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Speisemeisterei Burgthalschenke holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025) and a 4.8 Google rating across 240 reviews, placing it among the more consistently recognised tables in the Swabian south. Chef Guido Boerenkamp leads a seasonal, locally sourced kitchen that offers both a set menu and classic à la carte options. The three-level room with terrace makes it one of Vöhringen's more versatile dining addresses at the €€ price point.
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- Address
- Untere Hauptstraße 4, 89269 Vöhringen, Germany
- Phone
- +49 7306 5265

Where Swabian Consistency Earns Its Stripes
Speisemeisterei Burgthalschenke is a restaurant in Vöhringen, Germany, serving seasonal regional German cooking at a €€ price point. Approach Untere Hauptstraße on a warm evening and the terrace at Speisemeisterei Burgthalschenke is already occupied. This is not a destination that relies on novelty or spectacle to fill its seats. In a small industrial town on the Iller river, a restaurant earning and retaining a Michelin Bib Gourmand has to do something correctly, repeatedly, over years. Here, that something is a kitchen rooted in seasonal, local sourcing and a dining room spread across three levels that manages to feel neither cavernous nor cramped.
The Bib Gourmand designation, for those who treat Michelin's tiered recognition as a meaningful signal rather than a marketing badge, is instructive. It identifies cooking of genuine quality at a price point below the starred category. In Germany, where Michelin has grown increasingly confident in its Bib selections alongside its star list, that recognition carries weight. The 2025 edition confirms this is not a flash in the pan.
Classic Cuisine in a Non-Destination Town
Germany's dining conversation tends to concentrate on Munich, Hamburg, Berlin, and the Rhineland. Properties like JAN in Munich or Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn attract the kind of attention that comes with high-profile locations and multi-star reputations. At the other end of the spectrum, places like Aqua in Wolfsburg demonstrate that serious cooking can exist in unlikely industrial settings. Vöhringen falls into that same category of towns where the presence of genuine culinary ambition is genuinely surprising to outsiders and entirely expected by locals.
The Classic Cuisine designation matters here. It signals a kitchen that is not chasing trends, not plating microherbs for their own sake, and not asking diners to decode a conceptual menu. Classic Cuisine, as a category, has experienced something of a quiet rehabilitation in German critical circles over the past decade. As creative formats like those at CODA Dessert Dining in Berlin or Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach have pushed the experimental edge of German dining further, there has been a corresponding appreciation for kitchens that execute traditional frameworks with discipline. Burgthalschenke operates in that latter space, and its sustained local audience suggests the case for classicism remains strong in smaller Swabian communities.
Chef Guido Boerenkamp and the Logic of a Seasonal Kitchen
Guido Boerenkamp leads the kitchen, where seasonal discipline and local sourcing shape the menu across the year. What the record does confirm is a kitchen operating with clear seasonal discipline and a local-sourcing framework that shapes the menu across the year. In the context of southern Germany, that is not a marketing position but a practical reality. The Allgäu and Swabian regions offer producers of genuine quality within a short radius, and a kitchen committed to working with them is making a structural choice about flavour and supply chain, not just a branding decision.
Dual-format offering, a set menu alongside classic à la carte options, is also telling. It suggests a kitchen confident enough to present a curated sequence for guests who want the chef's full editorial control, while remaining accessible to diners who want to choose their own path through the menu. In higher-price-bracket restaurants across Germany, the tasting menu has become almost the default format. At the €€ price point, maintaining both options without diluting either takes a degree of kitchen organisation that shouldn't be underestimated.
The Room and the Experience
Three levels of dining room plus a terrace is an unusual configuration for a restaurant of this scale. In practice, it gives the kitchen the ability to serve meaningfully different parties simultaneously, from a quiet table on the upper level to a terrace service in the warmer months. The terrace, in particular, is worth noting as a seasonal asset in a region where summer evenings can be long and mild. The on-site car park makes it accessible from surrounding towns in the Iller valley, and the terrace adds value for visits between late spring and early autumn.
That profile, a local institution with regional draw and no dependence on transient visitors, tends to produce a particular kind of service character. The dining room at a place like this operates with the confidence of knowing its regulars by name and the discipline of knowing that Michelin is watching. That combination rarely produces theatrical service, but it does tend to produce reliable, attentive hospitality that prioritises the experience of the meal over the performance of luxury.
Where It Sits in the Broader German Scene
Mapping Burgthalschenke onto Germany's broader dining hierarchy requires honest calibration. It is not competing with ES:SENZ in Grassau, Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg, or Schanz in Piesport for the same diner. Its comparison set is the network of Bib Gourmand tables across Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg, restaurants where the question is how consistently a clear brief is executed across seasons. On that measure, the 4.8 Google score across 249 reviews, taken alongside the 2025 Bib Gourmand confirmation, suggests the answer is yes. For more context on the broader German fine dining scene, see our comparisons of Waldhotel Sonnora in Dreis, Victor's Fine Dining by Christian Bau in Perl, and Bagatelle in Trier.
Planning a Visit
Speisemeisterei Burgthalschenke is at Untere Hauptstraße 4, 89269 Vöhringen. The large on-site car park makes it accessible from surrounding towns in the Iller valley, and the terrace adds value for visits between late spring and early autumn. Reservations are recommended, and the restaurant is open Wednesday through Sunday for lunch and dinner. The €€ pricing bracket positions it well within range for a mid-week dinner or a weekend lunch without the commitment of a full tasting-menu format.
Fast Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Speisemeisterei BurgthalschenkeThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Seasonal Regional German | $$ | Bib Gourmand | |
| Zur Linde | Traditional Swabian | $$ | Bib Gourmand | Oberboihingen |
| Stubersheimer Hof | Traditional Swabian German | $$ | Michelin Plate | Stubersheim |
| Gasthof zur Sonne | Local German with Italian Influences | $$ | Bib Gourmand | Tengen |
| Gutshof Andres | Modern Franconian Slow-Food | $$ | Bib Gourmand | Kirchlauter |
| Landgasthaus Hirsch | Traditional Swabian Cuisine | $$ | Bib Gourmand | Winterbach, Baden-Württemberg |
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- Rustic
- Cozy
- Classic
- Special Occasion
- Family
- Terrace
- Historic Building
- Local Sourcing
Rural-style interior spread over three levels with relaxing background music, cordial service, and a lovely terrace.








