Alfred Keller



Alfred Keller holds a Michelin star and an 85-point La Liste rating, placing it among the most formally recognised restaurants on the Croatian Adriatic. Chef Michael Gollenz leads a French-Mediterranean kitchen on the Čikat waterfront in Mali Lošinj, backed by a 530-selection wine list with particular depth in Croatian and Italian bottles and overseen by Wine Director Filip Veselovac.

The Čikat Setting and What It Signals
Mali Lošinj's Čikat bay has a particular quality of evening light — the pine-lined promenade filters the late sun into something close to amber — and Alfred Keller occupies a position on that promenade that makes it feel like part of the landscape rather than an imposition on it. The address, Čikat ul. 16, puts guests a short walk from the harbour, but the atmosphere at this stretch of coast runs quieter and more considered than the town's busier restaurant strip. That sense of remove is appropriate for a restaurant operating at this level.
Croatia's Adriatic dining scene has expanded its formal tier steadily over the past decade. Michelin entered Croatia in 2017, and the award has since spread across the coast and islands, from [Pelegrini in Sibenik](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/pelegrini-sibenik-restaurant) and [Restaurant 360 in Dubrovnik](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/restaurant-360-dubrovnik-restaurant) to [Agli Amici Rovinj in Rovinj](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/agli-amici-rovinj-rovinj-restaurant) and [Boskinac in Novalja](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/boskinac-novalja-restaurant). Alfred Keller is one of a small number of island restaurants to have earned that recognition, which is a different logistical and seasonal proposition from a mainland address. Running a starred kitchen on an island , with ferry-dependent supply chains, a compressed summer season, and a more limited local dining base , demands a different kind of operational discipline.
The Kitchen and Its Reference Points
Chef Michael Gollenz leads the kitchen at Alfred Keller, and the cuisine type listed across both the venue record and the La Liste assessment is French-Mediterranean. That framing has specific meaning in the context of Adriatic fine dining. The French tradition here functions as structural: classical technique, precise plating disciplines, the kind of sauce and reduction work that takes years to internalise. The Mediterranean element provides the ingredient vocabulary , Adriatic seafood, island herbs, the produce geography of the northern Croatian littoral.
The combination is not unusual at this price tier in Croatia. What distinguishes Alfred Keller's position is that the French-Mediterranean frame is applied on an island rather than in a city or coastal resort town with year-round infrastructure. The culinary training lineage implicit in this approach , formal European technique translated through a local ingredient lens , is a recognisable pattern across the better Adriatic tables. At [Dubravkin Put in Zagreb](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/dubravkin-put-zagreb-restaurant), [Korak in Jastrebarsko](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/korak-jastrebarsko-restaurant), and [Nebo by Deni Srdoč in Rijeka](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/nebo-by-deni-srdo-rijeka-restaurant), the underlying logic is similar: European technique sharpened against local sourcing. Alfred Keller's version of that approach has earned consecutive Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025, and an improvement from 84 to 85 points on the La Liste ranking between 2025 and 2026.
The name attached to the restaurant's concept also carries weight. Toño Pérez, cited in the venue record in connection with Alfred Keller, represents a Spanish fine-dining sensibility that has influenced the kitchen's thinking. Pérez is known in European fine-dining circles through his work at Atrio in Cáceres, one of Spain's more celebrated addresses , a house with deep wine credentials and a classical but refined kitchen approach. That reference point, when filtered through Chef Gollenz's execution in a Croatian island context, produces something that sits at an intersection of influences rather than belonging cleanly to any single tradition.
The Wine Programme
At Alfred Keller, the wine list is as formally developed as the kitchen. The programme carries 530 selections drawn from an inventory of 3,180 bottles, with declared strengths across Croatia, Italy, Champagne, France, Bordeaux, and Germany. That list of geographic strengths is not random. Croatia and Italy are the natural reference points for a restaurant of this location and cuisine type , Istrian and Kvarner wines sit alongside the Adriatic-facing Italian regions as the most contextually appropriate pairings for the kitchen's Mediterranean direction.
The deeper Champagne, Bordeaux, and French representation signals something about the restaurant's ambitions and its clientele. A 3,180-bottle inventory on an island restaurant serving lunch and dinner points to a serious collector infrastructure and a guest base willing to make significant commitments at the table. The corkage fee is set at $55, which is at the high end of what Croatian restaurants typically charge, and that pricing is consistent with a programme that does not need to compete on access , it competes on depth and curation.
