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CuisineModern Cuisine
Executive ChefUroš Štefelin
LocationLuxembourg, Luxembourg
Michelin

Grünewald Chef's Table earned its first Michelin star in 2025, placing it among Luxembourg's small tier of starred modern cuisine restaurants. Located in Dommeldange, the chef's table format and the cooking of Uroš Štefelin position it closer to the sourcing-led, produce-forward end of the city's fine dining spectrum than to its more classically French neighbours.

Grünewald Chef’s Table restaurant in Luxembourg, Luxembourg
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Where Luxembourg's Fine Dining Sits in 2025

Luxembourg's starred restaurant scene is compact by European capital standards, but its upper tier has grown meaningfully in the last decade. Two restaurants hold two Michelin stars — Amélys and the long-established Léa Linster — while a cluster of single-star addresses rounds out the city's serious dining options. Grünewald Chef's Table joined that single-star cohort with the 2025 Michelin awards, having carried a Michelin Plate recognition the year before. That trajectory, from plate to star in a single cycle, signals a kitchen operating with consistency and directional clarity rather than chasing novelty.

The modern cuisine category in Luxembourg occupies an interesting position: it is not the Franco-Belgian classicism of older generations, nor the strictly technique-forward cooking that dominated European fine dining in the 2010s. What emerges from the better kitchens in and around the capital is something more grounded in product provenance, where the cooking acts as a frame for ingredients rather than a transformation of them. Grünewald Chef's Table reads as a clear expression of that tendency, with chef Uroš Štefelin's approach sitting closer to the sourcing-led, produce-forward end of the spectrum than to, say, the formal architecture of Maison Lameloise in Burgundy or the fire-driven technique of 11 Woodfire in Dubai.

The Setting: Dommeldange and the Chef's Table Format

Dommeldange sits just north of Luxembourg City's core, a quieter residential district that has become associated with a more intimate register of hospitality than the city centre. Arriving at the address on Rue des Hauts-Fourneaux, the context is deliberately low-key , the restaurant does not announce itself with the visual signals typical of starred city-centre venues. That restraint is consistent with the chef's table format, which by design deprioritises spectacle in favour of proximity: proximity to the kitchen, to the cooking, and to the person responsible for both.

The chef's table model has spread across European fine dining for good reason. It removes the mediation between kitchen and guest, replacing it with a direct and often conversational exchange. At its most effective, the format makes the sourcing story audible: the chef can speak to where a specific cut came from, how a vegetable was grown, or why a particular producer was chosen for the season. For a kitchen emphasising ingredient provenance, that directness is not incidental , it is structural to the experience.

For those planning a visit from the city centre, Dommeldange is accessible by car in under ten minutes and connected by public transit. The format itself suggests booking well in advance; chef's table seatings, by their nature, operate at low capacity, and a single-star designation reliably tightens availability.

Sourcing as the Culinary Argument

The editorial angle that makes Grünewald Chef's Table worth attention within Luxembourg's broader dining conversation is not primarily about technique , it is about what arrives before the technique is applied. Sourcing-led kitchens, at their most coherent, treat ingredient selection as the first act of cooking. The choice of producer, the decision to work with a particular season's yield, the preference for a regional supply chain over a global one: these are culinary decisions as much as any knife skill or sauce reduction.

Luxembourg and its immediate surroundings , the Moselle valley to the east, the Ardennes to the north, the agricultural regions of adjacent Germany and Belgium , offer a sourcing geography that serious kitchens can draw on with specificity. The Moselle produces wines and, alongside them, the kind of small-scale horticultural and livestock operations that feed produce-conscious restaurants. When a kitchen in this region commits to working closely with its immediate supply chain, the menu becomes a seasonal argument for place rather than a generic exercise in fine dining format.

This approach places Grünewald Chef's Table in a broader European conversation. Restaurants like Agli Amici in Godia in northeast Italy have built multi-decade reputations on precisely this logic: the region's produce as the primary culinary statement, with technique in service of that produce rather than the reverse. Closer to Luxembourg, the same philosophy informs several of the more interesting addresses in the Benelux region, where border geography and agricultural diversity make hyper-local sourcing both practical and meaningful.

