
A Opinionated About Dining Top New Restaurants in Europe Highly Recommended pick for 2023, Klösterle brings progressive Austrian cooking to the Vorarlberg village of Klösterle, with Jakob Zeller and Ethel Hoon sharing the kitchen. The format and pacing lean toward the ceremonial end of alpine dining, placing it in a different register from the resort-circuit restaurants of nearby Lech am Arlberg.
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- Address
- Klösterle 50, 6754 Klösterle, Austria
- Phone
- +43 5582 627
- Website
- engel-kloesterle.at

Where the Arlberg Slows Down
The Vorarlberg valley road between Lech and the Arlberg pass carries a particular kind of quiet in winter: snowfields pressing close on both sides, and the village of Klösterle arriving before you expect it. The restaurant that shares the village's name occupies that same quality of understatement. The setting is not the point. The meal is.
Klösterle earned a Highly Recommended citation from Opinionated About Dining in its 2023 Leading New Restaurants in Europe list.
The Kitchen at the Table
Progressive Austrian cooking, as a category, operates differently from the ceremonial tasting-menu tradition you find at places like Steirereck im Stadtpark in Vienna or Döllerer in Golling an der Salzach. At its most considered, it returns to alpine and pastoral ingredients, mountain herbs, cured meats, lake fish, root vegetables, and subjects them to technique that sharpens rather than transforms. The goal is legibility, not spectacle. You should be able to trace the ingredient back to its origin by the time the plate is cleared.
The kitchen here is led by Jakob Zeller and Ethel Hoon, a pairing that is itself a signal. Shared kitchens at this scale tend to produce one of two outcomes: a fractured menu that reads like two conversations happening simultaneously, or a coherent point of view that benefits from two sets of discipline.
The pacing at a table like this matters as much as the food. The ritual of a progressive tasting menu in an alpine setting involves a particular sequence: arrival while appetite is still sharp, a course structure that moves from lighter to richer without rush, and the kind of service that disappears between courses rather than hovering. In the Arlberg corridor, where restaurants like Griggeler Stuba carry two Michelin stars and set a formal benchmark, the question for any newer entry is whether it earns its own rhythm or simply inherits the region's established format. Klösterle's placement outside Lech proper suggests the former: guests make a deliberate choice to come here, which shapes the tempo of the evening before the first course arrives.
Klösterle Against Its Peers
The Arlberg region has developed a dining tier over the past decade. Rote Wand Chef's Table, Aurelio, Fux, and Jägerstube and Walserstube all operate within the resort economy of Lech am Arlberg, where a wealthy seasonal clientele supports price points that would be harder to sustain in a quieter valley setting. Klösterle sits outside that system. The address, Klösterle 50, 6754 Klösterle, puts it in the village that predates the ski-resort development, and that positioning shapes the kind of restaurant it can be.
In other Austrian alpine contexts, the most compelling cooking often happens in exactly this kind of off-circuit location. Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof in Sankt Anton am Arlberg draws guests prepared to travel for the meal rather than guests looking for a convenient resort dinner. Kräuterreich by Vitus Winkler in Sankt Veit im Pongau and Landhaus Bacher in Mautern an der Donau represent a wider pattern in Austrian gastronomy: serious kitchens in provincial settings that serve a different kind of guest than the Viennese or Salzburg fine-dining circuit. Ikarus in Salzburg occupies yet another tier, rotating visiting chefs through a format built around international programming. Klösterle belongs to the regionally-rooted tradition rather than any of those internationalist models.
For context on progressive Austrian cooking, the reference points extend well beyond the Alps. The technical influence that filters into central European kitchens now draws from programmes at places as different as Le Bernardin in New York City, where precision with delicate proteins has been a foundational discipline for decades, and Atomix in New York City, whose course-by-card narrative format has influenced how younger European kitchens think about sequencing a meal. Neither model maps directly onto what Klösterle appears to be doing, but both illustrate how widely the vocabulary of progressive tasting menus has dispersed.
Planning the Visit
Klösterle holds a Google rating of 4.4 across 398 reviews, a volume that suggests it has been drawing guests consistently rather than occasionally. For a village-scale restaurant without the marketing infrastructure of a resort property, that number reflects genuine word-of-mouth reach. Reservations are essential, particularly during the winter ski season when the Arlberg corridor fills. The restaurant is located at Klösterle 50 in the village of the same name, a short drive from the Lech am Arlberg resort area. Guests travelling from Lech will find the road direct in clear conditions; in heavy snow, allow additional time.
For a fuller picture of dining in the wider area,
A Lean Comparison
| Venue | Cuisine | Price |
|---|---|---|
| KlösterleThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Progressive Austrian | |
| Griggeler Stuba | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ |
| Post Lech | Contemporary | €€€€ |
| Aurelio | Contemporary | €€€ |
| Fux | Fusion | €€€€ |
| La Fenice | Mediterranean Cuisine | €€€€ |
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