


Giewont holds a Michelin star and a place on La Liste's 2025 rankings from a dining room in Kościelisko, where floor-to-ceiling glass frames the 1,895-metre peak it is named after. Chef Przemek Sieradzki works through three tasting menus and an à la carte, drawing on Polish produce alongside French-sourced ingredients. It is one of the few fine-dining addresses in the Tatra foothills operating at this level of recognition.

A Mountain Setting With Serious Credentials
The approach to Kościelisko, a quiet village folded into the foothills south of Zakopane, does not immediately suggest a Michelin-starred dining room. The Tatra range dominates everything here: forested ridgelines, stone-walled farmhouses, and the long shadow of Giewont peak, which climbs to 1,895 metres above sea level. That altitude is not incidental backdrop. At Restaurant Giewont on Nędzy Kubińca, floor-to-ceiling glass walls ensure the mountain is present throughout every course, framing a dining room whose architecture has been composed around the view rather than competing with it. The spacious interior sits in deliberate harmony with the region's character, the kind of considered restraint that signals a kitchen taking its surroundings seriously.
The restaurant earned a Michelin star in 2024 and appeared on the La Liste Leading Restaurants ranking in 2025 with 75 points, placing it among a small cohort of Polish fine-dining addresses recognised at an international level. Star Wine List published it in January 2025, awarding it a White Star for the quality of its wine programme. For the Tatra region, these credentials are significant. Fine dining in mountain resort areas often coasts on scenery; Giewont has accumulated the kind of external validation that comes from consistent kitchen performance rather than real-estate advantage.
Polish Fine Dining Beyond the City Circuit
Poland's Michelin-starred restaurant scene has historically clustered in its major cities. Bottiglieria 1881 Restaurant in Kraków holds two Michelin stars. Arco by Paco Pérez in Gdańsk, hub.praga in Warsaw, and Muga in Poznań anchor the urban end of the country's modern cuisine conversation. Giewont's position outside that circuit matters editorially. A Michelin star in a skiing village argues that the guide's assessors found kitchen discipline that stands independently of the metropolitan context that typically produces such recognition. The comparison is instructive: Warsaw and Kraków restaurants operate inside dense hospitality ecosystems with year-round professional audiences. Kościelisko draws a seasonal crowd, primarily skiers in winter and hikers in warmer months, and Giewont has built a programme around that reality without compromising on standard.
The regional peer set in the Tatra area is thin at this tier. Drukarnia Smaku Cristina in nearby Zakopane represents the broader southern Polish dining scene, but starred restaurants with this level of international ranking are absent from the immediate vicinity. That scarcity is part of the context. Giewont does not have a tier of competitors directly around it, which places the burden of standard-setting on the kitchen itself rather than on competitive pressure from neighbours. Whether that isolation has sharpened or sheltered the restaurant's ambition is a fair question, and the Michelin star suggests the former.
The Kitchen's Approach: Produce, Tasting Menus, and the French-Polish Axis
Chef Przemek Sieradzki's programme at Giewont reflects a training arc visible in the menu's dual sourcing logic. Influences and produce travel from both Poland and France, creating a dialogue between local terroir and classical French technique that has become a recognisable signature in a subset of Central European modern kitchens. Documented examples from the restaurant's record include sirloin sourced from Zaczyk, prepared with evident attention to Polish beef traditions, alongside asparagus from France, described as plump and well-selected. The kitchen is not simply applying French method to Polish ingredients, nor is it presenting Polish regionalism as sufficient in itself. It is working along a more considered axis, one where sourcing decisions carry editorial weight.
This approach positions Giewont inside a broader movement in European fine dining, where chefs trained in or influenced by French classical tradition are recontextualising that knowledge through the lens of their home country's produce and culinary memory. The conversation is active across the continent: at Frantzén in Stockholm, the Scandinavian-meets-Japanese synthesis has become the template for Nordic luxury; at FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai, that method travels internationally. In Poland, the French-Polish axis is a younger project, and Sieradzki's kitchen in the Tatras is one of the cleaner examples of it operating outside a capital city context.
The menu architecture supports this reading. Three tasting menus run alongside an à la carte: a classic format, a seasonal version, and a vegan option. Offering a vegan tasting menu at this tier is a meaningful signal; it requires the kitchen to apply the same level of technique and composition to a format that many starred restaurants still treat as an afterthought. The presence of three distinct menu pathways suggests a kitchen confident enough in its range to offer genuine differentiation rather than a single chef's tasting sequence with token alternatives.