How Grünewald Compares Within Luxembourg's Starred Set

Among Luxembourg's current Michelin-starred restaurants, the competitive set is instructive. Equilibrium and De Jangeli represent different registers of the city's dining ambition, while Bonifas and Parc Le'h sit at other points on the quality spectrum. Archibald De Prince, one of the single-star addresses in the broader Luxembourg region, holds an explicitly organic designation , a formal commitment to sourcing that Grünewald approaches through format and cooking philosophy rather than certification language.

What separates Grünewald from the majority of its single-star peers is the chef's table format itself. Most starred restaurants in Luxembourg operate as conventional dining rooms, where the kitchen remains largely invisible to guests. The chef's table removes that invisibility. It also changes the economics and the cadence of service: fewer covers, longer seatings, and a meal that tends to be sequential and unhurried rather than concurrent across a full dining room. At the €€€€ price point shared with the city's other top-tier addresses, the value proposition is density of attention rather than volume of courses.

Internationally, the chef's table format at this level is a well-established marker of intent. Frantzén in Stockholm is perhaps the most cited example of the format operating at maximum seriousness , a fully immersive, multi-hour progression through a kitchen-adjacent space. FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai extends that model internationally. Grünewald is not competing at that scale or price tier, but the format alignment is meaningful: chef's table restaurants self-select for a guest who wants engagement, not just execution.

Google Reviews and the Guest Signal

A 4.6 rating across 66 Google reviews is a useful data point for a restaurant operating at this capacity level. Chef's table restaurants accumulate reviews slowly by design , low cover counts mean the sample builds gradually. A consistent 4.6 at 66 reviews suggests the kitchen is delivering reliably rather than producing occasional peaks surrounded by inconsistency. For a restaurant that received its first Michelin star in 2025 after a Plate in 2024, the review pattern and the award trajectory are aligned: a steady upward arc rather than a sudden spike.

Among the city's modern cuisine addresses, that review consistency matters for a different reason than it does in high-volume restaurants. When a kitchen serves thirty or forty guests on a given night rather than a hundred, each service represents a higher proportion of the total experience base. Consistency at low volume is, in some respects, a harder standard to meet than consistency at scale.

Planning Your Visit

Grünewald Chef's Table is located at 2 Rue des Hauts-Fourneaux in Dommeldange, a short distance from the centre of Luxembourg City. The €€€€ price tier puts it at the upper end of the city's restaurant market, in line with other starred addresses. Given the chef's table format and the 2025 Michelin star, advance booking is strongly advisable; availability at low-capacity starred restaurants in small European capitals tends to compress quickly after award announcements, particularly for weekend seatings.

Visitors building a broader Luxembourg itinerary around serious dining can find additional context in our full Luxembourg restaurants guide. For accommodation choices calibrated to the same level of care, our Luxembourg hotels guide covers the relevant options. Luxembourg's bar scene, covered in our bars guide, and the Moselle wine region, detailed in our wineries guide, are natural complements to an itinerary anchored by a meal of this register. Cultural and experiential programming is mapped in our experiences guide.

Among modern cuisine restaurants at a comparable tier and format internationally, Cracco in Galleria in Milan, Trescha in Buenos Aires, and Azafrán in Mendoza each offer reference points for what modern cuisine looks like when grounded in a specific regional identity. Grünewald Chef's Table is making a comparable argument from a smaller, less internationally profiled city , which is, in part, what makes its 2025 recognition worth tracking.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I order at Grünewald Chef's Table?
The chef's table format means the menu is set rather than à la carte , the kitchen sequences the meal, and guests follow that progression. Given chef Uroš Štefelin's sourcing-led approach and the 2025 Michelin star, the dishes most worth attention are those that lean most explicitly on regional produce: the courses where the ingredient's origin is the primary statement. In a produce-forward kitchen, those tend to be the ones that arrive with the least intervention and the most specificity about what is on the plate and where it came from.
Can I walk in to Grünewald Chef's Table?
In practical terms, walk-in availability at a low-capacity chef's table restaurant that has just received its first Michelin star is unlikely, particularly on weekends or during peak travel periods in Luxembourg. The city draws significant business and diplomatic traffic year-round, and the starred dining tier is small enough that capacity fills quickly. At the €€€€ price point, a spontaneous visit is a reasonable aspiration but not a reliable strategy. Booking ahead , ideally several weeks in advance , is the more dependable approach for a meal that warrants the commitment.
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