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Cuisine€€€€ · Country cooking
Executive ChefMichael van der Kroft
LocationRotterdam, Netherlands
Opinionated About Dining
Michelin
The Best Chef

A basement counter restaurant in Rotterdam's Feijenoord district, Tres operates at the serious end of Dutch country cooking: seasonal set menus built around fermentation, ageing, and local producers, with Opinionated About Dining ranking it among Europe's top 500 restaurants and a Michelin Plate to its name. The format rewards guests who want to watch technique unfold across an evening rather than order à la carte.

Tres restaurant in Rotterdam, Netherlands
About

Down the Steps, Into the Ritual

The descent matters at Tres. A staircase takes you below street level on Vijf Werelddelen, and the shift in register is immediate: a basement space with vintage-inflected décor that is pared back rather than minimal, rugged at the edges yet genuinely inviting in the way that only rooms with actual character tend to be. Rotterdam's fine-dining scene sits largely above ground and in conspicuous settings, so this subterranean counter format reads as a deliberate counter-position — less about display, more about the table as a working surface between cook and guest.

That physical arrangement defines the ritual here. The expansive dining counter places you directly in front of the kitchen's process, which at Tres means fermentation vessels, aged proteins, and preparation techniques drawn from the broader European tradition of preserving and intensifying rather than simply cooking and plating. Watching this work in real time over the course of an evening is the mechanism through which the meal makes its case. It is not background theatre; the proximity is the point.

What Country Cooking Means at This Price Point

The cuisine classification — country cooking at €€€€ , is a deliberate friction. Country cooking at its lower registers implies rusticity, economy, and simplicity. At Tres, the price bracket and the Opinionated About Dining ranking (501st in Europe in 2025, 483rd in 2024) signal that the category is being taken seriously at a technical level that most regional cooking never reaches. The De Kromme Watergang in Hoofdplaat and Ode in Dokkum occupy a comparable niche in the Netherlands: country cooking traditions pushed into fine-dining territory through craft and sourcing, not through the conventions of French haute cuisine.

Self-taught chef Michael van der Kroft's approach at Tres runs through fermentation, garums, and ageing processes , techniques that require time, knowledge, and discipline to execute well, and that sit within a broader European return to pre-industrial preservation methods now being reconsidered with contemporary rigour. These are not decorative flourishes on an otherwise conventional menu; they are the structural vocabulary of the cooking. Tangy fermentations and complex ageing cycles are the grammar through which the kitchen expresses the produce it sources from local suppliers.

Within Rotterdam's top tier, Tres occupies a different position from the city's other €€€€ restaurants. FG - François Geurds and Fred operate in the creative and creative-French registers, while Parkheuvel represents the city's longest-standing modern-cuisine institution. Tres is the outlier: a basement counter format anchored in country cooking rather than French technique or creative fusion. Guests choosing between these restaurants are not choosing between quality tiers; they are choosing between fundamentally different dining experiences.

The Seasonal Set Menu as Commitment Device

Every season, the set menu resets. This is not an unusual structure in European fine dining, but at Tres the seasonal change functions as more than a marketing signal about freshness. Because the kitchen's core methods , fermentation, ageing, garum production , require long lead times, the menu is in some sense always several seasons in the making. What arrives at the counter in winter was being prepared in autumn or earlier. The seasonality is structural, not cosmetic.

Opinionated About Dining's reviewers noted the element of surprise built into each set menu, and that quality of unpredictability is worth flagging as a practical matter: this is not a restaurant where regulars return for a beloved signature dish. The format asks guests to give over control entirely. For that reason, Tres rewards guests who have already made some peace with the rhythm of a counter meal , the pace set by the kitchen, the progression determined by the season, the evening measured in courses rather than in a clock. Guests who want to negotiate the menu or return for a specific preparation should recalibrate expectations before booking.

