



On Södermalm's Hornsbruksgatan, Tjoget operates at the intersection of serious Mediterranean cooking and neighbourhood bar culture, the kind of place that earns an Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe recognition (2025) without trying to be a destination restaurant. Under chef Hedda Bruce, the kitchen draws from the Mediterranean with enough restraint to feel at home in Stockholm's increasingly confident casual dining tier. Google reviewers rate it 4.2 across more than a thousand responses, which tracks with its reputation as a reliable, repeatable room.
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- Address
- Hornsbruksgatan 24, 117 34 Stockholm, Sweden
- Phone
- +46 8 22 00 21
- Website
- tjoget.com

A Room That Sets the Tone Before You Order
Södermalm has a particular relationship with its restaurant interiors. The island's most enduring rooms tend to share a studied informality: exposed materials, deliberate lighting, seating arrangements that suggest gathering rather than ceremony. Tjoget is a restaurant in Stockholm serving Modern Mediterranean Small Plates at about $50 per person, and it belongs to that tradition. The space operates across both a bar and a dining area, and the design doesn't attempt to keep them separate, the energy from one bleeds into the other in a way that feels intentional. This kind of spatial integration is relatively common in cities like Copenhagen and Oslo, but Stockholm's dining rooms have historically defaulted to harder divisions between drinking and eating. Tjoget's layout pushes against that.
The bar side carries enough weight to draw people who aren't eating, which says something about the drinks program. But the kitchen isn't a supporting act. The two halves of the room are genuinely co-equal, which is rarer than it sounds and harder to sustain than it looks.
Mediterranean Cooking in a Nordic Room
Stockholm's casual dining tier has shifted considerably over the past decade. The city's reputation for serious cooking at the leading end, anchored by places like Frantzén and AIRA, has gradually pushed ambition further down the price ladder, and a cluster of neighbourhood-focused rooms have emerged that take their cooking seriously without performing seriousness. Tjoget sits in that cluster.
The kitchen's orientation is Mediterranean, which in Stockholm requires some translation. The pantry references, preserved vegetables, acid-forward dressings, grain-based dishes, fire and smoke, don't arrive with the same seasonal logic they would in Valencia or Palermo, but the technique and temperament are recognisably southern European. Chef Hedda Bruce has shaped a menu that sits somewhere between the simplicity-first approach you'd associate with a well-run taverna and the more composed plating that Stockholm diners have come to expect from kitchens at this level of recognition.
That recognition is specific: Tjoget received an Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe listing for 2025. OAD's casual category is not a consolation bracket, it reflects a set of rooms where the food earns attention on its own terms, independent of formality or price point. For Mediterranean-focused cooking in a Nordic context, that kind of cross-border critical attention is meaningful. Comparable Mediterranean programs operating in major European cities with similar recognition include Balear in Madrid and, in a different register, Apolonia in Chicago, both rooms where the cuisine's informality is the point rather than a limitation.
Where It Sits in Stockholm's Dining Conversation
Stockholm's most-discussed restaurants tend to cluster around New Nordic frameworks and fine-dining tasting menus. Operakällaren carries the weight of Swedish culinary tradition; Aloë and Adam/Albin operate in creative and New Nordic registers at the higher end of the market. Tjoget doesn't compete directly with any of them. Its comparable set is the smaller cohort of Stockholm rooms where the cooking is Mediterranean or southern European in spirit, the format is casual, and the price point is accessible relative to the city's top tier.
In that sub-segment, Tjoget is a strong option currently in operation. A Google rating of 4.2 across 1,073 reviews suggests consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance.
Södermalm as a neighbourhood has produced several rooms with this profile over the years: casual enough for regulars, precise enough for food-focused visitors who want something other than the city's formal tasting menu circuit. Tjoget fits that pattern and, based on the OAD recognition, has maintained it long enough to earn external validation.
Booking and Getting There
Tjoget sits on Hornsbruksgatan in Södermalm, reachable on foot from Hornstull metro station in under ten minutes. Reservations are recommended.
Cuisine Context
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TjogetThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Modern Mediterranean Small Plates | $$$ | ||
| Villa Dagmar | Mediterranean & Nordic Fusion | $$$ | Östermalm | |
| Restaurang Nytorget 6 | Mediterranean-inspired Swedish Bistro | $$ | , | Södermalm |
| Vingården | Mediterranean Grill with Swedish Seasonal Ingredients | $$$$ | Riddarholmen | |
| Bistro Mirabelle | French Bistro | $$$ | Vasastan | |
| Mancini | Authentic Italian Fine Dining | $$$ | Norrmalm |
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