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On the edge of Vilnius's Old Town, Gaspar's holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand and consecutive Star Wine List honours for its concise, produce-led menu that draws on Goan and Portuguese culinary traditions. Chef Gaspar Fernandes, a Le Cordon Bleu graduate, works within a historically layered space that once served as part of the city's Jewish Quarter. At the €€ price tier, it occupies a distinctive position among Vilnius's recognised dining addresses.

Where the Old Town Ends and Something Else Begins
Pylimo gatvė runs along the old boundary between Vilnius's medieval core and what became the New Town, and the building at number 23 carries that transitional history in its stonework. Above the entrance, a Yiddish restaurant sign survives from the era when this quarter was a centre of Jewish commercial and cultural life. Walking toward Gaspar's, you read the city's layered past before you've ordered a drink. That context is not incidental. It shapes how the room feels once you're inside: compact, historically weighted, the kind of space that resists the blank-slate aesthetic that defines newer Vilnius openings.
The physical container here does real editorial work. Where Vilnius's higher-end addresses such as Demo and Džiaugsmas occupy either expansive contemporary rooms or purpose-designed interiors, Gaspar's operates in a neighbourhood register. The seating arrangement is intimate rather than theatrical, the scale closer to a European neighbourhood bistro than to a destination dining room. That format places it in a specific tier: recognised, awarded, but deliberately without the ceremony that the city's one-Michelin-star addresses carry.
A Cuisine That Sits Alone in Its Category
Vilnius's awarded dining scene skews heavily toward modern Lithuanian and modern European formats. Nineteen18, Pas mus, and 14Horses all work within that broad current. Gaspar's operates in a different register entirely: Indian cooking, inflected with Portuguese culinary logic, executed by a Le Cordon Bleu-trained chef born in Goa. That combination is not a marketing positioning. It reflects biography. Chef Gaspar Fernandes grew up in a part of India that spent four and a half centuries under Portuguese administration, where the two culinary traditions became genuinely entangled at the level of spice use, technique, and ingredient preference. The menu at Gaspar's is the product of that specific cultural overlap, not a fusion concept applied from the outside.
In the wider European context, Goan-Portuguese cuisine rarely surfaces in the awarded tier. Compare the category positioning of Indian cooking across the continent: in London, Amaya represents the grills-and-small-plates approach; in Birmingham, Opheem sits at the modern-Indian end of the spectrum; in Dubai, Trèsind Studio and Avatara Restaurant operate in the haute-Indian format. Gaspar's claim is different: it is a neighbourhood restaurant, at the €€ price point, serving food that draws on a precise regional and biographical inheritance, and it has held a Michelin Bib Gourmand while doing so. That combination — accessibility, specificity, and institutional recognition — is uncommon in any European city.
The Menu: Concise, Produce-Driven, Seasonally Responsive
The menu structure at Gaspar's is deliberately narrow. Dishes are determined by available produce and calibrated with Indian spicing rather than constructed around a fixed set-piece format. That approach places the kitchen in a category closer to certain contemporary European small-plates models than to a traditional subcontinental restaurant operating a large, stable menu. The naan bread, made with locally milled whole wheat flour, arrives with a nuttiness that distinguishes it from the standard tandoor output. That sourcing decision, using Lithuanian-milled grain rather than imported flour, is a signal about the kitchen's orientation: local supply, adapted through an Indian technical tradition.
The dish referred to internally as "my mum's curry" appears in several varieties on the menu and functions as the kitchen's anchor reference point. It draws on home cooking rather than restaurant convention, which places it in a specific tradition within Indian cuisine where the domestic register is explicitly valued over the formal. Portions are generous. Presentation is careful. The balance tips toward satisfaction over spectacle, which maps to the Bib Gourmand logic: quality at a price that does not require occasion-level justification.
