Restaurant in Cromvoirt, Netherlands
Serious cooking, relaxed format, repeat-worthy.

Noble Kitchen on the Bernardus golf course in Cromvoirt is one of North Brabant's most interesting restaurants at the €€€ tier: serious Robata-grilled proteins, genuine Asian technique, and a futuristic terrace setting that works across long lunches and relaxed dinners. A 4.6 Google rating across 150 reviews backs the consistency. Book if you want ambitious cooking without the €€€€ price commitment.
Noble Kitchen is worth booking, and if you visit once, you will almost certainly want to return. Situated on the Bernardus golf course in Cromvoirt, this restaurant delivers modern cuisine with consistent Asian inflection — think Wagyu A5 from a Robata grill, sushi among the starters, and sauces that lean on kimchi and orange salt — at a €€€ price point that positions it comfortably below the €€€€ tier where most of the Netherlands' leading addresses compete. A Google rating of 4.6 across 150 reviews suggests this is not a flash in the pan. For food-focused travellers making their way through North Brabant, it belongs on the shortlist alongside De Lindehof in Nuenen and Tribeca in Heeze.
The building itself is a conversation starter. Arriving at Bernardus golf course, the futuristic structure looks incongruous against the flat Dutch landscape , angular, low, and glass-heavy in a way that reads almost sculptural from the approach. Inside, the design resolves into something more coherent: casual luxury is the most accurate description, with the terrace overlooking the greens adding a strong outdoor dimension on warmer days. This is a space that flatters a long lunch or an unhurried evening meal without imposing formality.
The kitchen, led by chef Edwin Kats and his team, is working a clear and considered lane. The menu draws on Asian technique and ingredient references , sushi, Robata grilling, kimchi, citrus-salted fish , but frames them within a European dining structure. The result is food that rewards attention without requiring encyclopaedic knowledge of any single cuisine. Dishes described in the awards copy include grilled sole with orange salt and kimchi-infused beurre blanc, Wagyu A5 steak from the Robata grill, and an amuse-bouche sequence that opens the meal. These are specific, committed flavour decisions, not vague East-meets-West gestures.
Menu is described as extensive, which matters practically: this is a place where the breadth of what is on offer shapes the visit as much as any single dish. That breadth is also what makes Noble Kitchen a strong multi-visit proposition.
Noble Kitchen is built for repeat dining more than many restaurants at this price tier. The combination of an extensive menu, a setting that works across lunch and dinner, and a kitchen with genuine range means your second and third visits can look meaningfully different from your first.
On a first visit, the natural path is to let the kitchen show its range: begin with amuse-bouches and move through the sushi offering before committing to a main. The Robata-grilled proteins , particularly the Wagyu A5 , represent the kitchen's most technically confident work and are worth anchoring a meal around.
A second visit rewards more deliberate exploration. Noble Kitchen's Asian references extend across multiple registers: raw preparations, grilled proteins, fermented sauces. Use a return visit to move into the parts of the menu you bypassed the first time, particularly the fish dishes, where the kitchen's sauce work appears most intricate.
A third visit, or a visit for a regular, is when the terrace and the setting earn their full weight. Thursday through Sunday the kitchen runs long hours , noon to midnight on Thursday and Friday, 6 PM to midnight on Saturday, noon to midnight on Sunday , which means there is genuine flexibility about when to arrive and how long to stay. An unhurried Sunday lunch on the terrace, working through sections of the menu you have not reached before, is the format that gets the most from what Noble Kitchen offers. For guests combining the restaurant with a stay in the area, see our full Cromvoirt hotels guide.
Noble Kitchen holds a Google rating of 4.6 from 150 reviews. The editorial recognition in the awards record uses language consistent with Michelin Guide commentary , describing specific dishes, technique, and the overall experience in detail that implies close evaluator attention , though no star designation is explicitly confirmed in the available data. At €€€, it sits a price tier below the majority of Michelin-starred Dutch restaurants, which makes it a lower-stakes entry point for the food-focused explorer testing North Brabant's dining scene for the first time.
