Goldadelux occupies a Kreuzberg address that places it within Berlin's most contested dining corridor, where the gap between neighbourhood bar and serious kitchen has narrowed sharply over the past decade. The venue sits at Erkelenzdamm 45, a stretch that has absorbed successive waves of creative ambition. Readers seeking orientation on where Goldadelux fits within Berlin's broader fine dining tier will find context below.
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- Address
- Erkelenzdamm 45, 10999 Berlin, Germany
- Phone
- +4917673264686
- Website
- golda-delux.de

Kreuzberg's Dining Corridor and Where Goldadelux Sits
Berlin's serious restaurant scene has never organised itself around a single postcode. Unlike Paris arrondissements or Tokyo districts that announce culinary intent before you reach the door, the German capital distributes its ambitious kitchens across neighbourhoods with very different social registers. Kreuzberg is one of the more instructive cases. The district has moved, over roughly fifteen years, from a zone associated with late-night informality to one where multi-course menus and serious wine lists share streets with döner counters and canal-side bars. Erkelenzdamm sits near the heart of that transition, and Goldadelux at number 45 is a casual Israeli street food restaurant serving sabich in Berlin.
Arriving on foot, the neighbourhood reads as lived-in rather than curated, which tends to set a particular expectation about what is inside, an expectation that Berlin's better kitchens have learned to use deliberately. The contrast between exterior modesty and interior seriousness has become a minor local tradition, one that venues like Nobelhart & Schmutzig have used to sharpen their identity.
The Structure of a Berlin Fine Dining Meal in 2024
This is true at Rutz, where the tasting format has anchored a two-Michelin-star programme. It is true at FACIL, whose contemporary European progression runs inside the Mandala Hotel. It is true at CODA Dessert Dining, which inverts the conventional arc by making the sweet register the structural backbone rather than the finale. The tasting progression has become the dominant grammar of ambitious Berlin cooking, and any venue positioning in the upper tier is, implicitly, writing in that language.
Goldadelux is walk-in friendly and the average meal price is about $15. The kitchen decides the pacing, the transitions, the ratio of intensity to relief, and the point at which the meal commits to its closing register. The early courses tend to be shorter, more acidic, more about calibrating the palate than satisfying it. Mid-course is where technique announces itself most openly. The final savoury course carries the weight of what the kitchen considers its central statement. Dessert, in the better examples, does more than provide sweetness, it closes the argument the kitchen opened two hours earlier. Readers who have experienced this structure at restaurants like Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn or Aqua in Wolfsburg will recognise the ambition that format implies.
Peer Context: What Berlin's €€€€ Tier Looks Like
Restaurant Tim Raue operates at two Michelin stars with a pan-Asian inflection that has made it one of the more globally legible addresses in the city. Nobelhart & Schmutzig has built its reputation on radical local sourcing, a position that generates both fierce loyalty and occasional friction. FACIL offers the polish of a hotel-adjacent kitchen with the credibility of sustained Michelin recognition. CODA has carved out a category of its own by treating dessert as the primary discipline rather than a supporting act.
What connects these venues is not cuisine type, they range considerably, but a shared commitment to format discipline and a willingness to ask something of the guest. Meals here require time, attention, and a degree of trust. That is the implicit contract at the €€€€ level in Berlin, and it is the context in which Goldadelux at Erkelenzdamm 45 should be assessed. For comparison across the broader German fine dining tier, the comparable set extends to addresses like JAN in Munich, Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach, and Victor's Fine Dining by Christian Bau in Perl. At the European level, the tasting progression model finds reference points at Le Bernardin in New York City and Lazy Bear in San Francisco, both of which demonstrate how a fixed format can carry strong individual personality without becoming rigid.
Planning Your Visit
| Venue | Area | Price Tier | Format | Awards |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goldadelux | Kreuzberg | Not confirmed | Not confirmed | Not confirmed |
| Nobelhart & Schmutzig | Kreuzberg/Mitte border | €€€€ | Fixed tasting, local sourcing | Michelin starred |
| Rutz | Mitte | €€€€ | Fixed tasting | 2 Michelin stars |
| CODA Dessert Dining | Neukölln | €€€€ | Dessert-led tasting | 2 Michelin stars |
| FACIL | Tiergarten | €€€€ | Contemporary tasting | 2 Michelin stars |
Readers with an interest in Germany's regional fine dining beyond Berlin may also find value in exploring ES:SENZ in Grassau, Schanz in Piesport, Waldhotel Sonnora in Dreis, Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg, and Bagatelle in Trier.
A Minimal comparable set
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price |
|---|---|---|
| GoldadeluxThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Kreuzberg, Israeli Street Food - Sabich | $$ |
| Kreuzberger Himmel | Kreuzberg, Authentic Syrian & Arabic | $$ |
| forn simsim | Prenzlauer Berg, Levantine Manakish | $$ |
| Jemenitisches Restaurant | Neukolln, Authentic Yemeni | $$ |
| Yarok | Mitte, Authentic Syrian | $$ |
| Yafo | Kreuzberg, Modern Israeli | $$$ |
At a Glance
- Trendy
- Modern
- Cozy
- Casual Hangout
- Open Kitchen
Casual and inviting atmosphere with a focus on fresh, flavorful street food presented at fine dining taste level.