The Wine Programme and Its Standing
Wine list at Gaspar's has drawn consecutive recognition from Star Wine List, holding the number-one ranked position in 2023, 2024, and 2025, with a number-two ranking also recorded in both 2024 and 2025. For an Indian restaurant operating at the €€ tier in Vilnius, that level of sustained wine programme recognition is atypical. The pairing of serious wine curation with Goan-inflected cooking is not the standard configuration: most Indian restaurants at comparable price points either run a short list focused on off-dry whites and light reds, or treat the wine programme as secondary. That Gaspar's holds multiple Star Wine List positions across three consecutive years suggests the programme is a core commitment, not an afterthought.
In the Lithuanian context, this positions Gaspar's in an interesting way. The city's wine-serious addresses tend to sit in the modern-European bracket. Gaspar's holds its own against those addresses on the wine dimension while operating in an entirely different culinary category. For guests oriented around wine as well as food, that combination is worth factoring into a Vilnius itinerary.
How It Sits Within the Vilnius Dining Picture
Vilnius's recognised dining tier has expanded notably over the past several years, with Michelin recognition arriving for multiple addresses across different formats and price points. Within that expansion, Gaspar's occupies a specific gap: the only Indian-heritage address in the awarded tier, operating at a neighbourhood scale and price, with a wine programme that competes with the city's more expensive rooms. It does not occupy the same bracket as the city's starred restaurants, but it is not trying to. The Bib Gourmand designation is Michelin's explicit recognition of value alongside quality, and Gaspar's pricing at €€ reflects that positioning accurately.
For a fuller picture of what Vilnius offers at the higher end of the spectrum, our full Vilnius restaurants guide maps the scene across formats and price tiers. Those planning wider Lithuania travel will also find relevant context in ALBA Bistro in Klaipėda, Apvalaus Stalo Klubo in Trakai, Arrivée in Kaunas, and Red Brick in Radiškis. For the rest of what the city offers, our Vilnius hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the adjacent territory. The Vilnius wineries guide rounds out the full picture for those with a particular interest in the drinks side of the city.
Planning a Visit
Gaspar's is at Pylimo g. 23-3, on the edge of the Old Town within walking distance of the main historic sites. The address sits at the €€ price tier, making it one of the more accessible entry points into Vilnius's awarded dining scene. Given its Michelin recognition and its Google rating of 4.7 across more than a thousand reviews, booking ahead is advisable, particularly for evenings. The combination of a compact room and consistent demand means availability can be tight. Arriving in the area early enough to see the Yiddish sign above the door in daylight adds a layer of historical context that the evening crowds can obscure.
What Dish Is Gaspar's Famous For?
The dish most closely associated with Gaspar's is the curry described on the menu as "my mum's curry," which appears in several varieties and reflects the Goan home-cooking tradition that chef Gaspar Fernandes draws on directly. The naan bread, made with locally milled whole wheat flour, is also a frequently referenced element: the use of Lithuanian-sourced grain gives it a nuttiness that separates it from standard versions. Both dishes connect to the restaurant's broader position in Vilnius, where Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition and three consecutive years of Star Wine List honours provide the institutional framing for a kitchen working from a very specific culinary inheritance.
Accolades, Compared
Comparable options at a glance, pulled from our tracked venues.
| Venue | Awards | Cuisine | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gaspar's | Star Wine List #2 (2025), Star Wine List #1 (2025), Star Wine List #2 (2024), Star Wine List #1 (2024), Star Wine List #1 (2023), Bib Gourmand | Indian | This venue |
| Demo | Michelin 1 Star | Modern European, Innovative, Wine Bar & Small Plates | Modern European, Innovative, Wine Bar & Small Plates, €€€€ |
| Somm | Fusion, Modern Cuisine | Fusion, Modern Cuisine, €€ | |
| Džiaugsmas | Michelin 1 Star | Modern Cuisine | Modern Cuisine, €€ |
| Le Travi | Italian | Italian, € | |
| Stikliai | Classic French | Classic French, €€€€ |
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