Restaurant in Frankfurt, Germany
Levantine Table, Bahnhofsviertel

Du Liban brings Lebanese cooking to Frankfurt's Gallusviertel in a format that suits casual dinners, relaxed dates, and small groups who want to share food without booking three weeks ahead. It's a practical alternative to the city's heavier European dining options, and easy enough to book that spontaneous visits are realistic. Best visited on weeknights for a more comfortable pace.
If you want Lebanese food in Frankfurt without the fuss of a formal booking process, Du Liban on Weserstraße 17 is worth your attention. This is a venue for casual dinners with people you actually want to talk to: dates, small groups catching up, or anyone who wants a relaxed meal without a corporate dining room atmosphere. Midweek evenings tend to offer a more comfortable pace than weekend rushes, so if timing is flexible, Thursday is usually your call.
The address puts Du Liban in the Gallusviertel, a Frankfurt neighbourhood that runs practical rather than polished — which tends to work in favour of restaurants like this. Venues in areas without heavy tourist foot traffic often direct their energy toward the food rather than the fit-out, and the premise here follows that logic. Lebanese cooking, at its leading, is generous by design: mezze formats encourage sharing, spiced dishes reward a slow pace, and the kitchen tends to punch above its tier when the sourcing is right.
Du Liban sits in a Frankfurt dining scene that leans heavily toward European fine dining and German classics. That makes a well-executed Lebanese kitchen genuinely useful as an alternative , not as a novelty, but as a reliable option when you want something that doesn't fit the standard Frankfurt mould. For a special occasion that doesn't require a tasting menu or a three-week booking window, a casual Lebanese meal done properly can land better than a stiff formal dinner. The occasion match here is: relaxed celebration, informal date, or a small group that wants to share food rather than order individually.
On timing: Lebanese restaurants across this format generally run better earlier in the evening when the kitchen is freshest and the room isn't yet at capacity. Arriving at opening or within the first hour of service is the practical move, particularly if you're treating the meal as a proper occasion rather than a quick stop.
Frankfurt has a strong concentration of high-end European dining , venues like Aqua in Wolfsburg and Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn represent the leading end of the German fine dining circuit, but those are destination meals requiring significant planning. Du Liban operates at the other end of that spectrum: accessible, walk-in-friendly territory. If you're also exploring the city's restaurant options more broadly, our full Frankfurt restaurants guide covers the range, and our Frankfurt bars guide is useful for before or after dinner. For accommodation near this part of the city, our Frankfurt hotels guide has current options.
Other Frankfurt dining worth knowing about: ALEJANDRO'S, Allgaiers Restaurant, Ariston, atm by Deli&Grape, and Babam each serve different parts of the market. For experiences beyond restaurants, our Frankfurt experiences guide is a useful companion, and our Frankfurt wineries guide covers the wine side of the city.
Du Liban is at Weserstraße 17, 60329 Frankfurt am Main. Booking difficulty is easy , walk-ins are likely manageable, particularly on weeknights. No website or phone number is currently listed in our records; check Google Maps for current hours before visiting. Dress code: smart casual is fine for this type of venue. For parties of four or more, arrive early to avoid a wait.
Quick reference: Weserstraße 17, Frankfurt | Easy to book | Leading on weeknights | Smart casual
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Du Liban | Easy | ||
| Heimat, Frankfurt | Unknown | ||
| Le Petit Royal Frankfurt | Unknown | ||
| Restaurant Chairs | Unknown | ||
| Coffee bar at the Kunstverein | Unknown | ||
| Bader's fish deli | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Du Liban and alternatives.
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