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At Støperigata 6, BELLIES makes a considered case for vegetables as the principal event, not a supporting act. The 2025 Michelin Plate holder works beetroot, pumpkin, and Jerusalem artichoke through a framework of Asian technique — Sichuan pepper, ssamjang, in-house ferments — that draws out complexity rather than masking it. With a 4.8 Google rating across nearly 300 reviews, it occupies a distinct tier in Stavanger's dining scene.

Where Vegetables Are the Point
Stavanger's restaurant culture has long been anchored by seafood and New Nordic ambition. The city gave Norway its first three-Michelin-starred restaurant in RE-NAA, and its broader fine dining scene runs from Hermetikken to K2 and Sabi Omakase, with protein — fish, shellfish, land animals — as the default structural logic of most menus. BELLIES, on Støperigata 6 in the city's harbour-adjacent industrial quarter, operates on a different premise entirely. Here, the vegetable is not an accompaniment or a dietary concession. It is the argument.
That distinction matters more than it might first appear. Across much of contemporary fine dining, plant-forward menus are framed as substitution , what you eat instead of meat. The approach at BELLIES refuses that framing. Beetroot, pumpkin, and Jerusalem artichoke are given the kind of technique and plate real estate that kitchens typically reserve for a primary protein, and the menu is built to showcase what these ingredients actually do under careful hands, rather than what they replace.
The Technique Behind the Produce
The culinary logic at BELLIES draws on two distinct but complementary frameworks: an ingredient-first Nordic attention to seasonal produce, and an Asian technical vocabulary that proves particularly well-suited to amplifying vegetable flavour. Sichuan pepper brings heat and a signature numbing quality that works against root vegetable sweetness in ways that conventional European spicing rarely achieves. Ssamjang, the Korean condiment built from fermented soybean paste and gochujang, introduces umami depth that is often what vegan dishes miss when animal-derived stocks and aged cheeses are removed from the equation.
This kind of East-meets-Nordic synthesis is not unique to Stavanger , you find versions of it at KLE in Zurich and Légume in Seoul , but it requires a kitchen with genuine fluency in both traditions to avoid feeling like a collision of styles rather than a coherent language. What the 2025 Michelin Plate recognition signals is that the approach holds together: the guide's assessors noted that quality vegetables are given a starring role they are rarely afforded, with Asian elements used to embellish rather than dominate natural flavours.
The in-house fermentation and preservation programme is a significant part of how that coherence is maintained. Fermented components do the work that a stock reduction or butter emulsion might do elsewhere , they carry acidity, funk, and depth. In a plant-based kitchen operating at this price tier (€€€, comparable to Bravo and above casual dining), that kind of infrastructure is not incidental. It is the backbone of the flavour system.
BELLIES in the Norwegian Fine Dining Context
Norway's broader restaurant culture has developed a serious plant-forward strand over the past decade, partly driven by the New Nordic movement's emphasis on foraged and seasonal produce. Maaemo in Oslo and FAGN in Trondheim both incorporate strong vegetable courses within tasting formats, and places like Iris in Rosendal, Under in Lindesnes, and Gaptrast in Bergen have each explored the boundary between land, sea, and garden. Boen Gård in Tveit takes the estate-produce approach a step further. But a fully vegan kitchen operating at the €€€ level with Michelin recognition is a smaller and more specific category. Within Stavanger itself, BELLIES occupies that category alone.
The Google rating of 4.8 across 293 reviews is a meaningful data point in this context. At the price point and format, satisfaction ratings of that consistency are rarely accidental. They tend to reflect either strong repeat custom, a clear audience that finds the restaurant meets a specific and underserved need, or both. For visitors to Stavanger whose dining preferences run toward plant-based food, BELLIES is not one option among many , it is effectively the answer to a question that most of the city's restaurant scene does not address.
The Atmosphere and the Room
Located on Støperigata , a street that sits in the post-industrial zone between Stavanger's old town and its working waterfront , BELLIES occupies the kind of address that has become a reliable indicator of a certain type of independent restaurant: off the main tourist drag, in a building with material character, with a guest list that skews toward residents and the specifically curious rather than foot-traffic visitors. The Michelin assessors noted a lovely atmosphere and described dishes served with a smile, which in Michelin language signals a front-of-house operation that is warm without being performative , a distinction that matters in a dining format that is already asking guests to reconsider their assumptions about what a satisfying meal looks like.
The atmosphere that typically defines restaurants of this type in Nordic cities tends toward the considered rather than the elaborate: materials that carry some history, lighting pitched at conversation, service that explains the thinking behind the plate without lecturing. Whether BELLIES fully inhabits that archetype, the guest response suggests the room and the service work in concert with the food rather than against it.
Planning Your Visit
BELLIES sits at the €€€ price tier, placing it above everyday dining but below the city's top-end tasting menu rooms like RE-NAA or Hermetikken. The address is Støperigata 6, 4014 Stavanger. Given the volume of positive reviews and the specificity of the concept , there is no other vegan restaurant in Stavanger at this recognition level , demand is likely to outpace casual walk-in availability. Booking ahead is advisable, particularly if you are visiting from outside the city and BELLIES is a primary reason for the trip. For a broader picture of what the city offers, our full Stavanger restaurants guide covers the range from neighbourhood spots to tasting-menu counters. If you are building a longer stay, our Stavanger hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide map the rest of the city's offer.
Frequently Asked Questions
What do people recommend at BELLIES?
The Michelin Plate citation points specifically to the treatment of beetroot, pumpkin, and Jerusalem artichoke as dishes that demonstrate the kitchen's approach at its clearest. The use of Sichuan pepper and ssamjang as seasoning tools, alongside in-house fermented and preserved components, is where the menu's Asian-Nordic logic is most legible. The 4.8 Google rating across 293 reviews suggests consistent quality across the board rather than a single standout dish, which is the more useful signal for a format where the menu likely changes with the season. BELLIES holds a 2025 Michelin Plate, the guide's recognition for restaurants that consistently prepare good food , a credential that few vegan restaurants in western Norway share at this price point.
Should I book BELLIES in advance?
At the €€€ tier with Michelin recognition and a 4.8 Google rating from nearly 300 reviews, BELLIES is clearly drawing consistent, repeat-quality demand. Stavanger is not a city with an oversupply of vegan fine dining , this is the format's primary address in the city , so the restaurant is likely to fill on its own terms rather than relying on passing trade. If you are travelling to Stavanger and BELLIES is a fixed point of your itinerary, booking ahead is the practical call. The city's broader dining scene, from the three-starred RE-NAA to the more casual Bravo, operates similarly , advance planning is the norm at any restaurant with a defined identity and limited covers.
At-a-Glance Comparison
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BELLIES | Vegan | €€€ | Michelin Plate (2025); Vegetable lovers will find paradise at this plant-powered restaurant that celebrates fabulous, yet often overlooked, ingredients. Whether it's beetroot, pumpkin or Jerusalem artichoke, quality vegetables are given a starring role that they are rarely afforded. A range of Asian elements, from Sichuan pepper to ssamjang, are used to embellish the natural flavours of the produce, as are fermented and preserved components made in-house. There’s a lovely atmosphere and all dishes are served with a smile. | This venue |
| RE-NAA | New Nordic, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | New Nordic, Creative, €€€€ |
| K2 | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Modern Cuisine, €€€ |
| Sabi Omakase Stavanger | Sushi | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Sushi, €€€€ |
| Bravo | Norwegian | €€ | Norwegian, €€ | |
| Hermetikken | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Modern Cuisine, €€€€ |
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