Skip to Main Content
← Collection
Belgrade, Serbia

Salon 1905

CuisineModern Cuisine
Executive ChefIvan Tasic
LocationBelgrade, Serbia
Michelin
La Liste

Set inside the marble-and-gilt Geozavod building on Karađorđeva, Salon 1905 operates at the uppermost tier of Belgrade dining. Chef Ivan Tasic runs a surprise tasting menu that draws on Serbian produce and traditional recipes refracted through a contemporary lens. La Liste recognition in both 2025 and 2026, alongside consecutive Michelin Plates, places it among the most credentialed tables in the city.

Salon 1905 restaurant in Belgrade, Serbia
About

Inside the Geozavod: Where Belgrade's Architectural Heritage Meets the Tasting Menu Format

Approaching Karađorđeva 48, the Geozavod building does not require any introduction. The nineteenth-century edifice, with its marble columns, stucco detailing, brass fittings, and gilt ornament, occupies a register of civic grandeur that few Serbian buildings can match. Climbing to the first floor, where Salon 1905 operates, the interior continues that language without apology: this is a room designed for ceremony, and the tasting menu format it houses treats the architectural context seriously. There is a particular category of fine dining that earns its formality through the weight of the space it occupies. Salon 1905 belongs to it.

Belgrade's fine dining scene has developed unevenly. The city has strong casual and mid-market traditions rooted in grilled meats, slow-cooked stews, and the social rituals of the kafana, but a smaller, more concentrated tier of modern tasting-menu restaurants has emerged over the past decade. Salon 1905 sits near the leading of that tier, operating at the €€€ price point and competing in a peer set that includes comparably serious Belgrade addresses such as Langouste, Iva New Balkan Cuisine, and Legat 1903. The format, a surprise tasting menu with no à la carte option, signals a deliberate positioning: guests surrender the choice of individual dishes and accept a curated sequence instead, a model that requires a level of trust that Belgrade diners have increasingly shown willingness to extend.

Serbian Produce as a Cultural Argument

The editorial rationale behind Salon 1905 is not simply technical ambition. The kitchen's stated orientation toward Serbian produce and traditional recipes, read through a contemporary lens, reflects a broader argument about what Balkan cuisine can be when it is taken seriously at the fine dining level. This is a position that other regional restaurants have also staked, but the Geozavod setting gives it a particular weight: the building itself is a statement about Serbian institutional history, and a tasting menu that grounds itself in local ingredients and heritage recipes inside those walls carries a coherence that more generically international formats would not.

Central European and Balkan cuisines share a pantry shaped by geography and centuries of trade: cured meats, fermented dairy, freshwater fish, forest mushrooms, stone fruits, and grain-based preparations that predate the modern restaurant entirely. A kitchen that draws on this material seriously, rather than deploying it as decorative local colour, operates in a tradition that connects to places like Fleur de Sel in Novi Slankamen, where Serbian terroir is handled with comparable intentionality. Internationally, the model of rooting a modern tasting menu in a specific national or regional larder has proven durable, whether at Maison Lameloise in Chagny or, at the further reach of the format, at Frantzén in Stockholm. Salon 1905 operates at a different scale and price tier than those addresses, but the cultural logic is recognisably the same.

Awards, Recognition, and What They Signal

The credentialing picture at Salon 1905 is consistent and worth reading carefully. La Liste, the Paris-based ranking that aggregates restaurant reviews across multiple international sources, scored Salon 1905 at 80 points in its 2025 edition and 76 points in 2026. That slight downward movement in score does not indicate a collapse in standing; La Liste scores across consecutive years fluctuate within ranges, and a score in the mid-to-upper seventies places the restaurant comfortably among the better-regarded tables in its region. The Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 confirms that the Michelin Guide's inspectors consider the food worth a visit, stopping short of a star but establishing a quality floor. A Google rating of 4.5 across 753 reviews indicates that the response from a broad public audience aligns with the critical assessment.

For context, the modern cuisine category at this award level internationally includes addresses like Cracco in Galleria in Milan, Trescha in Buenos Aires, and Azafrán in Mendoza. Within the Belgrade market, the combination of La Liste placement and Michelin recognition makes Salon 1905 one of the most externally validated restaurants in the city. The kitchen is led by Chef Ivan Tasic, whose youth within the context of this setting is itself a credential: running a tasting menu operation inside a monument-grade building, and sustaining multi-year awards recognition, requires a consistency that goes beyond individual strong meals.

The Tasting Menu Logic and the Room

The surprise tasting menu format, in which guests select only the number of courses rather than the dishes themselves, is now a standard structure at serious fine dining operations globally. FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai and 11 Woodfire in Dubai both operate within this format at their respective levels. What distinguishes the format at Salon 1905 from many peers is the specificity of the cultural frame: the kitchen is not working through a generalised modern European vocabulary but is working with Serbian material, which makes the surprise element carry a different weight. A guest unfamiliar with the depth of Serbian culinary tradition may encounter preparations that recontextualise ingredients they associate with home cooking or market stalls. That recontextualisation is, in fact, the point.

The room itself remains the most immediate argument the restaurant makes. Marble, stucco, brass, and gilt are not materials that recede; they demand engagement. Dinner at Salon 1905 is unavoidably an event, and the absence of an à la carte option reinforces that: this is not a room where a guest orders a single main course and leaves. The format and the setting are consistent with each other in a way that is easy to underestimate. A casual format inside the Geozavod would read as incongruous. The tasting menu, with its pacing and its ceremony, is the correct response to the architecture.

How to Plan Your Visit

Salon 1905 sits on Karađorđeva in the older, lower part of central Belgrade, within reasonable walking distance of the Savamala cultural district and the riverfront. The address is well within the area covered by our full Belgrade restaurants guide, and travellers combining a dinner here with broader city planning will find relevant context in our Belgrade hotels guide, our Belgrade bars guide, our Belgrade wineries guide, and our Belgrade experiences guide. Given the awards profile and the special-occasion positioning of the room, advance booking is advisable, particularly for weekend evenings. The price range at €€€ places it at the upper end of the Belgrade market but well below comparable tasting-menu operations in Western European capitals, which makes it a reasonable entry point for travellers calibrated to those markets.

Other Belgrade addresses worth considering alongside Salon 1905 include GiG and Magellan, both of which operate at different price and format registers and illustrate the range of the city's current dining offer. The tasting menu tier in Belgrade is small enough that a visit to Salon 1905 does not simply represent a single restaurant choice; it is an introduction to what the city's most serious kitchen operators are attempting at this moment.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is the signature dish at Salon 1905? Salon 1905 does not offer a fixed à la carte menu or a declared signature dish. The kitchen runs a surprise tasting menu in which guests choose only the number of courses; the specific preparations change and are not published in advance. The consistent thread across the menu is the use of Serbian produce and traditional recipes interpreted through a contemporary approach, which Chef Ivan Tasic has sustained across multiple years of La Liste and Michelin recognition.

Where the Accolades Land

A quick look at comparable venues, using the data we have on file.

Collector Access

Need a table?

Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.

Get Exclusive Access