Einstein Gourmet




Einstein Gourmet holds two Michelin stars in Sankt Gallen, Switzerland, with consistent recognition from La Liste, Opinionated About Dining, and Star Wine List, which ranked it the number-one wine program in Switzerland in 2025. Chef Sebastian Zier leads a Modern European kitchen operating Thursday through Saturday, supported by a cellar of 45,000 bottles under Wine Director Loris Lenzo.

Two Stars in a City That Rarely Gets Noticed
Sankt Gallen sits in the northeastern corner of Switzerland, closer to the Austrian border than to Zurich, and its fine dining scene reflects that peripheral position: smaller, less discussed in international food media, and consequently easier to book than its actual quality warrants. Einstein Gourmet, at Berneggstrasse 2, operates inside that gap. The room carries the considered restraint that defines the upper tier of Swiss formal dining, and the critical record stacked around it places it well above what most visitors expect from a mid-sized Swiss city.
Michelin has held two stars here through both 2024 and 2025, a consistency that matters more than a single-year award. Within Switzerland, the two-star bracket is a small cohort. Peer restaurants in that tier include Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau, Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl in Basel, and Memories in Bad Ragaz. That Einstein Gourmet holds its ground in this set while operating in a city of around 75,000 people says something about the discipline required to sustain that level away from the commercial gravity of Zurich or Geneva.
What the Awards Record Actually Says
The critical recognition here is layered in a way that distinguishes Einstein Gourmet from restaurants that carry a single prestigious signal. La Liste, which aggregates hundreds of international sources into composite scores, rated it 88.5 points in 2025 and 87 points in 2026, placing it consistently in the upper-middle band of their global ranking. Opinionated About Dining, whose Classical in Europe list prioritises the kind of technique-driven French and European cooking that sits outside the fashion cycles of natural wine and open-fire cooking, ranked it 146th in 2023, 284th in 2024, and 243rd in 2025. The movement across those OAD rankings reflects the scoring volatility inherent in crowd-sourced critic models, but the persistent presence in the top 300 of Classical European cooking is the more meaningful signal.
The wine program adds a separate credibility layer. Star Wine List ranked Einstein Gourmet first in Switzerland in both 2021 and 2025, with the 2021 cycle also producing a silver medal in the Austrian Wine List category and a Grand Prix placement. A 3,200-selection list backed by 45,000 bottles in inventory is serious by any European standard, and Wine Director Loris Lenzo's program draws particular depth from Switzerland, Bordeaux, Burgundy, France, Germany, and Italy. The pricing sits in the upper tier of Swiss restaurant wine lists, with many bottles above the 100-franc threshold, which is consistent with a program designed for guests who treat the cellar as a primary reason to visit, not an afterthought.
The Culinary Position in Sankt Gallen
Swiss fine dining at the two-star level generally operates within a French technical framework, with variations in how aggressively local producers are incorporated and how far the kitchen moves toward contemporary European inflections. Einstein Gourmet's registered cuisine, Modern European with a Creative designation, places it in a middle position: formally trained, classically structured, but not locked into strict Franco-Swiss orthodoxy. Chef Sebastian Zier leads the kitchen alongside Richard Schmidtkonz, and the kitchen runs lunch and dinner service Thursday through Saturday, with the restaurant closed Sunday through Wednesday.
That schedule, Thursday to Saturday only, with lunch running 12 to 2 pm and dinner 6 to 10 pm, positions Einstein Gourmet in the subset of Swiss two-star restaurants that treat closure days as a quality control mechanism rather than a commercial limitation. The format is common at this tier across Switzerland and neighbouring regions, where kitchen teams at Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and 7132 Silver in Vals similarly compress their weeks to protect execution standards.
Within Sankt Gallen itself, the gap between Einstein Gourmet and the next tier is measurable. Jägerhof holds one Michelin star at the €€€ price point, and Corso operates at the contemporary €€€ level without star recognition. Candela and Helvetia offer solid mid-range options, and Multertor rounds out the modern cuisine tier. Einstein Gourmet at €€€€ sits clearly above all of them in both price and critical standing, which means it functions as a destination restaurant for the region rather than a local favourite for regular weeknight trade.
