Kohout NA VÍNĚ
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Set inside Brno's House of Arts on Malinovského náměstí, Kohout NA VÍNĚ pairs two tasting menus and a vegetarian set with an à la carte selection, all anchored by a floor-to-ceiling wine store. The list leans into Czech, Slovenian, and Hungarian producers, with Coravin access expanding the by-the-glass offer. Weekend tables fill fast — reserve ahead.

A Restaurant Inside a Cultural Institution
Brno has spent the better part of two decades building a serious dining scene around its old centre, and the most interesting addresses tend to anchor themselves to the city's architectural fabric rather than work against it. Kohout NA VÍNĚ occupies the ground floor of the House of Arts (Dům umění města Brna) on Malinovského náměstí, a position that gives the room a different register from the street-level bistros and steakhouses that define much of the city's mid-range offer. The building itself carries cultural weight in Brno — it functions as a gallery and event space — and that context shapes what the restaurant feels like before a single dish arrives.
The interior reads as modern without erasing its setting. One of its more deliberate gestures is the ceiling display of artists' names: donors who have contributed to the establishment's upkeep, a detail that links the dining room directly to the institution it inhabits. It is the kind of specificity that separates a room with a story from a room with a fit-out. The floor-to-ceiling wine store is the other dominant visual element, and it signals clearly where the restaurant's priorities sit.
Wine as the Organising Principle
In Czech restaurant dining, wine has historically played second fiddle to beer culture , Brno sits well within Bohemian and Moravian brewing traditions , but a cohort of addresses has emerged that inverts that hierarchy. Kohout NA VÍNĚ belongs firmly to that group. The wine list focuses on the Czech Republic, Slovenia, and Hungary: three producing countries that share a central European character and remain underrepresented on international lists dominated by France, Italy, and Spain.
Moravian wine in particular deserves attention here. The region around Mikulov and Pálava, an hour south of Brno, produces Welschriesling, Grüner Veltliner, and increasingly credible Pinot Noir and Blaufränkisch under a framework that has grown more rigorous over the past decade. A restaurant list that takes Czech production seriously is, by extension, a list that takes Moravian wine seriously, and for visitors travelling from markets where these bottles rarely appear, that alone justifies careful attention to the wine section of the menu.
The use of the Coravin wine system extends the practical reach of the list. Coravin allows bottles to be accessed by the glass without being opened in the conventional sense, which means producers and vintages that would normally require a full-bottle commitment become available in smaller pours. For a list that prioritises Central European labels , many of which are unfamiliar to visiting diners , this is a meaningful logistical decision, not a cosmetic one. It supports exploration rather than default ordering.
For context on how this wine-forward approach compares to the broader Czech fine dining conversation, La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise in Prague operates in a similar register of refined tasting menus with serious list depth, though its focus skews toward historical Bohemian cuisine. The Brno offer at Kohout NA VÍNĚ is less historically framed, more focused on the contemporary Central European wine arc.
The Menu Structure
The kitchen runs two tasting menus alongside a vegetarian set menu and an à la carte selection. That breadth of format is notable: many tasting-menu restaurants in the Czech Republic have moved away from à la carte entirely, treating the set menu as the only legitimate expression of the kitchen's work. Kohout NA VÍNĚ maintains both tracks, which gives the room flexibility across different occasions , a working dinner can run à la carte while a weekend table takes the longer tasting format without either feeling out of place.
The vegetarian set menu signals a kitchen that has thought about plant-based eating as a structural commitment rather than an accommodation. In Central Europe, where meat remains the default reference point for serious cooking, a dedicated vegetarian menu is a substantive editorial choice.
Brno's wider dining scene offers comparison points across different categories. ELEMENT and Borgo Agnese represent other established addresses in the city, while Pavillon Steak House and PRIME STEAK anchor the meat-focused end of the market. ATELIER bar & bistro occupies a more casual register. Kohout NA VÍNĚ sits in a different tier from all of them , the wine-led tasting format inside a cultural venue creates a specific niche that doesn't overlap neatly with any single competitor.
For broader Czech comparisons outside Brno, Bohém in Litomyšl, Chapelle in Písek, and Cattaleya in Čeladná each reflect how serious cooking has dispersed across Czech cities and towns beyond Prague. Internationally, the tasting-menu-with-serious-wine-list format has its reference points at places like Atomix in New York City and Le Bernardin in New York City, though the price tier and scale at Kohout NA VÍNĚ operate in an entirely different bracket.
Malinovského Náměstí and the Address
The square sits in Brno's inner city, close to the main train station and within walking distance of the old town centre. The House of Arts is a functioning cultural venue, which means the restaurant shares its building with exhibition openings, concerts, and events. That co-habitation gives the address a different energy from a standalone restaurant: on some evenings the building is busy with gallery visitors, on others it is quieter and the dining room feels more self-contained. Either way, the physical address reinforces the restaurant's identity as something other than a conventional dining destination.
For visitors building a full Brno itinerary, the EP Club guides to hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences cover the city beyond the dining room. The full Brno restaurants guide maps the broader scene, including addresses like ARRIGŌ in Děčín and Babiččina zahrada in Průhonice for context on how the Czech regional dining conversation is developing outside the capital.
Planning Your Visit
Reservations are necessary, particularly on weekends, when the room reaches capacity. This is not a venue where walk-in optimism serves the guest well. The address is at Dům umění města Brna, Malinovského nám. 652/2, 602 00 Brno-střed , central enough to reach on foot from most accommodation in the inner city. Given the wine list's depth and the Coravin access to premium pours, arriving with time to work through the list properly is worth factoring into the evening's planning.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I book Kohout NA VÍNĚ in advance?
Yes. The restaurant books out, particularly on weekends. Given its position inside the House of Arts , a cultural venue that draws its own separate audience , demand on event nights can be especially concentrated. Book as far ahead as practical for weekend visits.
What kind of setting is Kohout NA VÍNĚ?
A modern restaurant inside a functioning arts institution, with a floor-to-ceiling wine store as the room's dominant visual feature and an artist-name ceiling that connects the space to its cultural context. Among Brno's dining addresses it occupies a distinct position: more institutional in setting than the city's standalone bistros, more wine-focused in identity than most.
What do people recommend at Kohout NA VÍNĚ?
The wine list, specifically its focus on Czech, Slovenian, and Hungarian producers, draws consistent attention. The Coravin system makes it possible to explore the list by the glass without committing to full bottles. The tasting menus are the kitchen's main statement; the vegetarian set menu offers a dedicated option beyond simple substitutions.
Is Kohout NA VÍNĚ suitable for children?
The setting , a formal cultural institution, tasting menus, a wine-led focus , is oriented toward adult dining. It is not a casual family restaurant. Brno has more relaxed options for tables with younger guests; this address is better suited to evenings where the wine list and menu format are the point of the visit.
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