Marie B
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Inside a 14th-century Prague townhouse, Marie B runs a four-course carte blanche menu rooted in Czech culinary tradition, named after a real 19th-century Czech cookbook author. The counter seats wrap a U-shaped open kitchen beneath vaulted ceilings, with contemporary art installations and a Moravian-focused wine list. Vin de Marie, the attached wine bar, occupies the same building.
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A Graffiti Door, a Vaulted Ceiling, and a Ghost From 1894
The approach to Marie B sets the tone deliberately. The address on Dlouhá 37 leads through a covered courtyard to a door marked by street graffiti, the kind of entrance that filters out anyone expecting polish at the threshold. Inside, the contrast is sharp: a minimalist interior beneath a rustic vaulted ceiling dating to the 14th century, the original bones of the townhouse exposed but working alongside two light installations by Berlin artist Anselm Reyle. The tension between the worn and the considered is the design argument the room makes from the first moment.
That argument extends to the kitchen. Prague's serious dining scene has spent the past decade sorting itself into distinct registers: the French-Czech formalism of places like La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise, the contemporary European lines of Alcron, and a growing cohort of modern Czech kitchens that treat the national canon as a living reference rather than a museum exhibit. Marie B belongs to that third category, and the format makes that position clear: four courses, carte blanche, creative dishes grounded in Czech culinary tradition. There is no à la carte hedge. The kitchen commits to a single direction per sitting.
The 1894 Cookbook and What It Signals
Behind glass near the counter sits a cookery book published in 1894, written by chef Marie B Svobodová, the woman after whom the restaurant is named. It is not decorative. The display functions as a statement of intent: the kitchen sees itself as a continuation of something, not a rupture from it. Czech cuisine has historically occupied an awkward position in European fine dining, substantial, peasant-rooted, better known for svíčková and roast pork than for tasting menus. The restaurants now working in this space, Marie B among them, are making the case that Czech technique and ingredient logic can carry a counter-format menu without apology or irony.
That positioning places Marie B in interesting company across the Czech Republic. Properties like Cattaleya in Čeladná, Chapelle in Písek, and Bohém in Litomyšl are each working through a similar question: how do regional Czech culinary roots translate to a modern tasting format? In Prague itself, the question carries additional weight because international visitors arrive with expectations shaped by other capitals. The carte blanche format at Marie B sidesteps that pressure by removing the option to play it safe.
Counter Dining and Critical Reception
The seating arrangement at Marie B is worth understanding before you arrive. Diners sit at a U-shaped counter around the open kitchen, which means the format is explicitly theatrical without pretending otherwise. You watch the kitchen work. The counter configuration, common at serious omakase and tasting-menu venues from Atomix in New York to Le Bernardin's chef's table tier, creates an intimacy that shapes the pacing of a meal. The kitchen cannot hide behind closed doors, and neither can the guest retreat into a private dining bubble. It is a format that rewards attention.
The Michelin Guide has included Marie B in its Prague selection. For context on the broader Prague dining tier, 420 Restaurant and Alma occupy adjacent positions in the city's considered-dining conversation, each working a distinct angle on the same question of what contemporary Prague cooking means.
Moravian Wine and the Attached Bar
Wine list at Marie B places deliberate emphasis on Moravian labels, a curatorial choice that reflects a broader shift in how Czech restaurants are approaching the domestic wine offer. Moravia produces the overwhelming majority of Czech wine output, and its Welschriesling, Müller-Thurgau, and Blaufränkisch expressions have gained traction in quality-focused dining rooms. Centering a wine list on Moravian producers is both a regional statement and a practical one: the labels pair logically with Czech-rooted dishes and carry a provenance story that international Burgundy or Tuscan selections cannot replicate in this context.
Building also houses Vin de Marie, a wine bar operating in the same space. For those who want to approach the wine program outside the structure of a full tasting menu, the bar provides a lower-commitment entry point into the same cellar logic. It is a smart piece of programming, the kind of secondary format that reflects confidence in the core offering rather than a need to hedge it.
Planning a Visit
Marie B sits on Dlouhá, one of Prague's Old Town arteries, which puts it within walking distance of the Old Town Square and the broader Staré Město dining corridor. The courtyard entrance on Dlouhá 37 is the detail to hold onto; the graffiti-marked door is not a mistake in the address. Given the counter format and the critical attention the restaurant has received, advance reservation is advisable, particularly for weekend sittings. The four-course carte blanche structure means there is no menu to review in advance, the kitchen decides the direction, and the appropriate response is to let it.
For visitors building a broader Prague itinerary, Amano and ARRIGŌ in Děčín offer reference points at different price registers, while ATELIER bar and bistro in Brno and Babiččina zahrada in Průhonice extend the Czech creative-dining picture beyond the capital.
Comparable Spots, Quickly
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marie BThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Modern Czech Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | |
| Kampa Park | Modern French Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | Mala Strana |
| Benjamin | Modern Czech Tasting Menu | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | Vrsovice |
| Pot au Feu | Traditional French Bistro | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Josefov |
| Portfolio | Modern International Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | Josefov |
| Amano | Modern Italian Contemporary | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Pelc Tyrolka |
At a Glance
- Trendy
- Modern
- Intimate
- Sophisticated
- Date Night
- Solo
- Special Occasion
- Open Kitchen
- Historic Building
- Extensive Wine List
- Natural Wine
- Sommelier Led
- Local Sourcing
Minimalist trendy interior with urban feel, raw walls, neon art under rustic vaulted ceiling, lively yet intimate counter seating around open kitchen.














