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Bad Gleichenberg, Austria

Geschwister Rauch - Restaurant

CuisineCreative
LocationBad Gleichenberg, Austria
Michelin
La Liste
We're Smart World

A Michelin-starred address in the Styrian village of Trautmannsdorf, Geschwister Rauch draws on more than 120 years of Wirtshaus tradition while pushing well past it. Siblings Richard and Sonja Rauch run the fine dining restaurant alongside a lunchtime tavern, with ingredients sourced from their own pig farm and the surrounding region. La Liste ranked it 91 points in 2026.

Geschwister Rauch - Restaurant restaurant in Bad Gleichenberg, Austria
About

Where the Village Pantry Becomes the Menu

The road into Trautmannsdorf, a small settlement above Bad Gleichenberg in Austria's Styrian wine country, does not build anticipation through spectacle. There are no grand approach roads or architectural gestures. What announces Geschwister Rauch instead is the smell of the vine-covered terrace in summer, grapevines pulling shade across the outdoor tables, and the quiet particular to villages that have been doing the same thing, well, for a very long time. The building housing the restaurant has been a Wirtshaus for more than 120 years. That continuity is not incidental to what you eat here — it is the premise.

Austrian fine dining has long wrestled with a productive tension: how to take the Wirtshaus tradition seriously without freezing it. The most interesting answer, demonstrated at places like Steirereck im Stadtpark in Vienna and Döllerer in Golling an der Salzach, is to treat regional identity as a creative constraint rather than a curatorial one. Geschwister Rauch operates from the same conviction, though in a quieter register and a smaller village.

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The Sourcing Model Behind the Cooking

What distinguishes the kitchen's approach most clearly is the degree to which the supply chain is owned rather than curated. The restaurant runs its own pig farm, which functions as a primary supplier and sets the terms of the cooking rather than responding to them. When the protein source is this proximate, the kitchen does not need to substitute or compromise based on seasonal availability from a third party. It can schedule, plan, and use the whole animal in ways that a restaurant sourcing from a wholesaler cannot.

This model places Geschwister Rauch within a broader movement in European fine dining toward vertical integration at the ingredient level. Chefs at properties like Kräuterreich by Vitus Winkler in Sankt Veit im Pongau and Obauer in Werfen have similarly anchored their menus in regional Styrian and Salzburg produce, but the farm-to-table relationship at Geschwister Rauch is unusually literal. The sourcing is not a selling point layered onto the menu — it is the structural logic of the menu itself.

The kitchen also works with local produce from the wider Styrian region: wild garlic, sheep's milk cheese, kohlrabi, free-range chicken from the Hütter farm, physalis, and radish all appear in dishes that frame these ingredients as the subject, not the supporting cast. The cooking style is described as creative interpretations of classic Wirtshaus dishes, which in practice means the reference points are identifiable , stuffed peppers, gnocchi, calf's head , but the execution is precise and technically accomplished enough to have earned a Michelin star in 2024.

Format and What It Signals

The fine dining restaurant operates as a tasting menu format, running two menus that give the kitchen coherent narrative control over the sourcing story. This is the norm at one-star level in Austria, where tasting menus allow the kitchen to pace sourcing commitments and reduce waste in a way that à la carte service does not permit as easily. For guests, the format means committing to the kitchen's seasonal logic rather than selecting around it.

Restaurant holds a La Liste score of 91 points from the 2026 edition, placing it in a tier that La Liste uses to identify restaurants of consistent technical merit and distinct identity. For context, this score puts Geschwister Rauch in the same general altitude as respected regional fine dining across Europe, well above the casual end of the Michelin-starred bracket. Peer comparisons in Austria's creative fine dining category would include Ikarus in Salzburg and Ois in Neufelden, both of which also work within identifiable regional frameworks while operating at a technical level that distinguishes them from direct regional cooking.

Google reviews from 571 ratings settle at 4.5, a figure that at this volume indicates sustained rather than episodic quality. Single-visit anomalies average out quickly at that scale.

The Wirtshaus at Lunch and the Shop

The siblings operate the fine dining restaurant alongside a daytime Wirtshaus, which opens Wednesday through Saturday for lunch. This two-tier structure is common among Austrian properties that want to serve both the serious tasting menu guest and the local community that has been eating in the same building for generations. The Geschwister Rauch Wirtshaus runs on the classic Wirtshaus register: approachable, rooted in local produce, priced accordingly. The distinction between the two formats is the depth of technical ambition in the evening restaurant, not a difference in the sourcing ethos, which is consistent across both operations.

There is also a shop on site selling high-quality food items, which functions as an extension of the sourcing philosophy into retail. For guests who want to take something of the experience home , a jar, a product from the farm, a local ingredient , the shop provides that without requiring a separate trip to a producer.

The Room and the Terrace

In summer, the terrace shaded by grapevines is the obvious place to eat. Styria's wine country summers are warm enough to make outdoor service practical for a significant portion of the year, and the setting here rewards it. The surrounding range of vine-covered hills is the visual backdrop, which carries a particular coherence when what is on the plate is also sourced from that landscape. The adjacent Villa Rosa, a building dating from 1913, provides accommodation for guests who want to stay overnight, and the property also runs cookery classes, which gives visitors an access point into the kitchen's methodology beyond the tasting menu itself.

Planning the Visit

The restaurant is located at Trautmannsdorf 6, 8343 Bad Gleichenberg, in southern Styria, roughly an hour from Graz by car. The fine dining service runs Tuesday through Saturday evenings from 5:30 PM, with lunch service Wednesday through Saturday from 11:30 AM. The restaurant is closed Sundays and Mondays. The price range sits at the €€€€ tier, which is standard for one-star tasting menu restaurants in Austria. Visitors combining the experience with a broader Styrian itinerary can use our full Bad Gleichenberg restaurants guide, alongside our Bad Gleichenberg hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide for a fuller picture of the area. For those building a wider Austrian fine dining itinerary, Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof in Sankt Anton am Arlberg, Griggeler Stuba in Lech, Schwarzer Adler in Hall in Tirol, and Restaurant 141 by Joachim Jaud in Mieming represent the western Austrian end of the same conversation. For creative fine dining beyond Austria, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen and Enrico Bartolini in Milan operate in the same creative register at a different scale.

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