.png)



A former inn on the Øresund coast, Sletten brings the culinary credentials of Copenhagen's Formel B to a relaxed Humlebæk setting. The menu runs to around 20 seasonal small plates, think halibut ceviche with grilled lime and sorrel, or fried monkfish with salsify and gruyere, backed by a wine list with genuine range. A Michelin Plate and a 2025 Opinionated About Dining ranking of #654 in Europe confirm the kitchen's standing.
Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.
- Address
- Gl Strandvej 137, 3050 Humlebæk, Denmark
- Phone
- +45 49 19 13 21
- Website
- formelfamily.dk

A Coastal Village Format That Copenhagen Hasn't Quite Replicated
The approach to Sletten tells you most of what you need to know about its register. Gl Strandvej runs along the Øresund shore north of Copenhagen, flanked by low fishermen's houses whose painted timber facades face out toward the water. The restaurant occupies a former inn within this cluster, and the harbour sits close enough that the light arriving through the windows shifts with the tide and cloud cover. It is the kind of setting that Danish coastal cooking has long depended on, proximity to the source as both practical logic and aesthetic argument.
That setting is not incidental. Across Denmark's finer dining circuit, the relationship between location and menu has become a defining variable. Coastal addresses like Sletten operate within a different logic than a Copenhagen tasting room: the expectation is informality, seasonality, and a directness of produce that the city kitchen can approximate but rarely replicate in the same physical terms. Henne Kirkeby Kro in Henne and Dragsholm Slot Gourmet in Hørve represent the same instinct further afield, the provincial address as a condition of the food, not a compromise of it.
Formel B Credentials in a Different Key
The kitchen at Sletten is run by the chef duo behind Formel B, the long-standing Copenhagen restaurant that has operated as one of the city's more quietly consistent fine-dining addresses. Chef Kasper Klitten Byrsing leads the team. What that lineage signals, in practical terms, is a kitchen trained in technical precision and classical sourcing discipline, the kind of formation that shows in how produce is treated rather than in how elaborately a dish is constructed.
The broader Danish dining scene has sorted itself into recognisable tiers over the past decade. At the summit sit operations like Geranium in Copenhagen and Jordnær in Gentofte, both carrying Michelin stars and priced accordingly at the €€€€ level. The New Nordic maximalism associated with venues such as Noma and Alchemist occupies its own category, conceptually ambitious, high-ceremony, and designed for an international audience as much as a local one. Sletten sits in neither camp. Its €€€€ price point places it in a tier where the food earns its standing without the scaffolding of extended tasting menus or theatrical presentation.
That positioning is worth pausing on.
The Menu: Seasonal Small Plates With a Clear Point of View
Around 20 dishes rotate through the menu, changing with the seasons. The format runs on small plates, with two to three plates per person described as a reasonable measure, enough to range across the kitchen's range without tipping into the extended-course format that defines the starred end of the Danish scene.
The cooking leans on the northern European larder without the self-conscious foraging register that became a cliché of the New Nordic wave. Halibut ceviche with grilled lime, green tomatoes, and sorrel is a dish that uses acid and bitterness to animate a delicate fish, the ceviche technique applied to a North Sea species rather than a South American one, which is a quieter editorial point than it might first appear. Fried monkfish with salsify, onions, and gruyere works in a richer, more autumnal register: the earthiness of salsify against the firm texture of monkfish, with gruyere adding salt and depth rather than the cream-heaviness that can overwhelm that combination.
The wine list, noted for its range and interest, operates as a genuine accompaniment to that kind of food rather than a secondary consideration. A menu built on acidity, seasonal vegetables, and coastal fish requires a list with flexibility across styles, light reds, natural whites, and wines from lesser-known producers sit more comfortably alongside this kind of cooking than a Cabernet-heavy selection would.
The Room and Who Sits in It
Sletten runs two distinct interior spaces. The room with the sea view draws most guests by instinct, the harbour-facing aspect is the obvious choice and the aesthetic case for it is direct. The other rooms carry their own character, with food-focused artwork on the walls providing a different kind of atmosphere: more internal, more about the eating than the view. Neither is a poor option, and the choice depends on whether the draw is the Øresund light or the work on the walls.
The former-inn character of the building contributes a relaxed quality that distinguishes it from the more formal dining rooms of the Copenhagen restaurants operating in the same culinary tier. Parsley Salon in Hellerup offers a comparable coastward-leaning informality closer to the city; Sletten sits further up the shore, with Humlebæk's village scale providing a different context entirely.
Getting There and Planning the Visit
Humlebæk sits roughly 35 kilometres north of central Copenhagen along the Øresund coast, accessible by train on the Kystbanen line with a station in the town itself. The address at Gl Strandvej 137 places the restaurant within walking distance of the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, which is the primary draw for most day-trippers to the area. Combining a visit to Louisiana with lunch or dinner at Sletten is a well-worn pairing on this stretch of coast, and the €€€€ price range means the meal merits some advance planning.
The seasonal menu format means the specific dishes available will depend on when you visit. The winter and early spring menus lean on root vegetables, preserved elements, and the richer fish preparations; summer and autumn bring lighter ceviche-style plates and greener ingredients.
For those building a broader picture of Danish modern cooking outside Copenhagen, the regional circuit includes Frederikshøj in Aarhus, Alimentum in Aalborg, ARO in Odense, Domæne in Herning, Kadeau Bornholm in Åkirkeby, and MOTA in Nykøbing Sjælland. For Scandinavian modern cuisine at the very leading of its register, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai provide useful comparative reference points from the same culinary tradition.
In Context: Similar Options
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sletten | Modern French & Nordic Small Plates | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | Humlebæk |
| Mielcke & Hurtigkarl | Contemporary Global Fusion with Nordic & Asian Influences | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | Frederiksberg |
| Kiin Kiin | Modern Thai Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | Nørrebro |
| Theo | Contemporary European Bistronomy | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Indre By |
| Epicurus | Nordic-French Fine Dining with Jazz | $$$$ | , | Indre By |
| Kappo Andō | Modern Japanese Kappo | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Indre By |
At a Glance
- Romantic
- Scenic
- Cozy
- Elegant
- Sophisticated
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Celebration
- Waterfront
- Open Kitchen
- Terrace
- Historic Building
- Standalone
- Extensive Wine List
- Sommelier Led
- Local Sourcing
- Farm To Table
- Waterfront
Relaxed yet refined atmosphere with bright, naturally lit dining rooms overlooking the harbor; warm and welcoming with tasteful decor and multiple intimate spaces that evoke Danish hygge and nostalgia.














