13 Best Restaurants in Frankfurt, Germany

Adolf Wagner

$$ | Sachsenhausen Fodor's choice

With sepia-toned murals of merrymaking above the dark-wood wainscotting, this Apfelwein classic succeeds in being touristy and traditional all at once, and it's a genuine favorite of local residents. The kitchen produces the same hearty German dishes as other nearby taverns, only better. Cider is served in large quantities in the noisy, crowded dining room with many large, communal tables. Reservations are recommended on weekends. Warning: it serves no beer! The family also operates a hotel upstairs.

Café Mozart

$ | City Center Fodor's choice

Reminiscent of a traditional coffeehouse, this café has been offering all types of sweets and pastries, along with breakfast, lunch, and dinner since 1915. Open daily, it's on a quiet, tucked-away street that's steps from the main shopping area, Zeil. In warm weather, there's a lovely outdoor garden.

Kartoffelküche

$ Fodor's choice

For more than 30 years, this simple restaurant has been serving traditional dishes accompanied by potatoes cooked every way imaginable. The potato-and-broccoli gratin and the potato pizza are excellent, as are the Hessian potato pancakes with toppings including mushrooms, smoked salmon, or a fried egg. For dessert, try potato strudel with vanilla sauce. The charming decor includes colorful art deco dishes and lamps.

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Vinum Weinkeller

$$ | City Center Fodor's choice

Housed in a former wine cellar that dates from 1893 in one of the alleys off Fressgass, Vinum specializes in regional wines, by the glass or bottle to accompany a regional prix-fixe menu. The burnished brickwork and low lighting adds to the charm. The wine-themed decor includes such items as glass bowls filled with wine corks.

Kleine Hochstr. 9, Frankfurt, Hesse, 60313, Germany
069-293–037
Known For
  • wine-friendly dishes, including cheese platters
  • German specialties, including Würste
  • Sauerbraten with dumplings and red cabbage
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. Closed weekends Jul.--Aug.

Zum Gemalten Haus

$ | Sachsenhausen Fodor's choice

There aren't many classic Apfelwein locales left, but this is one of them. It's just as it has been since the end of the 19th century: walls covered with giant paintings darkened with age, giant stoneware pitchers called Bembels, glasses that are ribbed to give greasy hands traction, long tables that can seat 12 people, schmaltzy music, hearty food with daily specials, and, as is traditional, no beer. Try this one if you want to truly capture the spirit of Old Sachsenhausen.

Schweizerstr. 67, Frankfurt, Hesse, 60594, Germany
069-614–559
Known For
  • favored by locals
  • apple wine and other fruit wines and liqueurs
  • sausage platters and cheese platters
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon., and 1st 2 wks of Aug.

Café Siesmayer

$ | Westend

This sleek establishment at the Palmengarten is accessible either from the botanical garden or from the street, offering fresh-baked pastries throughout the day and a limited prix-fixe lunch menu that changes daily. It closes at 7 pm. The Palmengarten also has the Linden Terrace for snacks in season, and the elegant and pricey Restaurant Lafleur for dinner.

Siesmayerstr. 59, Frankfurt, Hesse, 60323, Germany
069-9002–9200
Known For
  • splendid garden views
  • cheese and Wurst platters
  • daily lunch specials
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

Daheim im Lorsbacher Thal

$$ | Sachsenhausen

This is a traditional-looking restaurant that has been reinvented with a modern vibe; it also claims to have the largest Apfelwein and cider selection in Germany, some of which is used to marinate meats. More than 200 labels are represented, including those from other countries, and cellar tours are offered to diners who request one. It's on the eastern edge of Sachsenhausen, on the border with the Bruckeviertel (Bridge Quarter) neighborhood.  Reservations essential on weekends.

Ebbelwoi Unser

$ | Sachsenhausen

This friendly Apfelwein restaurant offers typical decor, with traditional wood paneling and coat hooks on the wall. It's popular with locals, who come for regional favorites, including dishes with the ubiquitous Frankfurter green sauce, but also a rarity: beer. Save room for appelkranzen, battered and fried apple rings dusted with cinnamon sugar and served with ice cream.

Frankfurt, Hesse, Germany
069-153–45128
Known For
  • slaughter plate (with sausage and liver dumplings)
  • generous-size pork and veal schnitzels
  • Appelkranzen (battered and fried apple rings dusted with cinnamon sugar and served with ice cream)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch

Exenberger

$ | Sachsenhausen

The menu is typical of Old Sachsenhausen—apple wine and sauerkraut are served—but the interior is bright and modern and the Frankfurt specialties are a cut above the rest. As proprietor Kay Exenberger puts it, "We're nearly as fast as a fast-food restaurant, but as gemütlich (quaint) as an apple wine locale must be". It's so popular that reservations are a good idea, even at lunch, and everything can be wrapped up to go. Many rave about the chocolate pudding with vanilla sauce.

Bruchstr. 14, Frankfurt, Hesse, 60594, Germany
069-6339–0790
Known For
  • lentil soup with Frankfurters
  • Himmel und Erde (Heaven and Earth) Wurst platter
  • chocolate pudding with vanilla sauce
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Reservations essential

Main Tower Restaurant

$$$$ | City Center

On the 53rd floor of the skyscraper that houses the Helaba Landesbank Hessen-Thüringen, this popular cocktail bar and high-end restaurant captures unbeatable views through 25-foot floor-to-ceiling windows, from where you can take in all of "Mainhattan". The cuisine is part global and part regional and is served at dinner as a chef's-choice prix-fixe menu ranging from four to seven courses (wine extra). Lunch is an open menu with no minimum, as is the lounge for drinks and bar snacks, which opens at 9 pm. Both the restaurant and the Tower Lounge are open until midnight.

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Neue Mainzerstr. 52–58, Frankfurt, Hesse, 60311, Germany
069-3650–4770
Known For
  • impeccable service
  • extensive wine list
  • €4.50 per person elevator fee
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues. and Sat., Reservations essential, Jacket required

Steinernes Haus

$ | Altstadt

At this friendly spot, diners share long wooden tables beneath traditional clothing mounted on the walls. The house specialty is a raw steak brought to the table with a heated rock tablet (Stein is the German word for stone) where you do your own cooking. The house beef broth is the perfect antidote to cold weather. By the way, if you order a beer, specify a Kleines, or small glass; if not, you'll automatically get a liter.

Braubachstr. 35
- 069 - 283–491
Known For
  • traditional, meat-centric German menu
  • old-fashioned ambience
  • kitchen open late
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted, Reservations essential

Zum Schwarzen Stern

$$ | Altstadt
This restaurant in a historic half-timber house that dates from 1453 offers a menu focusing on traditional Hessian food, but presented in a modern way, with carefully arranged plating. Try to get a table by the windows for people-watching across the busy square. The restaurant is named for the historic six-pointed black metal star which marks the entrance.
Römerberg 6, Frankfurt, Hesse, 60311, Germany
069-291–979
Known For
  • "Frankfurter Teller" sampler with sausages, pork loin, and crispy pork knuckle
  • chicken and local pike-perch
  • mushroom and aparagus dishes in season

Zwölf Aposteln

$ | City Center

There are few inner-city restaurants that brew their own beer, and the Twelve Apostles is one of the pleasant exceptions. Enjoy homemade pilsners in the dimly lighted, cavernous cellar, and sample traditional international and Croatian dishes.