Restaurant in Berlin, Germany
Michelin-noted Israeli at an accessible price.

Berta brings Israeli cooking to Friedrichshain with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, at a €€ price point that makes it one of Berlin's more accessible occasion restaurants. Booking is easy compared to the city's starred rooms, and the cuisine occupies a gap no other Michelin-recognised kitchen in Berlin currently fills. A solid choice for a food-focused dinner without a tasting-menu price tag.
Berta is one of the more interesting mid-price propositions in Berlin's restaurant scene: Israeli food done with enough seriousness to earn back-to-back Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025, priced at €€ so it won't punish your card the way a tasting-menu evening at Rutz or Nobelhart & Schmutzig will. If you want a special-occasion dinner that doesn't require a three-month booking window or a three-figure bill, Berta is worth a serious look. The caveat: with only 9 Google reviews logged so far, the public record is thin, and the 3.6 rating reflects a very small sample. Book with that context in mind.
Berta sits on Mühlenstraße 30 in Friedrichshain, the stretch of East Berlin that runs along the Spree and carries a certain industrial energy without being aggressively hip. The address positions it close to the East Side Gallery corridor, which means it draws a mixed crowd: locals who know the neighbourhood and visitors who end up here after the gallery. What Israeli cuisine means at this address is worth thinking about before you arrive. The kitchen's reference points are the bold, produce-forward cooking that has defined contemporary Israeli restaurants from Tel Aviv to London — charred vegetables, legumes given serious treatment, spiced meats, and a confidence with acids and herbs that makes the food feel alive rather than heavy. For a comparable frame of reference, Ha'Achim in Tel Aviv represents the source tradition, while Honey & Smoke in London shows how the cuisine travels in a European context.
The physical room at Berta reads as intimate rather than grand. At a €€ price point, you are not walking into the kind of considered architectural dining environment you get at FACIL, with its courtyard light and polished service choreography. What you get instead is something more direct: a room scaled for conversation, suited to a date or a two-to-four person occasion dinner where the food is the main event rather than the setting. That trade-off is fine if you know it going in. If the physical environment of a special occasion matters as much as what's on the plate, calibrate expectations accordingly.
Without confirmed published hours in the database, specific session times can't be stated. What can be said is that Israeli-influenced restaurants of this profile typically perform differently across day and evening. Lunch at venues in this category tends to offer the cleaner value proposition: lighter formats, shorter commitments, and often the same kitchen at a lower price-per-head. If Berta runs a lunch service, it is worth investigating as a first visit — you get a read on the kitchen without the full cost or time commitment of an evening booking. Dinner is the right call for a proper occasion: the format lends itself to the slower, more abundant style that Israeli cooking does well, and the Mühlenstraße location in Friedrichshain has an atmosphere after dark that suits a longer meal. For current session times and whether lunch is available, check directly with the venue before booking.
Booking difficulty at Berta is rated Easy. At €€ pricing and with a relatively low public profile compared to Berlin's Michelin-starred rooms, you are unlikely to need more than a week's notice for most evenings. Weekend dinner may warrant booking further ahead, particularly if you have a specific date in mind for a celebration. Contrast this with the booking reality at places like CODA Dessert Dining or Horváth, where demand regularly stretches the window to four to six weeks. If your date is flexible, Berta is an easy add to your Berlin itinerary without the advance planning anxiety of the city's top-tier tasting-menu rooms.
| Detail | Berta | Nobelhart & Schmutzig | FACIL |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Israeli | Modern German | Contemporary European |
| Price range | €€ | €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Michelin recognition | Plate (2024, 2025) | 1 Star | 1 Star |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Hard | Moderate |
| Leading for | Occasion dinner, value | Destination tasting menu | Business meal, design |
Against Berlin's Michelin-recognised field, Berta occupies a distinct position: the only Israeli kitchen in the group, and by far the most accessible on price. Rutz, Nobelhart & Schmutzig, and FACIL are all operating at €€€€, with tasting menus and service models that justify the price for a full destination evening. Berta's Michelin Plate signals kitchen quality without the full starred overhead. If you want to eat well in Berlin without committing to a tasting-menu format or a top-tier price, Berta is the stronger practical choice.
For a special occasion where the setting and service formality matter as much as the food, FACIL is the better pick: the space is architecturally distinctive, the service polished, and the Mandala Hotel context adds to the sense of occasion. Nobelhart & Schmutzig is the right choice if you want a politically committed, ingredient-driven tasting menu and are happy to spend accordingly. CODA Dessert Dining is in a category of its own , a dessert-led tasting menu that works leading for adventurous diners who are specifically seeking that format.
Berta sits in a gap none of those venues fill: mid-price Israeli cooking with Michelin-level recognition, easy to book, and accessible enough to visit more than once. For the diner who finds Berlin's top-tier rooms logistically demanding or financially prohibitive on a given trip, Berta is a credible alternative that doesn't ask you to compromise on kitchen ambition.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Berta | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | €€ | — |
| CODA Dessert Dining | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Rutz | Michelin 3 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Nobelhart & Schmutzig | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Horváth | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| FACIL | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
At €€ pricing with two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025), Berta is one of the stronger value cases in Berlin's recognised restaurant scene. You're getting a kitchen that Michelin has flagged twice for quality, at a price point well below the city's starred rooms. If Israeli cuisine is a format you want to explore, this is a low-risk entry.
Berlin's Friedrichshain neighbourhood skews casual enough that solo diners are rarely out of place, and at €€ pricing the commitment is modest. Without confirmed counter or bar seating in the database, call ahead to ask about solo-friendly spots. If solo counter dining is a priority, Nobelhart & Schmutzig's format may suit better.
Bar or counter seating isn't confirmed in the available venue data for Berta, so don't assume it's an option without checking directly. Contact the restaurant before arriving with that expectation. At €€ and with easy booking, a table reservation is the lower-risk route.
Berta works for a low-key special occasion: two Michelin Plates signal genuine kitchen intent, and €€ pricing means the bill won't dominate the evening. For a milestone where room formality and ceremony matter, Horváth or Rutz would set a more appropriate tone. Berta is the better call when the food matters more than the occasion-dressing.
No dress code is documented for Berta, and Friedrichshain's dining culture broadly runs casual to smart-casual. Arriving neat but not formal is a reasonable baseline. Nothing in Berta's positioning — €€ pricing, East Berlin address — suggests a jacket is expected.
For more formal Michelin-recognised dining, Rutz and Horváth both operate at a higher price point with greater occasion weight. Nobelhart & Schmutzig offers a comparable mid-serious register with a distinct regional German focus. FACIL and CODA Dessert Dining serve different formats entirely — FACIL for polished business dining, CODA if a dessert-forward tasting menu is the goal. Berta is the only Israeli kitchen in this group and the most accessible by price.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.