The counter-ritual comparison extends to other Dutch restaurants operating in this genre. De Librije in Zwolle and Aan de Poel in Amstelveen have built similarly devoted followings around set-format dining that uses Dutch seasons and local produce as its primary material. At the rural end, De Groene Lantaarn in Staphorst, De Lindehof in Nuenen, and De Lindenhof in Giethoorn demonstrate how far this tradition of serious cooking outside the urban mainstream extends across the Netherlands. Tres is the city's representative in that national conversation.

The Awards Picture and What It Implies

Tres holds a Michelin Plate (2025), which within the Michelin framework signals a kitchen producing food worth seeking out , a step below Star recognition but a meaningful marker in a guide that is selective about which restaurants receive any designation. The more instructive signal is the Opinionated About Dining trajectory: Tres was named among the leading new restaurants in Europe in 2023, then ranked 483rd in Europe in 2024, then moved to 501st in 2025. OAD rankings are compiled from the votes of serious, frequent diners rather than professional critics alone, and a ranking within the top 500 restaurants across the entire European continent places Tres in a competitive set that extends well beyond Rotterdam or even the Netherlands. Among Rotterdam's €€€€ restaurants, the OAD ranking is the most direct evidence of the kitchen's standing relative to a continental peer group.

For context, Amarone and Fitzgerald represent Rotterdam's mid-to-high tier in modern French territory, while De Bokkedoorns in Overveen demonstrates the Dutch tradition of serious country and seasonal cooking finding a home just outside the major cities. Tres sits at the intersection of those two currents: city location, rural-sourcing philosophy, and a kitchen that draws continental attention without leaning on the established French vocabulary its neighbours in Rotterdam's fine-dining tier tend to use.

A Google rating of 4.8 across 140 reviews is consistent with the profile the awards suggest: a small room with a devoted following, high satisfaction rates among guests who understood what the format required of them before they arrived.

Planning Your Evening at Tres

Tres opens Thursday through Sunday, with dinner from 6:30 pm on all four evenings and lunch service on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday from noon to 4 pm. Monday and Tuesday are closed. The address is Vijf Werelddelen 75, 3071 PS Rotterdam, placing the restaurant in the Feijenoord district south of the Maas, away from the central cluster of Rotterdam fine dining. This is a deliberate journey rather than a post-work detour. The lunch service on weekend afternoons offers a different rhythm from the evening, and for guests who prefer a counter meal in natural light, that window is worth considering when the season allows for it.

The set-menu format means planning starts before you arrive. Given the kitchen's commitment to seasonal produce and advance-prepared fermentations, the menu on any given evening reflects decisions made weeks or months earlier. Booking ahead is therefore both a practical necessity and a logical extension of the experience: you are joining a process already underway, not commissioning something new. For the broader Rotterdam dining picture, the full Rotterdam restaurants guide maps the city's options by style and tier; the Rotterdam hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the wider city context for guests planning a full visit.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I eat at Tres?
Order the set menu , it is the only format the kitchen offers, and it is the mechanism through which the cooking makes sense. Chef Michael van der Kroft's approach is built around fermentation, ageing, and garum production, and the seasonal progression of the menu is where that technique is fully expressed. Expect a meal shaped by Dutch local producers and preservation methods, not classical French plating conventions. The OAD Top 500 Europe ranking (2025) and Michelin Plate confirm that the kitchen is operating at a level where trusting the format pays off.
What is the overall feel of Tres?
If you are coming to Rotterdam for direct contemporary European fine dining in a polished above-ground setting, the city's other €€€€ options like FG - François Geurds or Parkheuvel will suit you better. If you want a counter experience in a basement room where the kitchen's fermentation and ageing work is the visible subject of the evening, and where the OAD ranking signals a serious place in the European conversation, Tres is the right call. The awards and the €€€€ price bracket both apply, but the dining register is closer to a working kitchen than a formal dining room.
Is Tres suitable for children?
At €€€€ pricing with a set counter format that runs late into the evening, Tres is not designed around younger guests.

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