Atmosphere, Format, and the Dining Room Experience
Kościelisko is part of the broader Zakopane area, a destination long associated with affluent Polish winter tourism. The village draws skiers who prefer a quieter base than Zakopane itself, and the dining room at Giewont reflects that demographic: a spacious interior designed for comfort over density, positioned inside an area where the accommodation category skews toward upscale mountain chalets and boutique hotels rather than budget infrastructure. For visitors building a trip around the region, our full Kościelisko hotels guide covers the accommodation options that make sense alongside a dinner reservation here.
The floor-to-ceiling glass is the room's defining architectural gesture. It does what that format always promises and rarely delivers: a genuine integration of the landscape into the meal. The Giewont peak at 1,895 metres is large enough, and close enough, to fill that glass without the view feeling distant or postcard-flat. What the architecture demands of a kitchen is that the food justify the setting rather than shelter behind it. The Michelin star and the La Liste placement suggest the kitchen has met that test.
Google reviews sit at 4.6 from 533 ratings, a signal of consistent guest experience rather than a statistical outlier. At restaurants in remote or seasonal locations, review scores can fluctuate sharply as a function of tourist volume and expectation mismatch. A 4.6 average across more than five hundred reviews in a mountain village implies a consistent service standard that holds across the seasonal mix of visitors.
Planning a Visit
Restaurant Giewont is closed Monday and Tuesday. From Wednesday through Friday, service runs from 2 PM to 10 PM. Saturday mirrors that window, and Sunday opens an hour earlier at 1 PM, running through to 10 PM. For visitors staying in the Tatra region, that Wednesday-to-Sunday schedule means building an itinerary around the closed days. The à la carte format means a visit does not require committing to a full tasting sequence, though the kitchen's profile suggests the tasting menus are the more complete expression of the programme. The price range sits at €€€, consistent with the starred restaurant tier across Poland and broadly comparable with one-Michelin-star pricing in Central European non-capital cities.
The address is Nędzy Kubińca 4, Kościelisko, a short distance from the main Zakopane area. For those exploring the southern Polish region more broadly, our Kościelisko bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide map the broader offer around the village. The full Kościelisko restaurants guide sets Giewont in context with the other dining options in the area. For reference points in Poland's wider fine-dining circuit, 1911 Restaurant in Sopot, Acquario in Wrocław, Biały Królik in Gdynia, Luneta & Lorneta Bistro Club in Ciekocinko, Nare Sushi in Skórzewo, and Restauracja Solmarina in Wiślinka each represent the country's growing regional fine-dining reach beyond the capital.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Giewont a family-friendly restaurant?
Giewont operates at a €€€ price point with a formal tasting menu format and à la carte options. As with most restaurants in this tier in Poland, the atmosphere is oriented toward adults seeking a considered dining experience. Families visiting Kościelisko, an area that draws visitors of all ages for skiing and hiking, will find the broader village has a range of more casual options. Giewont is leading suited to guests prepared for a longer, multi-course meal.
What is the atmosphere like at Giewont?
The dining room at Giewont in Kościelisko is defined by its architecture: a spacious interior with floor-to-ceiling glass framing the Giewont peak, which rises to 1,895 metres. The setting reflects the affluent ski-resort character of the surrounding area. With a Michelin star awarded in 2024 and a La Liste 2025 ranking at 75 points, the atmosphere sits at the formal end of the Polish mountain dining spectrum, without the theatrical intensity of some city-based starred restaurants. The €€€ pricing and the tasting menu format reinforce a tone that is considered and unhurried.
What dish is Giewont famous for?
The kitchen under Chef Przemek Sieradzki does not operate around a single signature dish in the way that some celebrity-chef restaurants anchor their identity to one preparation. The programme draws on both Polish and French sourcing, with documented highlights including sirloin from Zaczyk and French asparagus, as described in the restaurant's Michelin and La Liste recognition materials. The three tasting menus (classic, seasonal, and vegan) are the fuller expression of what the kitchen does, and the Michelin assessors' language around "expressive, consummately seasoned dishes" points to a kitchen whose strength is in the overall composition of a meal rather than a single showpiece course.
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