Bar in Herford, Germany
1575 Weinbar & Handel
100ptsSommelier-Led Sustainable Selection

About 1575 Weinbar & Handel
Opened in 2023 on Herford's Neuer Markt, 1575 Weinbar & Handel is a wine bar built around sustainable producers from Germany and across Europe. Sommelier Sören and his wife Gianna have created a focused, knowledgeable space that sits closer to specialist retail destination than conventional bar — a considered addition to a city not previously known for serious wine.
A Wine Bar Arrives in Herford
There is a format that has been spreading quietly through mid-sized German cities over the past decade: the sommelier-led wine bar that doubles as a retail counter, blurring the line between drinking well tonight and taking something home for the weekend. These spaces tend to be small, editorially curated, and built around a point of view rather than range. They sit apart from the conventional Weinstube tradition and equally apart from the high-volume cocktail bars that animate Germany's larger cities. 1575 Weinbar & Handel, which opened in 2023 on Neuer Markt 5 in the centre of Herford, belongs firmly in that format.
Herford is not a city that appears in standard German wine tourism conversations. Those tend to start in Frankfurt, Hamburg, or Berlin, where venues like The Parlour in Frankfurt on the Main, Le Lion Bar de Paris in Hamburg, and Buck & Breck in Berlin have built reputations over years. The arrival of a genuinely considered wine bar in Herford says something about how specialist drinking culture is dispersing beyond major urban centres, finding footholds in places where the audience is smaller but the appetite is real.
The Setting on Neuer Markt
Neuer Markt sits in Herford's pedestrian core, and the address places 1575 at the intersection of foot traffic and neighbourhood identity. The name itself carries weight: 1575 refers to the year Herford was granted brewing rights, grounding the bar in local history without making that history the whole story. It is the kind of detail that signals editorial intent — the operators chose a reference point that is specific to the city rather than generic to wine culture.
The atmosphere that results from this kind of format is typically one of quiet, concentrated attention. Wine bars built by working sommeliers tend to look inward rather than outward — the visual noise is kept low so the conversation about what is in the glass can take precedence. Whether the room leans toward bare wood and pendant lighting or something more architectural, the register is almost always closer to a well-stocked private cellar than a restaurant dining room. That atmosphere, in Herford's context, represents something genuinely new.
The Wine List: Sustainable Producers, European Scope
The editorial logic of 1575 rests on its wine selection, which is built primarily around sustainable farming producers drawn from Germany and across Europe. This is not a list assembled for range or prestige-label recognition. The sustainable-farming framing implies a set of sourcing decisions that tend to favour smaller domaines, lower-intervention cellars, and producers whose farming practices are verifiable rather than marketed. In Germany's wine context, that points toward a list that might include certified organic or biodynamic growers from the Mosel, Rheingau, or Baden alongside counterparts from natural wine-forward regions in France, Italy, Austria, or Slovenia.
Handel component of the name matters here. The retail dimension transforms the wine bar from a venue you visit into a resource you return to. Guests who discover a producer through a glass can take a bottle home; the discovery becomes a habit. This model is well-established in Berlin and Munich (where the Goldene Bar occupies a different but comparably focused specialist tier) and in Cologne at places like Bar Trattoria Celentano, but it carries particular significance in a city where serious wine retail options are limited.
For guests navigating the list, the sustainable-producer orientation means the wine programme rewards curiosity over familiarity. Ordering by grape variety or appellation name will get you somewhere, but the better approach in a bar of this kind is to tell the sommelier what you are in the mood for and let the list speak through the person who built it. Sören's sommelier background is the functional mechanism that makes the selection coherent rather than merely eclectic.
Format and Occasion
The Weinbar and Handel format, combined with the scale typical of owner-operated specialist venues, places 1575 closer to the casual-intimate end of the spectrum than the formal end. It opened in 2023, which makes it recent enough that its neighbourhood standing is still consolidating, but the model is proven: across Germany, venues operating in this format tend to attract a loyal local core quickly because they fill a specific gap. See comparable specialist-format bars gaining traction in cities like edelrausch in Leipzig or Alte Kanzlei Stuttgart for a sense of how this format performs across different German contexts.
The presence of both Sören and Gianna running the space together produces the kind of hospitality that larger operations cannot replicate. Owner-operated bars of this size tend to treat each guest interaction as consequential rather than transactional. The format is not built for high-volume throughput; it is built for the kind of conversation that leads someone from a glass of Spätburgunder into a bottle of something they have never heard of, and eventually home with two more to open at the weekend.
Planning Your Visit
1575 Weinbar & Handel is located at Neuer Markt 5, 32052 Herford, making it walkable from the central train station and from Herford's main pedestrian zone. As an owner-operated venue that opened in 2023, hours and booking arrangements are leading confirmed directly before visiting, as schedules at this scale can shift with seasons or private events. For broader orientation on what Herford's food and drink scene offers, see our full Herford restaurants guide.
Visitors arriving specifically for the wine programme will find the retail function useful: the bar-and-retail combination means that even a short visit can be productive if a producer on the list catches your attention. For context on how German specialist bars operate at different scales and in larger cities, the range runs from the cocktail-focused Buck & Breck in Berlin to the beer-tradition anchored Uerige in Dusseldorf, the heritage-minded Kieler Brauerei am Alten Markt in Kiel, and the panoramic Main Tower Restaurant & Lounge in Frankfurt. Each represents a distinct strand of German drinking culture; 1575 occupies a quieter but increasingly relevant one.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is 1575 Weinbar & Handel more formal or casual?
By the standards of Germany's specialist wine bar scene, 1575 sits at the casual end. Owner-operated venues of this format, particularly those opened in 2023 and still building their local following, tend to prioritise conversation and accessibility over ceremony. The sommelier background of the founder means the knowledge in the room runs deep, but the delivery is typically relaxed rather than instructional. Compared to Michelin-adjacent wine programmes in Frankfurt or Hamburg, this is an environment where asking basic questions is encouraged rather than tolerated.
What do regulars order at 1575 Weinbar & Handel?
Given that the wine list is built around sustainable farming producers from Germany and Europe, regulars at this kind of venue typically gravitate toward the list's more obscure German producers , growers from lesser-known appellations who would not appear on a conventional restaurant list , alongside whatever the sommelier is currently excited about from the European selection. The retail (Handel) function suggests that bottles from the list are available to purchase, so a common pattern is to drink something by the glass and then buy a bottle of the same wine to take home. The list rewards repeat visits more than single occasions.
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