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CuisineSmørrebrød
Executive ChefVarious
LocationCopenhagen, Denmark
Opinionated About Dining

Schønemann has served smørrebrød from its address on Hauser Plads since 1877, making it one of Copenhagen's most enduring lunch institutions. Ranked in Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list each year from 2023 through 2025, it draws a loyal midday crowd for open-faced rye bread lunches prepared with the precision the format demands. The kitchen operates strictly on lunch hours, closing at 5 pm daily.

Schönemann restaurant in Copenhagen, Denmark
About

The Ritual of the Midday Table

There is a particular quality to Copenhagen at midday that distinguishes it from other northern European capitals. While the evening draws the creative tasting menus and the destination dining circuit, the lunch hour belongs to a quieter, older tradition. Smørrebrød — the open-faced rye bread lunch — is not a casual convenience. In the hands of serious practitioners, it is a structured meal with its own sequencing, etiquette, and hierarchy of ingredients, as codified as any omakase counter or French service ritual. The convention runs in a specific order: herring first, then other fish, then meat, then cheese. Each slice arrives on its own plate. You do not rush a smørrebrød lunch, and you do not eat it at your desk.

Schønemann, at Hauser Pl. 16 in central Copenhagen, sits at the focal point of that tradition. The address has been serving the format since 1877, which places it in a category of institution that predates the New Nordic movement, the Michelin era in Denmark, and the city's current identity as a global dining destination. For context, Geranium and the broader creative fine dining scene that put Copenhagen on the international map are decades newer. Schønemann operates in a different register entirely, and deliberately so.

What the Format Demands

The smørrebrød tradition imposes discipline on both kitchen and diner. The rye bread base, dense and slightly sour, is not neutral. It carries flavor, and the toppings must be chosen to work with it rather than against it. Classic combinations have evolved over generations , pickled herring with egg yolk and raw onion, roast beef with remoulade and crispy onions, liver pâté with bacon and pickled cucumber , and the skill lies in execution: the freshness of the fish, the texture of the bread, the balance of fat and acid in each component. There is no sauce work to hide behind, no molecular technique to redirect attention. The food is on display, literally open-faced, and the quality of each ingredient is immediate and legible.

Across Copenhagen's smørrebrød scene, a clear tier has formed between the casual lunch counter and the more deliberate specialist. Restaurant Palægade and Sankt Annæ represent the formal end of the spectrum, with white tablecloths and extended wine lists calibrated to the format. Møntergade operates in a more contemporary register. Schønemann occupies the institutional middle: recognized by serious critics, operating with long-standing consistency, but rooted in the unpretentious lunch-room character that defined the format before it attracted international attention.

The Recognition Record

Opinionated About Dining, which has become one of the more credible external benchmarks for European restaurants operating outside the Michelin framework, has tracked Schønemann across three consecutive years: Highly Recommended in 2023, ranked 230th in its Casual Europe list for 2024, and ranked 234th for 2025. That consistency across the OAD cycle is more meaningful than any single-year placement , it reflects a kitchen that maintains standards without variance, which in a lunch-only format operating six days a week is a genuine operational achievement. The Google score of 4.7 across 2,105 reviews corroborates the OAD signal at scale, suggesting the quality holds across the full range of visitors, not just the critic cohort.

For reference, the city's most decorated kitchens operate in an entirely different bracket: Jordnær in Gentofte and destinations further afield like Frederikshøj in Aarhus or Henne Kirkeby Kro occupy the fine dining tier. Schønemann's peer set is narrower and more specific: the category of Copenhagen lunch institution that takes a traditional format seriously without transforming it into a tasting menu event.

Arriving and Sitting Down

The address on Hauser Plads, a small square in the inner city between Nørreport and the Latin Quarter, puts Schønemann within walking distance of several Copenhagen itinerary anchors. The surrounding streets carry the character of older Copenhagen, with bookshops and institutional facades that predate the waterfront restaurant districts. This is not the harbor-facing new Copenhagen of glass-and-wood dining rooms. The physical setting reinforces the point: this is where the city eats lunch the way it has always eaten lunch.

Service at a serious smørrebrød house follows its own pace. The protocol is to arrive, be seated, and order deliberately , this is not a format suited to speed. A full smørrebrød lunch across three or four pieces, taken with snaps or a cold lager, runs comfortably past an hour. The kitchen closes at 5 pm, seven days a week, which is itself a statement: this is a lunch restaurant, full stop. There is no dinner service to fall back on, no evening pivot to a different menu. The entire operation is built around a single meal in a single tradition.

Smørrebrød in the Wider Copenhagen Context

Copenhagen has spent the past two decades accumulating one of the densest concentrations of serious restaurants in Europe. The creative fine dining circuit, from the now-closed Noma through Geranium to newer entrants, draws most of the international attention and drives the city's reputation in the global rankings. But the smørrebrød tradition predates all of it, and the leading practitioners of the format operate with a confidence that comes from institutional longevity rather than trend adjacency.

For visitors building a Copenhagen itinerary around the full range of what the city does well, the smørrebrød lunch belongs on the schedule alongside the evening fine dining reservation. They address different things: one is about historical craft and daily ritual, the other about contemporary creativity. Both are part of understanding why Copenhagen matters as a food city. Mikkeller fits into a third category entirely, reflecting the city's craft brewing culture. A fuller picture of where to eat and drink across the city is mapped in our full Copenhagen restaurants guide, alongside our full Copenhagen bars guide, our full Copenhagen hotels guide, our full Copenhagen wineries guide, and our full Copenhagen experiences guide.

Denmark's dining culture beyond the capital also rewards attention. anx in Aarhus demonstrates that the smørrebrød tradition has found a serious interpreter outside Copenhagen. Further afield, Alimentum in Aalborg, ARO in Odense, and Domæne in Herning reflect a national dining scene that extends well past the capital. For context on how Copenhagen's food culture compares internationally, the precision-driven lunch format at Schønemann is not unlike the discipline that defines a counter like Le Bernardin in New York City , different format entirely, but the same principle: a single tradition executed without compromise.

Know Before You Go

  • Address: Hauser Pl. 16, 1127 København, Denmark
  • Hours: Monday to Sunday, 11:30 am to 5:00 pm
  • Cuisine: Smørrebrød (traditional Danish open-faced lunch)
  • Recognition: Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe , Ranked #234 (2025), #230 (2024); Highly Recommended (2023)
  • Google Rating: 4.7 from 2,105 reviews
  • Service note: Lunch-only operation; no dinner service
  • Booking: Contact details not available through EP Club; check directly with the venue

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Schønemann known for?

Schønemann is known as one of Copenhagen's most enduring smørrebrød institutions, operating since 1877. The format is the traditional Danish open-faced rye bread lunch, served in the classic sequence: herring first, followed by other fish, meat, and cheese courses. The kitchen has earned consistent recognition from Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list across 2023, 2024, and 2025, and holds a 4.7 Google score from over 2,000 reviews, placing it among the most reliably rated lunch addresses in the city.

What should I eat at Schønemann?

The menu follows the conventions of classical smørrebrød, which means beginning with herring preparations before moving to fish, meat, and cheese. The format rewards ordering multiple pieces across the sequence rather than treating it as a single-item lunch. The kitchen's OAD recognition across three consecutive years points to consistent execution across the full range rather than a single standout dish, so following the traditional ordering sequence gives the most complete experience of what the format is designed to deliver.

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