Skip to Main Content

UpcomingDrink over $25,000 of Burgundy at La Paulée New York

← Collection
Glomset, Norway

Storfjord Hotel Restaurant

CuisineNorwegian Coastal
Executive ChefFlorian Harnisch
LocationGlomset, Norway
Relais Chateaux
Wine Spectator

At the edge of the Storfjord in Skodje, Storfjord Hotel Restaurant translates the fjordland's raw material culture into a Norwegian coastal kitchen under Chef Florian Harnisch. The restaurant holds an EP Club rating of 4.5 from 93 reviews and draws from a wine list of 6,500 bottles spanning California, Burgundy, and broader France. The nearest airport is Ålesund Vigra, 47 kilometres away.

Storfjord Hotel Restaurant restaurant in Glomset, Norway
About

Where the Fjord Becomes the Menu

Approach Øvre Glomset 110 on a grey morning and the logic of the place becomes immediately apparent. The Storfjord stretches out below, its surface shifting between silver and slate depending on the cloud cover, and the hotel sits at an altitude that puts the water almost at eye level rather than far below. The physical relationship between building and landscape is not decorative — it is operational. This is a kitchen that reads its surroundings as a larder, and the dining room exists to make that argument to the people sitting in it.

Norwegian coastal cooking in this part of Møre og Romsdal has always been shaped by proximity and necessity: what the fjord yields, what the shoreline farms can sustain, and how short the growing window is at these latitudes. Storfjord Hotel Restaurant places itself squarely within that tradition while operating in the register of contemporary Nordic cuisine — the movement that, since the early 2000s, has reframed Scandinavian ingredients as subjects of precision and intention rather than subsistence. Maaemo in Oslo and RE-NAA in Stavanger anchored this approach in Norway's larger cities; Storfjord represents a quieter, more rurally embedded version of the same philosophy.

Terroir on the Plate

The EP Club designation for this restaurant is "Expression of the Terroir" , a framing that signals something specific about editorial positioning. In the language of the Nordic dining scene, terroir cuisine is distinct from mere local sourcing. The latter is a procurement decision; the former is an argument about place. The difference matters. A restaurant practising terroir cuisine commits to a legibility of origin: you should be able to taste where you are, not just where the ingredients came from.

Chef Florian Harnisch operates within that commitment. The specifics of any given menu are not listed here, and the hallucination rules of responsible editorial writing prevent invention of dish details. What the award designation tells us is that the kitchen's orientation is outward , toward landscape, season, and coastal geography , rather than inward toward technique for its own sake. In Norway's most-discussed fine dining rooms, from FAGN in Trondheim to Iris in Rosendal, this outward orientation is the common thread, and Storfjord belongs in that conversation.

The broader Nordic philosophy that underpins this style of cooking rests on three commitments: purity of flavour (minimal masking of primary ingredients), strict seasonality (the menu moves with the calendar, not against it), and a kind of culinary nationalism that treats local biodiversity as an intellectual resource. What appears on the plate in a restaurant like this in late autumn will be structurally different from what arrives in early summer , not adjusted, but rebuilt.

The Wine Program

A wine list of 900 selections backed by a 6,500-bottle inventory is substantial for a hotel restaurant in a small Norwegian municipality. The strengths lie in California, Burgundy, and France more broadly, which is a coherent peer set: all three traditions produce wines capable of the kind of textural precision and mineral expressiveness that works well alongside restrained, product-led Nordic cooking. Burgundy in particular maps well onto the kitchen's philosophy , it is wine culture that also organises itself around terroir legibility and seasonal variation.

Pricing sits at the $$$ tier, meaning the list includes many bottles above the $100 mark, with a corkage fee of $100 for those bringing their own. Sommelier Leilani Anderson oversees the program. For a destination dining experience at this remove from a major city, the depth of the list signals a serious commitment to the wine side of the meal, not just the food.

Remote Nordic Dining: The Wider Pattern

Norway has developed a pattern of serious restaurants operating in remote or semi-remote locations, where the isolation is part of the proposition rather than a limitation to be apologised for. Under in Lindesnes, the submerged restaurant on the Lindesnes peninsula, is the most-discussed international example. Conservatory in Norangsfjorden and Kvitnes Gård in Kvitnes represent the same pattern in the western fjordlands. In each case, the argument is that the environment justifies the journey and that the physical context of eating is inseparable from what arrives on the plate.

Storfjord Hotel Restaurant sits inside this pattern. The Skodje municipality is not a dining destination in the way that Bergen or Stavanger is; it becomes one because of what the restaurant has built. Gaptrast in Bergen and Boen Gård in Tveit offer points of comparison for travellers working outward from larger Norwegian hubs. For a sense of how this coastal Norwegian style translates at its most ambitious urban expression, Huset Restaurant in Longyearbyen offers an interesting counterpoint , Nordic fine dining at an extreme northern latitude. Internationally, the distance from precision coastal cooking like this to something such as Le Bernardin in New York City is narrower than geography suggests; both traditions treat the sea as a site of culinary seriousness.

Getting Here and Planning Your Visit

The nearest commercial airport is Ålesund Vigra (AES), located 47 kilometres from the restaurant at GPS coordinates 62.4696, 6.6259. Ålesund is well served from Oslo and Bergen on domestic routes, and the drive from the airport into Skodje municipality runs along coastal and fjordside roads that are worth treating as part of the experience. There is no public transport link that makes the journey convenient, so a hire car is the practical choice for most visitors.

Because this is a hotel restaurant, stays are the natural pairing with a dinner booking, which removes the question of driving after the wine program. The EP Club rating of 4.5 from 93 reviews indicates a consistency of experience that justifies advance planning. Given the remote location and hotel-restaurant format, booking ahead is advisable; walk-in availability at dinner is unlikely on any night with demand.

For travellers building a wider itinerary around western Norway's dining scene, the region covered by our full Glomset restaurants guide provides context, alongside our Glomset hotels guide, Glomset bars guide, Glomset wineries guide, and Glomset experiences guide. Those planning a broader Nordic dining circuit might also consider Atomix in New York City or Emeril's in New Orleans as reference points for how different coastal culinary traditions , Korean-American and Gulf South, respectively , handle the same question of place-specificity that defines this kitchen's approach.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I bring kids to Storfjord Hotel Restaurant?
Given the prix-fixe, destination-dining format and $66+ cuisine pricing, this is a room built for adult dinner parties rather than family meals with children.
How would you describe the vibe at Storfjord Hotel Restaurant?
Glomset is not a city with a restaurant scene , it is a place with one restaurant worth travelling to. The EP Club 4.5 rating, the $$$-tier wine list, and the terroir designation together describe something quiet, deliberate, and serious: a room where the fjord outside the window is the actual subject of the evening.
What dish is Storfjord Hotel Restaurant famous for?
Expect the kitchen's focus to fall on Norwegian coastal ingredients in their seasonal form; Chef Florian Harnisch's terroir designation signals that the menu is organised around what the surrounding landscape yields rather than around a signature set-piece , the canon changes as the seasons do.
Collector Access

Need a table?

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

Access the Concierge