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Gdańsk, Poland

Hewelke

CuisineModern Cuisine
Executive ChefAlyona Orel
LocationGdańsk, Poland
Michelin

A Michelin Bib Gourmand recipient housed in a converted Gdańsk brewery, Hewelke pairs a vaulted brick interior with a menu that moves freely between European and pan-Asian registers. The Peking duck has become a local reference point, and the cocktail list takes its names from the planets in a nod to the astronomer whose name the venue carries. At the single-euro price tier, it sits well clear of Gdańsk's fine-dining bracket while outperforming it on recogni­tion.

Hewelke restaurant in Gdańsk, Poland
About

A Brewery Floor That Sets the Tone

Walking into the space on Jana Kilińskiego 7, the first thing that orients you is the architecture rather than any décor choice: a vaulted brick ceiling that once arched over fermenting tanks now curves above dining tables, and exposed steel support columns mark the room's industrial ancestry without apology. A controlled flash of neon punctuates the brick at intervals, enough to signal that the kitchen is not trying to replicate a heritage museum. The physical environment, in other words, gives you the pacing cue before a single plate arrives. You are in a place that takes its history seriously enough to preserve its bones but loosely enough to do something unexpected inside them.

That tension between preservation and experimentation runs through Gdańsk's broader dining scene, which has spent the better part of a decade building a serious restaurant culture around converted industrial and merchant buildings in the city's historic core. Hewelke sits inside that pattern while operating at a price point — the single-euro tier — that keeps it accessible to a wider cross-section of the city than the fine-dining addresses clustered further along the Old Town. For reference, Mercato and Fino occupy a higher bracket, while Hewelke competes on quality recognition rather than price escalation.

The Ritual of a Dual-Format Day

The dining ritual here has an unusual shape. The address functions as a bakery through the daytime hours, which means the rhythm of the space shifts perceptibly as evening approaches. By night, the counter and kitchen pivot toward a restaurant format under chef Alyona Orel, and the same room that was dispensing bread in the afternoon reorganises itself around something considerably more considered. This kind of format switching is not unique to Gdańsk , several European cities have seen café-to-dinner transformations become a distinct category of their own , but the execution matters, and the Michelin Bib Gourmand awarded in 2025 suggests the evening kitchen is holding its standard consistently enough to warrant inspector attention.

The Bib Gourmand designation, it is worth being precise about, is Michelin's marker for cooking that delivers quality at a price point below the starred tier. It does not imply a lesser ambition; it implies a different contract with the guest. At Hewelke, that contract involves a kitchen willing to move laterally across culinary traditions without anchoring itself to any single one. The result is a menu that reads more like a considered edit than a fusion experiment, which is a meaningful distinction in practice.

Global Registers, Coherent Execution

Polish restaurants that operate with genuine global range remain a smaller cohort than the country's dining press sometimes suggests. The more common pattern is a modern European menu with one or two Asian-inflected dishes appended as novelty. What distinguishes Hewelke within the Gdańsk scene is that the pan-Asian register appears to be load-bearing rather than decorative. Tom kha, the Thai coconut-galangal broth, sits in the menu as a structural dish rather than an accent. The Peking duck, which has developed its own local following, represents a serious preparation rather than a loose interpretation: Peking duck done well requires multi-stage cooking over a controlled timeline, and the fact that it has become the dish that guests specifically reference in conversation about the restaurant indicates the kitchen is not taking shortcuts with it.

For context on where Gdańsk's modern cuisine scene sits relative to other Polish cities, Bottiglieria 1881 in Kraków and Muga in Poznań represent the formal fine-dining tier, while hub.praga in Warsaw and 1911 in Sopot offer instructive comparisons in terms of how Baltic-adjacent cities handle contemporary menus. Hewelke occupies a recognisable niche within that national picture: Michelin-recognised, price-accessible, and operating with a confidence in cross-cultural cooking that most restaurants at its price tier avoid out of caution.

The Cocktail Program as Cultural Reference

The naming of the cocktail list after the planets is not arbitrary decoration. Johannes Hevelius , the seventeenth-century Gdańsk astronomer and brewer whose surname the restaurant adapts , was instrumental in cataloguing the lunar surface and mapping the northern sky, and his connection to both brewing and celestial observation gives the venue its conceptual frame. The planet-named cocktails close that loop, functioning as a reference the attentive guest can decode and the casual guest can ignore. This kind of layered cultural embedding is something Gdańsk does reasonably well across several of its more serious hospitality addresses. Eliksir and Niesztuka are other Gdańsk addresses that operate with a clear sense of local narrative rather than generic European restaurant grammar.

At the broader level, the trend of cocktail programs rooted in local intellectual or historical figures has become a reliable signal of a certain kind of hospitality ambition. It suggests a kitchen and bar team that has thought about where they are, not just what they are serving. At a price point as accessible as Hewelke's, that kind of attention is not guaranteed, which is part of what the Michelin recognition encodes.

Planning Your Visit

Hewelke is located at Jana Kilińskiego 7 in Gdańsk, within reach of the city's historic centre. The Google rating of 4.6 across 638 reviews places it among the more consistently regarded restaurants in the city at its price tier, and the Bib Gourmand awarded for 2025 means the kitchen is operating under ongoing inspector scrutiny. Given the dual bakery-restaurant format, evening visits are the appropriate frame for the full menu. The single-euro price tier makes this one of the more affordable Michelin-recognised evenings available in northern Poland. Reservations and hours are leading confirmed directly with the venue, as details were not available at time of publication. For a broader picture of where Hewelke sits within Gdańsk dining, see our full Gdańsk restaurants guide, or explore our Gdańsk bars guide, hotels guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide for the full city picture.

Readers interested in how the modern cuisine category performs elsewhere in Poland might also look at Acquario in Wrocław or Giewont in Kościelisko. For international reference points in the modern cuisine bracket, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai mark the upper end of what the category can mean in formal terms. Hewelke is operating in a very different register, but the Bib Gourmand signals that the gap is one of scale and ambition rather than seriousness. For Gdańsk at the higher price tier, Ritz offers a contrasting point of comparison.

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