The Wine List as a Separate Argument
For a wine-focused visitor, the case for Einstein Gourmet rests on the list as much as the kitchen. Being ranked first in Switzerland by Star Wine List two years apart, 2021 and 2025, with consistent depth across multiple European regions, is a credential that places this program in a specific competitive set: not just Swiss restaurant wine lists, but European fine dining programs where the cellar functions as editorial content in its own right.
The depth in Switzerland is notable because Swiss wine remains difficult to access outside the country. Domestic production is small, export volumes are low, and the better producers sell out locally. A restaurant wine list that leads in Swiss selections is, in practical terms, a more useful discovery mechanism for Swiss wine than most retail channels. Alongside that, the Burgundy and Bordeaux depth suggests a program with historical breadth, and the German and Italian selections indicate a regional range that goes beyond a default French-first approach. The three-dollar pricing signal from Star Wine List confirms that the list skews toward premium bottles, which aligns with a guest profile that is choosing a full dinner experience anchored by serious wine.
Regional Context and Comparable Experiences
Visitors building a Swiss fine dining itinerary around the eastern and central regions of the country have a small but coherent set of two-star and three-star options to map. Memories in Bad Ragaz, roughly 40 kilometres south of Sankt Gallen in the Rhine Valley, provides a direct regional comparison and operates at the three-star level. For those coming from the west, Colonnade in Lucerne represents the central Swiss fine dining offer. Further afield, cross-border comparisons with Hiša Franko in Kobarid or Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach reflect the Modern European Creative category that Einstein Gourmet shares, though in very different geographic and cultural contexts.
Sankt Gallen's UNESCO-listed Abbey Library and the textile history of the city's old town give the broader visit a character that pairs with a serious dinner rather than competing with it. The city is accessible by train from Zurich in under an hour, which makes a Thursday or Friday lunch at Einstein Gourmet viable as a day trip from the main hub, though the dinner service format and the depth of the wine list make an overnight stay the more sensible structure for anyone intending to engage fully with both kitchen and cellar.
General Manager Michael Vogt oversees the floor, and the Google rating of 4.9 across 76 reviews, while a small sample, indicates a service operation that matches the kitchen's critical standing. At the two-star level, floor execution is as much part of the rating as the food, and a consistent near-perfect score on public platforms, however limited in volume, reinforces what the Michelin and La Liste scores suggest about the overall quality of the experience.
For the wider picture of where to eat, stay, and drink in the city, our full Sankt Gallen restaurants guide covers the range from classic to contemporary. Our full Sankt Gallen hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide map the rest of the city for those spending more than a single meal here.
Planning Your Visit
Einstein Gourmet operates Thursday through Saturday, with lunch service from 12 to 2 pm and dinner from 6 to 10 pm. The restaurant is closed Sunday through Wednesday. The address is Berneggstrasse 2, 9000 St. Gallen. Given the compressed operating week and the restaurant's standing within the Swiss two-star tier, advance booking is advisable, particularly for dinner on Friday and Saturday. The €€€€ price bracket reflects a typical two-course lunch or dinner before wine; given the depth and pricing of the wine list, the full experience will sit at the upper end of Swiss fine dining spend.
What Should I Eat at Einstein Gourmet?
The kitchen operates within a Modern European and Creative framework under Chef Sebastian Zier, with a formal structure that reflects the restaurant's two Michelin stars and its consistent placement on the Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe list. OAD's Classical designation specifically recognises technically grounded, French-influenced European cooking, which means the menu leans toward precision and discipline rather than trend-driven improvisation. The database does not include specific current menu items or dish descriptions, so the specific dishes available on any given service date are not listed here. What the critical record confirms is that the kitchen operates at a level that has sustained two-star recognition across multiple consecutive Michelin cycles, which is a more durable signal than any single dish reference. The wine pairing opportunity through Loris Lenzo's 3,200-selection list, ranked first in Switzerland in 2025, is as important to the full experience as what arrives on the plate.
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