Restaurant in Berlin, Germany
Serious vegan tasting menu, easy to book.

Oukan delivers a Michelin Plate-recognised Japanese-inspired vegan tasting menu from a courtyard address in Berlin-Mitte. At €€€ — a price tier below most of its serious Berlin competition — it offers seven to nine fermentation-driven courses in a calm, minimalist room. Book it for a technically grounded plant-based tasting menu that earns its price without requiring the top-tier outlay of CODA or Rutz.
Oukan earns its Michelin Plate (2025) through a tightly controlled seven-to-nine-course vegan menu that takes Japanese fermentation technique seriously enough to have built a dedicated Fermentation Lab in the cellar. At €€€, it sits a price tier below Berlin's CODA Dessert Dining and Rutz, which makes it a credible entry point into Berlin's serious tasting-menu circuit without the €€€€ outlay. Book it if you want proof that plant-based fine dining can be technically rigorous rather than merely virtuous.
Seats at Oukan are not allocated in bulk. The restaurant occupies a Hinterhof — a Berlin courtyard building accessed through a red door on Ackerstraße in Mitte — and the format is a set creative menu with seven to nine courses. The kitchen does not offer a simplified option or a shorter route through the meal. You commit to the full sequence or you find somewhere else. That scarcity of format, not just of physical seats, is worth knowing before you arrive.
The space itself sets the register immediately. The interior draws on Far Eastern minimalism: clean lines, dark tones, stripped-back surfaces. Nothing competes with the food. For a neighbourhood that houses plenty of exposed-brick loft conversions and design-for-Instagram interiors, Oukan's room reads as genuinely considered rather than trend-assembled. The courtyard address adds a layer of remove from street noise that makes the dining room feel quieter and more controlled than its central Berlin postcode would suggest. For anyone eating alone or with a single companion, the spatial calm is an asset: conversation does not have to compete with the room.
What Oukan is doing technically sits within a Japanese culinary tradition that has always been vegetable-forward , fermentation, dashi-adjacent broths, umami built from non-animal sources. The Fermentation Lab in the cellar is not a marketing fixture. It anchors the menu's flavour logic: acids, depth, and controlled funk that give each course a structural backbone you don't often find in plant-based tasting menus, where sweetness or richness tends to fill the gap left by animal fat. The Michelin description singles out king oyster mushrooms , finely sliced, grilled, finished with lime, a yeast and brioche crumble, and a mushroom broth with thyme and apple cider , as a representative dish. The dish works because it is built on contrast and layered acidity rather than on sheer volume of ingredient. That logic runs through the menu.
The tea pairing, noted in the Michelin entry, is worth factoring into your booking decision. For a restaurant operating at this price tier and format, a non-alcoholic pairing option that is treated with the same seriousness as a wine list is a differentiator. Berlin has strong vegan dining at lower price points , FREA and Lucky Leek both operate below Oukan's price tier , but neither offers a multi-course format with fermentation at its core and an orchestrated beverage programme alongside it.
Oukan sits in Berlin-Mitte's northern reach, in a part of Ackerstraße that is residential enough to feel local without being inconvenient for visitors staying centrally. As a neighbourhood anchor, it functions as one of the few fine-dining-adjacent addresses in this part of Mitte that does not rely on a hotel lobby or a tourist-facing main street for footfall. The courtyard format , accessed through what the Michelin guide calls a side street, through a red door , creates a sense of arrival that the restaurant has earned rather than manufactured. For the Mitte food scene, which skews heavily towards casual and mid-market, Oukan is an outlier by format and ambition.
Service is described across sources as genuinely warm rather than formally correct. At the €€€ tier, that calibration matters: the meal runs long by design, and a team that reads the room well makes a seven-to-nine-course progression feel like an evening rather than an endurance. Chef Timur Yilmaz leads a kitchen and front-of-house operation that Michelin describes as a broad and strong team, which at this scale , a Hinterhof restaurant in a courtyard setting , usually means a tight group working closely rather than a brigade system. For context on where Oukan sits within Germany's wider fine-dining circuit, compare it against three-star addresses like Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn, Aqua in Wolfsburg, or Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach. Oukan is not competing at that level by award tier, but its Michelin Plate signals consistent quality worth the trip. For international vegan fine dining comparisons, KLE in Zurich and Légume in Seoul occupy a similar structural space.
