German€€mitte
Zur Letzten Instanz in Berlin's Nikolaiviertel has cooked Eisbein and Sauerbraten in the same 1621 tavern room since Berlin itself was young.
Why locals love it: Listed in every guidebook but largely missed by food travellers who stop at Mitte restaurants.
Tip: Book the small low-ceilinged room rather than the larger hall; it is the original 17th-century space.
Fried chicken€€kreuzberg
Henne Alt-Berliner Wirtshaus on Leuschnerdamm in Kreuzberg has served one dish for over a century: a half-roasted milk-fed chicken with kraut salad and rye.
Why locals love it: Henne has cooked one dish since 1907 and is barely online. The room has no booking widget; you phone two weeks ahead and ask for the original 1907 dining room.
Tip: Phone reservations only: +49 30 614 7730. Ask for the original 1907 room when booking; the annex is less atmospheric.
American BBQ€€kreuzberg
Big Stuff Smoked BBQ inside Berlin's Markthalle Neun in Kreuzberg pulls brisket and pork off an 80-kilo Texas-style smoker; the counter runs Wednesday.
Why locals love it: Big Stuff trades from a single counter inside Markthalle Neun behind an 80-kilo smoker shipped over from Tennessee.
Tip: Brisket sells out by 14:00 Thursdays during Street Food Thursday; arrive before 13:00 or accept the pulled pork.
Viennese€€charlottenburg
Ottenthal on Berlin's Kantstrasse in Charlottenburg has cooked a Vienna-style Austrian menu since 1996; the wine list runs 400 Austrian bottles.
Why locals love it: Ottenthal occupies a wood-panelled Kantstrasse corner in Charlottenburg most Mitte visitors never cross town for. The Austrian kitchen runs Vienna-style schnitzel.
Tip: Closed Sundays. Lunch from 12:00 weekdays is the easier seating; the candle-lit window tables need a booking two weeks ahead.
Mediterranean€€friedrichshain
Cielo on Berlin's Lenbachstrasse in Friedrichshain pairs Mediterranean sharing plates with a natural-wine list chosen by Yannick Kern; ex-Kink chef Ivano.
Why locals love it: Cielo opened in early 2025 on a residential Friedrichshain block away from any tourist map.
Tip: Closed Sunday and Monday. Walk-ups for the counter seats from 18:00 Tuesdays; tables need a booking a week ahead.
New American€€wedding
Vagabund Brauerei in Wedding's former boiler house brews American-influenced craft ales and a proper Berliner Weisse from a building most Berliners have not.
Why locals love it: Vagabund sits in a Wedding Kesselhaus on a street most visitors never reach. The brewery's American-influenced craft ales are better-known in San Francisco and London press than.
Tip: The taproom runs live events most Fridays; check the calendar before showing up mid-week.