmanship, provenance and flavour at the open grill. This results in dishes with character made from regional ingredients.
In this top restaurant, the season, Swiss tradition and Mediterranean influences are important. In summer, you can sit under the lime trees and enjoy the mountain view. The attentive service serves up something for every taste, from children's dishes to "Suure Mocke" and four-course menus.