The 4.6 Google rating across 360 reviews is consistent with a venue that delivers reliably rather than spectacularly on any given night. At €€€ for a full tasting menu with a serious beverage option, the value equation is strong by Berlin's current fine-dining standards. If you are building a Berlin dining itinerary that includes one tasting-menu dinner, Oukan is a more accessible entry point than most of its peers at higher price tiers, and its Michelin recognition gives it a floor of confidence that purely independent word-of-mouth recommendations cannot. See our full Berlin restaurants guide for broader context, or explore hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in the city.
Oukan is at Ackerstraße 144, 10115 Berlin , a Hinterhof (courtyard) address accessed through a red door. The restaurant is in Berlin-Mitte, walkable from U8 Rosenthaler Platz or U2 Senefelderplatz.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. Advance reservations are advisable given the set-menu format, but the restaurant does not carry the multi-week waitlist pressure of Berlin's hardest tables. Reserve online or via the restaurant directly.
Seven-to-nine-course creative vegan tasting menu. No à la carte. Full commitment to the menu sequence is required. Tea pairing available and worth considering.
| Venue | Price | Format | Michelin | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oukan | €€€ | Vegan tasting menu, 7-9 courses | Plate (2025) | Easy |
| CODA Dessert Dining | €€€€ | Creative tasting menu | 2 Stars | Moderate |
| Rutz | €€€€ | Modern European tasting menu | 2 Stars | Moderate |
| Nobelhart & Schmutzig | €€€€ | Modern German, set menu | 1 Star | Moderate |
| Horváth | €€€€ | Modern Austrian, tasting menu | 2 Stars | Moderate |
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oukan | Vegan | €€€ | The Oukan restaurant is clearly on the rise in Berlin, Germany and Europe. Japanese culture has vegetables in its genes, and that is more than evident here! The dishes come off as little vegetable flavour bombs, colourful and always surprising. Chef Timur Yilmaz is assisted by a broad and strong team in the kitchen, bar and dining room. Highly culinary and vegan: it can be known.; Michelin Plate (2025); It's worth seeking out this restaurant, which is tucked away in a side street. The Japanese-inspired cuisine is completely vegan, with fermented food playing a major role – hence the "Fermentation Lab" having been built in the cellar. There is a creative menu with seven to nine courses. The dishes are pleasantly stripped back, but no less complex for it. A shining example is the delicately cooked, finely sliced and grilled king oyster mushrooms seasoned with a squeeze of lime, sprinkled with a yeast/brioche crumble and served with a mushroom broth with thyme and apple cider, which adds a subtle spiciness. The intriguing tea pairing is a must! The icing on the cake is the decor. Drawing on Far Eastern influences, the aptly clean-lined, minimalist-style interior is done out in soothing dark tones. Extremely friendly service is the final flourish. | Easy | — |
| CODA Dessert Dining | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Rutz | Modern European, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown | — |
| Nobelhart & Schmutzig | Modern German, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Horváth | Modern Austrian, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| FACIL | Contemporary European, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Oukan and alternatives.
The interior is minimalist and dark-toned, drawing on Far Eastern influences — think considered and clean rather than formal. Smart casual is a reasonable baseline: no jacket required, but turning up in sportswear would feel out of step with the seven-to-nine-course format. Oukan sits at €€€ pricing, so dress with that spend in mind.
Yes, if fermentation-led Japanese cooking is a format you want to explore. The Michelin Plate (2025) is backed by a dedicated fermentation lab on-site, and the menu runs seven to nine courses with genuine technical depth — king oyster mushroom with yeast-brioche crumble and mushroom broth is the kind of dish that justifies the commitment. Add the tea pairing; it's the most distinctive element on the menu and sets Oukan apart from Berlin's broader vegan dining options.
Yes. A set tasting-menu format at a Hinterhof restaurant in Berlin-Mitte is a natural fit for solo diners — the pace of the meal is fixed, there's no ordering pressure, and the service is noted as extremely friendly. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so there's no penalty for booking a table of one.
At €€€, Oukan sits in Berlin's upper tier but below the city's hardest-to-book fine dining rooms. For that spend, you get a Michelin Plate (2025), a house fermentation lab, and seven to nine courses of Japanese-inflected vegan cooking. Compared to Nobelhart & Schmutzig, which charges similarly for a produce-first German tasting menu, Oukan offers more technical range and a more distinctive aesthetic. Worth it if vegan or fermentation-led cuisine is your target; less obvious if you're looking for protein-forward fine dining.
There's no à la carte — the kitchen runs a single creative tasting menu of seven to nine courses, so the choice is made for you. The one decision worth making: take the tea pairing. Michelin's own notes flag it as a highlight, and it's the element most specific to Oukan's identity.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.