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Arnhem, Netherlands

The Green Rose

Cuisine€€€ · Organic
LocationArnhem, Netherlands
Michelin
Star Wine List

The Green Rose occupies Arnhem's mid-to-upper dining tier with an organic kitchen that holds consecutive Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025, alongside a White Star listing from Star Wine List. At the €€€ price point, it sits above the city's casual farm-to-table options while offering a focused, produce-led approach that distinguishes it from the creative tasting-menu format found elsewhere on Koningstraat.

The Green Rose restaurant in Arnhem, Netherlands
About

Koningstraat and the City It Feeds

Arnhem's restaurant culture has never quite followed the Amsterdam playbook. The city's dining identity is quieter, more neighbourhood-rooted, shaped by proximity to the Veluwe's agricultural land rather than by the pressure of international tourism. Koningstraat sits at the centre of that character: a street where the mid-century brick of the postwar rebuild meets the ambitions of a generation of operators who have chosen produce quality over dining theatre. The Green Rose, at number 50, belongs to that orientation.

At the €€€ tier, The Green Rose occupies a specific position in Arnhem's price architecture. Below it, Locals (€€ · Farm to table) works a similar seasonal-produce logic at a lower price point, and Trattoria Da Giulio (€€ · Italian) draws a different crowd entirely. At the same tier, The Church (€€€ · Creative) leans into conceptual experimentation, while Konijnenvoer (€€€ · Vegetarian) makes a more ideological case for plant-only cooking. The Green Rose's organic designation places it in a different competitive set: not purely vegetarian, not primarily theatrical, but grounded in sourcing discipline as the primary organising principle of the kitchen.

The Organic Kitchen in the Netherlands: What the Category Actually Means

Dutch organic dining has matured considerably over the past decade. The earlier generation of organic restaurants often made the sourcing story do too much work, letting the ethical framework substitute for culinary precision. What the stronger operators have learned, and what the Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 implies about The Green Rose, is that certified or consciously organic sourcing only adds value when the cooking itself is coherent. The Plate is not a star — Michelin awards it to restaurants worth visiting rather than to those redefining a category — but holding it across consecutive years suggests a kitchen that has maintained a consistent standard rather than peaking in a single inspection cycle.

The Netherlands has a number of €€€ organic-leaning kitchens. De Kas in Amsterdam remains the reference point for the category nationally, operating from a 1926 greenhouse complex in the Frankendael park and running one of the most structurally defined garden-to-plate models in the country. MEI in Amersfoort works a comparable price tier with its own regional sourcing logic. The Green Rose sits in that broader cohort: smaller-city operators making a credible case that organic discipline and serious cooking are not mutually exclusive, and that you do not need an Amsterdam address to sustain either.

Further afield, the Dutch fine dining scene is anchored by multi-star houses that set the benchmark for the country's gastronomic ambition. De Librije in Zwolle, Aan de Poel in Amstelveen, and De Bokkedoorns in Overveen operate in a different category altogether, as do destination-format restaurants like De Groene Lantaarn in Staphorst, De Lindehof in Nuenen, and De Lindenhof in Giethoorn. The Green Rose does not compete at that altitude, nor does it need to. Its competitive logic is local and category-specific: a Michelin-recognised organic kitchen in a mid-sized city that has historically been underserved at the upper-middle tier.

Wine and the Star Wine List Recognition

The White Star listing from Star Wine List, published in April 2023, adds a credential that not every Michelin Plate restaurant in the Netherlands carries. Star Wine List focuses specifically on wine program quality, meaning the recognition reflects the depth or curation of the cellar rather than the food alone. For a restaurant operating under an organic ethos, this often translates to a preference for natural, biodynamic, or low-intervention producers, though the specifics of The Green Rose's list are not publicly detailed. What the listing signals is that the wine offer has been assessed independently of the food recognition, placing The Green Rose in a dual-credential position that is less common among restaurants at this price tier in non-capital Dutch cities. Fred in Rotterdam operates in a comparable bracket , a city restaurant with serious wine credentials alongside its culinary program.

Arnhem as a Dining Address

Arnhem's position in the Dutch restaurant conversation has been evolving. The city is large enough to sustain a genuine hospitality ecosystem but compact enough that a single well-run kitchen can meaningfully shape the upper end of its dining tier. Koningstraat 50 is a practical address: central enough for pre- or post-dinner movement through the city, accessible from Arnhem Centraal station, and within walking distance of the neighbourhoods that make Arnhem worth a longer stay. If you are approaching the city as a dining destination rather than a transit stop, the combination of The Green Rose at the €€€ organic end and the broader Koningstraat corridor gives you a coherent evening structure without requiring a car or significant travel between courses and drinks. For broader planning, the full Arnhem restaurants guide maps the city's dining range across categories and price points, and the Arnhem hotels guide covers the accommodation options that make an overnight stay viable. The bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide round out the city's offer for those spending more than a single meal here.

Google reviews stand at 4.5 across 412 ratings , a score that, at that volume, reflects sustained rather than circumstantial satisfaction. Restaurants with fewer than a hundred reviews can drift significantly with a handful of outlier experiences; 412 ratings at 4.5 represent a consistent signal over time.

Planning Your Visit

The Green Rose sits at Koningstraat 50 in central Arnhem and prices at the €€€ tier, consistent with a mid-range tasting or à la carte format rather than the highest-spend destination dining in the Netherlands. Phone and website details are not published through our data sources, so the most practical approach is to search the restaurant directly for current booking availability, which is advisable in advance for weekend sittings at any Michelin Plate restaurant of this scale. Hours are not confirmed through our record; verify directly before visiting.

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