Booking at Noble Kitchen is direct. With a 4.6 rating and a location in a small village rather than a major city, demand is real but not the kind that requires months of forward planning. Booking a week or two ahead is sensible for weekend dinner; weekday lunch slots are likely easier. Reservations: Recommended, especially for weekend evenings and terrace seating. Hours: Monday and Tuesday closed; Wednesday dinner from 5:30 PM; Thursday and Friday noon to midnight; Saturday dinner from 6 PM; Sunday noon to midnight. Dress: Smart casual is consistent with the casual luxury positioning. Budget: €€€ per head, positioning this below the €€€€ tier of the major Dutch destination restaurants. Address: Deutersestraat 39b, 5266 AW Cromvoirt. For more dining options in the area, see our full Cromvoirt restaurants guide. Explore further with our Cromvoirt bars guide, our wineries guide, and our experiences guide.
Noble Kitchen is the right call for food-focused travellers who want serious cooking without committing to a full €€€€ tasting menu format. It works for couples, small groups, and anyone who wants flexibility in how long they stay and how much they order. The extensive menu and long service hours , particularly Thursday through Sunday , make it one of the more accommodating restaurants in this part of the Netherlands. It is less suited to anyone seeking a purely Dutch or European tasting menu experience; the Asian references are central, not incidental. For that profile, De Lindehof in Nuenen or Inter Scaldes in Kruiningen are more directly aligned. For broader context on the leading end of Dutch modern cuisine, see also De Librije in Zwolle, Ciel Bleu in Amsterdam, and FG in Rotterdam.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Noble Kitchen | €€€ | — |
| De Librije | €€€€ | — |
| Aan de Poel | €€€€ | — |
| De Nieuwe Winkel | €€€€ | — |
| Fred | €€€€ | — |
| De Lindehof | €€€€ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Yes, it works well for celebrations. The futuristic building on Bernardus golf course gives the evening a distinct setting, and the €€€ price tier signals occasion dining without requiring a full tasting-menu commitment. The extensive menu with Wagyu A5 and Robata-grilled dishes gives a table something to build an evening around. Book a terrace table if weather allows.
The menu is broad and leans on Asian influences — expect sushi alongside grilled meats and European technique. Come hungry and plan to order across several sections rather than treating it as a single-course meal. The setting is a converted futuristic building on a golf course in the small village of Cromvoirt, so you will need a car or taxi. Thursday through Sunday are the only service days.
At €€€, yes — provided you engage with the full menu rather than ordering conservatively. The combination of Robata-grilled Wagyu A5, sushi, and European-technique dishes with Asian-inflected sauces gives the price point clear justification. Compared to a full €€€€ tasting menu at restaurants like De Librije, Noble Kitchen costs less and gives you more menu control.
Lunch is the stronger practical call on Thursday, Friday, and Sunday when the kitchen opens at 12 PM. The terrace overlooking the golf course reads better in daylight, and the relaxed format suits a long afternoon meal. Dinner on Saturday (from 6 PM) is the right choice for a formal occasion or if you want the full evening atmosphere. Tuesday and Wednesday are closed.
The venue is a full restaurant on a golf course, so groups are workable, but call ahead rather than assuming walk-in capacity at €€€ pricing. The extensive menu format means groups with mixed preferences can order broadly, which helps. For larger private bookings, check the venue's official channels — no phone or website is listed in public records, so approach via Bernardus golf course.
It functions better as a two-plus dining experience given the menu breadth — solo diners miss the ability to share and graze across sections. That said, the setting is relaxed rather than formal, and a solo diner ordering selectively at the bar or terrace is plausible. If solo dining is the priority, a more counter-focused restaurant would suit the format better.
Cromvoirt itself offers no direct alternatives at this tier. The nearest comparable options are in the broader Noord-Brabant region: Fred in Vught delivers tightly focused modern cooking at a similar price point, and De Lindehof in Nuenen offers more structured tasting menus for diners who want a set progression. Noble Kitchen is the right pick when you want a la carte flexibility with serious technique rather than a fixed menu.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.