Restaurant in Berlin, Germany
Annelies
100ptsConstrained-Window Café

About Annelies
Among Berlin's daytime café options, Annelies on Görlitzer Strasse operates in a different register from the neighbourhood's looser, louder alternatives. Ranked 79th on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in Europe list for 2023 and holding a 4.5 Google rating across more than 1,800 reviews, it draws a consistent crowd of morning regulars and weekend visitors who treat the short weekly hours as reason enough to plan around it.
Morning Light on Görlitzer Strasse
The stretch of Görlitzer Strasse that runs through Kreuzberg's SO36 pocket carries a particular texture: remnant shop signs, the low hum of a neighbourhood that genuinely lives rather than performs itself for visitors. Annelies sits at number 68 in this context, and the café's relationship to its street is the first thing you notice. It does not announce itself loudly. The physical approach is unhurried, consistent with a place that opens at 10 and closes by 4, six days a week, staying shut on Tuesdays entirely. That Tuesday closure is not an accident of scheduling — it signals something about the pace the place has chosen for itself.
Berlin's daytime café scene has fractured into recognisable tiers. There is the style-forward specialty coffee operation, all V60 pourover and reclaimed timber, where the product is the aesthetic as much as the cup. There is the Kiez standby, still serving milchkaffee in oversized ceramic, unchanged for a decade. And then there is a smaller cluster of places that sit somewhere more considered: cafés with a culinary point of view, operating on abbreviated hours that reflect a genuine commitment to quality over throughput. Annelies belongs to that last category, and its ranking — 79th on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in Europe list for 2023 , confirms it has been noticed by the constituency that cares most about that distinction.
The Ritual of a Short-Window Morning
The editorial angle that makes the most sense here is the dining ritual itself, because Annelies is fundamentally a place defined by constraint. Six hours of service, six days a week. No dinner, no evening drinks programme, no seasonal tasting format. The compressed window shapes the entire experience: you either build your day around it or you miss it. That kind of temporal discipline tends to attract a specific kind of regular , one who knows what they want and has decided in advance that this is the right place to get it.
In European café culture, this model has a precedent. The Viennese coffee house tradition is, at its core, about duration and ritual within fixed parameters: arriving at a certain hour, ordering in a certain sequence, staying as long as the newspaper demands. The Parisian zinc-bar breakfast follows its own compressed choreography, with the same croissant, the same crema, the same twenty minutes before the office. Berlin, being younger and less codified as a café culture, has not historically had its own equivalent ritual. But places like Annelies suggest one is forming: a morning or late-morning visit, food that takes the daytime meal seriously, and a crowd that comes back often enough to have regulars' habits.
Chef Matthew Maue is attached to the project, which places Annelies in the smaller category of Berlin cafés where kitchen credentials are part of the identity. This matters at the level of the scene, not merely the individual venue: when a chef with culinary background runs a café format, it tends to push the food beyond what a standard café kitchen produces. The 4.5 Google rating across 1,833 reviews is unusually consistent for a neighbourhood café , high-volume casual operations at this price point often see that average drift downward as footfall increases.
Where Annelies Sits in the Berlin Dining Picture
To understand Annelies properly, it helps to hold Berlin's full restaurant range in view. The city's prestige dining tier runs through places like Rutz, which holds three Michelin stars and operates at the leading of the city's formal dining bracket, and FACIL and CODA Dessert Dining, both holding two Michelin stars in creative formats that require advance planning and meaningful spend. Nobelhart & Schmutzig sits at one Michelin star with a Modern German programme built around local sourcing and counter-only service. Restaurant Tim Raue anchors another part of the city's fine dining map with its Chinese-influenced approach.
Annelies operates in an entirely different register from all of these, and that is the point. The OAD Cheap Eats ranking places it in a European peer set of cafés and casual venues judged on value-conscious quality , a different evaluative framework from Michelin, but one with its own rigour. The 2023 list included properties across multiple cities, and a position at 79 in that field is a signal of genuine recognition, not a consolation tier. For the traveller whose Berlin itinerary already includes a reservation at one of the city's Michelin-holding restaurants, Annelies fills a different slot: the morning before, the slower afternoon, the meal that does not require a jacket or a three-week booking lead time.
For context across Germany's broader range of recognised dining, the country runs deep , from Aqua in Wolfsburg and Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn to Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach, ES:SENZ in Grassau, and JAN in Munich. Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg anchors the northern end of that fine dining tier. The casual daytime category has less formal documentation, which is precisely why OAD's Cheap Eats list carries weight for venues like Annelies: it creates an evaluative record where one would otherwise be absent.
If the Scandinavian café comparison is useful, the model shares DNA with places like Apotek 57 in Copenhagen and Bar Centro in Stockholm , northern European café operations where food quality is taken as seriously as the coffee programme, and where limited hours are a feature rather than a constraint.
Planning a Visit
Annelies is at Görlitzer Str. 68, 10997 Berlin, in the Kreuzberg district. The operating window runs Monday and Wednesday through Sunday, 10 am to 4 pm, with Tuesday as the weekly closure. Given the OAD recognition and the review volume , over 1,800 ratings at a 4.5 average , weekend mornings in particular are worth arriving to early. The hours make this a natural anchor for a Kreuzberg morning, particularly for visitors whose afternoons are committed elsewhere. No booking method is listed, which suggests walk-in is the operating model. Coming midweek, particularly Thursday or Friday, will likely offer more space than a Saturday at noon.
For the full picture of what Berlin offers across categories, see our full Berlin restaurants guide, our full Berlin hotels guide, our full Berlin bars guide, our full Berlin wineries guide, and our full Berlin experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What do regulars order at Annelies?
Annelies holds an OAD Cheap Eats in Europe ranking and a 4.5 Google rating across more than 1,800 reviews , a signal that the food earns repeat visits rather than one-off curiosity. The café operates under chef Matthew Maue, which places kitchen quality at the centre of the offering. Without verified menu data in the public record, it is not possible to name specific dishes here with confidence, but the combination of culinary credentials, award recognition, and review consistency points toward a food programme that goes well beyond standard café fare. The short daily window , 10 am to 4 pm , means the menu is daytime-only, and the crowd that builds its morning around that window tends to return for the food as much as the coffee.
Hours
- Monday
- 10 am–4 pm
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- 10 am–4 pm
- Thursday
- 10 am–4 pm
- Friday
- 10 am–4 pm
- Saturday
- 10 am–4 pm
- Sunday
- 10 am–4 pm
Recognized By
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate Annelies on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.