Wine Director Filip Veselovac and Sommelier Aleksandar Petrović manage that list, and the presence of a formally titled sommelier at an island restaurant of this size is itself an indicator of the operation's tier. For comparison, [LD Restaurant in Korčula](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/ld-restaurant-korula-restaurant) and [Krug in Split](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/krug-split-restaurant) both operate serious wine programmes within the same regional fine-dining conversation, but Alfred Keller's inventory scale places it closer to the collector-tier addresses than the curated-but-accessible model.
Alfred Keller Within the Croatian Fine Dining Map
The geography of Croatian fine dining tends to cluster in three areas: Dubrovnik and the southern Dalmatian coast, Split and central Dalmatia, and the Istrian peninsula. The Kvarner islands , Lošinj, Cres, Krk , are slightly off that established circuit, which means Alfred Keller occupies a position that is formally competitive with the coast's better tables while being physically distinct from them. That separation has implications for how guests plan visits.
A table at Alfred Keller is not easily combined with a Dubrovnik evening, as [Restaurant 360](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/restaurant-360-dubrovnik-restaurant) might be. It requires a commitment to Lošinj specifically, which is either a complication or a reason to stay longer depending on how the trip is structured. [Our full Mali Lošinj restaurants guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/mali-losinj) covers the island's wider dining picture, and [Matsunoki](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/matsunoki-mali-loinj-restaurant) represents the other end of the formal spectrum on the island, with a Japanese Contemporary approach that sits alongside Alfred Keller as evidence of how the Lošinj dining scene has developed beyond traditional Adriatic cooking.
For broader regional comparison, [Alla Beccaccia in Valbandon](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/alla-beccaccia-valbandon-restaurant) in Istria and [Agli Amici Rovinj](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/agli-amici-rovinj-rovinj-restaurant) , the latter a two-star address , represent the upper end of what the northern Adriatic fine-dining circuit looks like. Alfred Keller sits in that peer conversation with one star and an improving La Liste score, at a price tier (€€€) that is slightly below the €€€€ bracket occupied by some of those comparators, which makes it one of the more accessible formal addresses in the Kvarner region.
Internationally, the formal French-Mediterranean model at this level has parallels at addresses like [Frantzén in Stockholm](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/frantzn-stockholm-restaurant) and [FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/fzn-by-bjrn-frantzn-dubai-restaurant), both of which operate within the same global conversation about European fine-dining technique applied through a local or hybrid lens, though at higher price tiers and in markets with very different competitive densities.
Planning a Visit
Alfred Keller serves both lunch and dinner, which is worth noting for an island restaurant at this level , many starred coastal addresses in Croatia are dinner-only during peak season, and the lunch option at Čikat gives visitors a different pace of experience, particularly useful if the afternoon extends onto the water. The restaurant's €€€ pricing , defined in the data as a typical two-course meal above €66, excluding drinks , is consistent with a Michelin-starred address at the more accessible end of the formal tier. A full meal with wine from the $$$-tier list will move the final bill significantly higher.
General Manager Lovorka Struna oversees operations, and the presence of a dedicated GM alongside a wine director and named sommelier confirms that the front-of-house infrastructure matches the kitchen's ambition. For guests planning a broader Lošinj visit, [our full Mali Lošinj hotels guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/mali-losinj), [bars guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/mali-losinj), [wineries guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/mali-losinj), and [experiences guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/experiences/mali-losinj) cover the surrounding options. Google reviewer scores sit at 4.7 across 107 ratings, which at a restaurant where a single visit represents a meaningful financial commitment indicates a consistent level of execution rather than a polarising one.
FAQ
What's the leading thing to order at Alfred Keller?
The venue data does not list specific dishes, and inventing menu items for a Michelin-starred kitchen would be misleading. What the record does confirm is that the cuisine is French-Mediterranean, serving both lunch and dinner, with a kitchen led by Chef Michael Gollenz. The wine programme , 530 selections, with Croatian and Italian bottles as declared strengths , is one of the more developed on the Kvarner islands, and given the depth of the list and the presence of a dedicated sommelier in Aleksandar Petrović, leaning into the pairing experience rather than ordering à la carte is likely to return the most from the visit. The consecutive Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025, combined with an improving La Liste score, point to a kitchen operating with consistency at the formal end of what the Croatian Adriatic offers.
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