Brasserie Côté Cour
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Set in the courtyard of Bourglinster Castle, Brasserie Côté Cour operates at the intersection of medieval architecture and plant-forward creative cooking. The terrace on the ramparts draws a loyal crowd from Luxembourg City and beyond, while a menu anchored in local nature, cauliflower, hazelnuts, marinated tomatoes, earns a Google rating of 4.7 from over a hundred reviews. Priced at €€€, it sits in a credible middle tier among Luxembourg's serious dining options.
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- Address
- 9 Rue du Château, 6162 Bourglinster Junglinster, Luxembourg
- Phone
- +352 78 78 78 1
- Website
- bourglinster.lu

A Courtyard That Earns Its Reputation
Luxembourg's serious dining scene clusters mostly in or around the capital, where restaurants like Ma Langue Sourit and Léa Linster set the competitive benchmark for the country. Against that backdrop, Brasserie Côté Cour takes a different position entirely. The restaurant sits inside the courtyard of Bourglinster Castle, a medieval fortification in the Junglinster commune roughly twenty kilometres east of Luxembourg City, and its setting carries a gravitational pull that brings guests back season after season, not simply for the food, but for the full sensory experience of eating within stone walls that predate any Michelin guide by several centuries.
The terrace on the ramparts frames the surrounding countryside in a way that few dining rooms in the Grand Duchy can match. For regulars, this is part of the ritual: arriving with enough time to walk the terrace before sitting down, watching the light shift over the landscape, then moving inside if the evening turns cool. The castle setting is not theatrical decoration layered over a standard brasserie, it shapes the pace and mood of the meal from the moment you arrive.
What the Regulars Already Know
A Google rating of 4.7 across 151 reviews signals something more consistent than a one-time destination visit. That kind of score, sustained over a meaningful volume of feedback, points to a repeat clientele who know exactly what they are coming for. The unwritten deal at Brasserie Côté Cour is this: you accept a degree of effort to get there, either a drive or a deliberate excursion from the city, and in return you get a setting that urban restaurants simply cannot replicate, paired with cooking that takes local ingredients seriously without dressing itself up in tasting-menu formality.
The price tier sits at €€€, or about $65 per person, placing it below the €€€€ bracket occupied by Michelin-starred peers like Archibald De Prince and Fani, and at the same level as Apdikt, the one-star creative restaurant in the capital. That positioning matters: it means the kitchen is working in a register where quality has to justify a meaningful price point without the safety net of formal tasting-menu protocol. Regulars appreciate that calibration. They come for cooking they can trust, at a price that doesn't require a special occasion as an excuse.
The Kitchen's Approach
Plant-based cooking as a default rather than an afterthought remains a genuine differentiator in the European creative dining space. At Brasserie Côté Cour, the menu is structured primarily around vegetables and plant-derived preparations, with a parallel menu for guests who want fish or meat. This is not a rigid ideological position but a practical expression of cooking that draws its inspiration from local nature, the fields, forests, and seasonal rhythms of the Luxembourg countryside rather than from Parisian technique or Nordic minimalism.
The cauliflower "risotto" with marinated tomatoes and crushed hazelnuts is the dish that consistently draws attention in descriptions of the kitchen's output. What makes it representative is precisely what it doesn't do: it doesn't mimic a classic risotto with apologetic fidelity, and it doesn't rely on a single contrasting flavour for effect. The combination works through texture and acidity working in parallel, the nutty crunch of hazelnut against the soft grain of cauliflower, the brightness of tomato cutting through both. That kind of compositional logic, applied to humble local produce, is the clearest statement of what this kitchen is doing. In that sense, it sits in a broader European creative tradition that includes restaurants as different as Noma in Copenhagen and Jordnær in Gentofte, kitchens that have made a case for local and seasonal produce as the basis of serious creative work, even as the specific flavour profiles and techniques remain entirely their own.
Across Europe, creative restaurants operating in this register, from Arpège in Paris to Quique Dacosta in Dénia, have established that plant-forward menus can carry the weight of a serious dining experience without compromise. Brasserie Côté Cour operates in a more accessible register than those starred kitchens, but the underlying logic is consistent: treat what grows locally as a primary creative resource, not a secondary one.
Planning a Visit
Getting to Bourglinster from Luxembourg City takes around twenty to twenty-five minutes by car; the address at 9 Rue du Château places the restaurant within the castle complex itself. The drive through the Junglinster commune, through gentle wooded hills, is part of the transition out of the city's pace. This is not a drop-in restaurant for a weekday lunch between meetings, it functions leading as a deliberate outing, and guests who treat it that way tend to get the most from the experience. Booking in advance is advisable given the consistent demand reflected in its review profile. The terrace on the ramparts operates seasonally, so timing a visit for warmer months, roughly late spring through early autumn, gives full access to the setting that draws so many regulars back.
Within the creative dining category specifically, the range across European cities is worth noting for context: Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, Enrico Bartolini in Milan, and JAN in Munich all operate in the same broad category, each shaped by their own city's culinary logic. Brasserie Côté Cour belongs to that creative tradition but on its own terms: a castle courtyard, a menu grounded in what Luxembourg's landscape produces, and a clientele that returns because the combination continues to deliver.
Standing Among Peers
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brasserie Côté CourThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Creative | €€€ | |
| Ma Langue Sourit | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star |
| Léa Linster | Modern French | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star |
| Grünewald Chef’s Table | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star |
| Guillou Campagne | Classic French | €€€ | Michelin 1 Star |
| Apdikt | Creative | €€€ | Michelin 1 Star |
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Browse all →At a Glance
- Elegant
- Classic
- Scenic
- Sophisticated
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Courtyard
- Terrace
- Historic Building
- Extensive Wine List
- Local Sourcing
- Garden
- Street Scene
Idyllic castle courtyard setting with stunning rampart terrace views, nostalgic brasserie atmosphere praised for magnificent cadre.













