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Inside the Queen Hotel on Dietla Street, Amarylis holds a 2025 Michelin Plate and a White Star from Star Wine List, positioning it among Kraków's mid-to-upper tier of modern cuisine. The kitchen weaves Polish sourcing traditions with broader European technique, presenting dishes with a precision that reads clearly in the plate. Two contrasting dining rooms — one in exposed brick, one in contemporary black and white — give the space an unusual architectural range for a hotel restaurant.

Downstairs, Between Two Worlds
Kraków's Old Town exerts a gravitational pull on the city's dining scene, and the streets that ring Planty Park — the green belt where the medieval walls once stood — have become reliable ground for restaurants that want proximity to the centre without the tourist-trap associations of the Rynek itself. Józefa Dietla 60 sits just inside that orbit. The address belongs to the Queen Hotel, and Amarylis occupies its basement level, a detail that immediately sets the register: you descend into the space rather than arrive at a shopfront, and the transition is architectural. Two rooms divide the experience before you've looked at a menu. The first is all exposed brick, vaulted and heavy in the way that Kraków basements often are, the masonry doing most of the decorative work. The second room breaks entirely with that palette: black and white furnishings, clean lines, a different visual temperature altogether. Neither room is an afterthought. The contrast is deliberate, and it gives tables a character that single-room hotel restaurants rarely manage.
What Modern Cuisine Means in Kraków Right Now
Poland's fine-dining conversation has shifted considerably over the past decade. The category that once meant French technique applied to Central European ingredients has fragmented into something more varied: Bottiglieria 1881 holds two Michelin stars and works explicitly within a modern Polish framework, while Artesse at the €€€€ tier pushes into avant-garde territory. The middle ground , where ambition is evident but the cooking stays recognisably rooted , is where Amarylis operates, alongside addresses like Copernicus, which shares the €€€ price point and a similar commitment to composed, technically considered plates.
The Michelin Plate awarded in 2025 is the relevant credential here. It signals that the Guide's inspectors found cooking worth noting , food of good quality, prepared with care , without the starred distinctions that would place the kitchen in a different competitive bracket. For visitors cross-referencing Kraków's scene, that Plate positions Amarylis alongside the tier of restaurants where craft is present and consistent, but where the experience is accessible rather than ceremonial. The White Star recognition from Star Wine List, published in July 2025, adds a separate layer of credibility on the beverage side, suggesting the wine programme has been put together with genuine intent rather than treated as an afterthought to the kitchen.
The Sourcing Logic Behind the Plates
The Michelin description of Amarylis points directly to a quality that defines the most interesting end of Polish modern cuisine: the effective integration of global and Polish influences. That phrase carries more weight than it might appear to at first. Poland's culinary identity is rooted in specific ingredients , rye, buckwheat, beet, freshwater fish, forest-foraged mushrooms, smoked meats with regional variation , and the question any ambitious kitchen must answer is how to honour that material without either subordinating it to French or Nordic convention, or retreating into nostalgic recreations of historical dishes.
Approach at Amarylis, as characterised by those who've assessed it formally, sits in the integration model rather than the revival model. Polish ingredients appear as central material, treated with the kind of technical attention that produces precise flavour contrasts rather than comfortable, familiar outcomes. This approach has parallels elsewhere in the country: Muga in Poznań and Acquario in Wrocław both work in the space where sourcing specificity and European technique overlap. Kraków's position as a city with active agricultural supply chains from the Małopolska region , where dairy, root vegetables, and game have distinct local character , gives kitchens at this level genuine sourcing material to work with, rather than requiring them to import identity from elsewhere.
Emphasis on precision and flavour contrasts in the cooking suggests a kitchen that thinks about ingredient pairings analytically rather than defaulting to comfort. Acidity against fat, textural variation within a single dish, the use of fermentation or curing to add depth to primary ingredients: these are the tools that define modern Polish cooking at its more considered end, and they are tools that only make sense when the underlying produce carries enough flavour to reward that level of attention.
Kraków's Hotel Restaurant Problem , and Why This One Sidesteps It
Hotel restaurants in European cities occupy a structurally difficult position. They serve a captive audience that may not be looking for a serious meal, they often absorb the hotel's service culture rather than developing a distinct dining identity, and they struggle to draw local regulars who would choose to walk past a dozen independent alternatives. Kraków has its share of hotel dining rooms that exist primarily for convenience. Amarylis does not read that way. The Michelin recognition in 2025 implies inspector visits motivated by the cooking itself, and the Star Wine List acknowledgement suggests a programme that invites engagement from wine-interested guests rather than defaulting to a short, safe list. For visitors staying in the Queen Hotel, the restaurant provides something beyond convenience. For those coming from outside, the Dietla address is a short walk from the Old Town and from the Kazimierz district, making it accessible without a commitment to the hotel itself.
Within Kraków's broader dining spread, it sits in a different register from Folga or Bufet KRK, which operate at lower price points and with more casual formats, and from Karakter or Filipa 18, which occupy distinct neighbourhood identities. The €€€ price tier and the hotel setting give Amarylis a specific function in the city's ecosystem: it is the formal-enough option for a considered meal that doesn't require advance planning on the scale of the city's starred rooms.
For anyone mapping Poland's modern cuisine scene more broadly, Kraków restaurants like this one sit in an interesting peer group with kitchens in other Polish cities working at comparable levels of ambition: Arco by Paco Pérez in Gdańsk, hub.praga in Warsaw, and Giewont in Kościelisko each represent different expressions of what serious cooking looks like across the country's regions. For a global reference point in modern cuisine operating at the leading of that category, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai illustrate how far the modern cuisine format stretches internationally.
Planning a Visit
Amarylis is located at Józefa Dietla 60, inside the Queen Hotel, a short walk from Kraków's Old Town and roughly ten minutes on foot from the main square. The €€€ price tier places it in the mid-to-upper range for the city. Given the 2025 Michelin Plate and the hotel setting, booking ahead is advisable for dinner, particularly on weekends; the hotel context means tables may be held for guests, which can affect availability for walk-in diners. The two-room layout , brick-vaulted and contemporary , is worth specifying a preference for when booking if atmosphere matters to your decision. For a fuller picture of the city's eating and drinking options, see our full Kraków restaurants guide, our full Kraków bars guide, our full Kraków hotels guide, our full Kraków wineries guide, and our full Kraków experiences guide.
What's the leading thing to order at Amarylis?
The Michelin assessment highlights precision cooking and effective flavour contrasts as the kitchen's consistent strengths, which points toward dishes where those qualities are most legible: composed plates that place a primary Polish ingredient against a contrasting element, whether acidic, textural, or aromatic. The kitchen's integration of global and local influences suggests that dishes drawing on both reference points are where its identity is sharpest. Without a confirmed current menu in the database, specific dish recommendations aren't possible here, but the wine programme's White Star recognition from Star Wine List makes a paired tasting format worth considering if the kitchen offers one , the beverage side has been formally acknowledged as matching the food in seriousness. For current menu details, contact the restaurant directly or check via the Queen Hotel.
In Context: Similar Options
A quick look at comparable venues, using the data we have on file.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amarylis | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Amarylis is a restaurant in Kraków, Poland. It was published on Star Wine List o… | This venue |
| Bottiglieria 1881 Restaurant | Modern Polish | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Polish | |
| Copernicus | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Modern Cuisine, €€€ | |
| Farina | Seafood | €€ | Seafood, €€ | |
| MOLÁM | Thai | € | Thai, € | |
| Artesse | Creative | €€€€ | Creative, €€€€ |
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