Restaurant in Hamburg, Germany
Michelin-noted Asian cooking on the Elbe

Henssler Henssler holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025 and a 4.4 Google rating across nearly 3,800 reviews, making it one of Hamburg's more consistent choices for Asian-influenced cooking at the €€€ tier. The Große Elbstraße waterfront address adds practical appeal for weekend lunch. Booking is rated easy, but secure weekend slots one to two weeks ahead during summer.
With 3,742 Google reviews and a 4.4 rating, Henssler Henssler at Große Elbstraße 160 has built a consistent following on Hamburg's waterfront dining strip. It holds a Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025, which signals cooking that meets Michelin's quality threshold without the ceremonial weight of a star. At €€€ pricing, it sits at a more accessible point than most of Hamburg's decorated restaurants, and that combination — recognised quality, Elbe-side location, Asian-influenced format — is the core reason to book it.
If you have already visited once and are deciding whether to return, the answer is yes, provided the Asian-influenced menu format suits what you are planning. The venue rewards repeat visits from diners who want a polished meal with some technical ambition but do not want to commit to the full ceremony of a tasting-menu-only room.
Henssler Henssler's cuisine type is listed as Asian Influences, which in the Hamburg context positions it differently from the city's dominant fine-dining wave of creative European tasting menus. This is not a kaiseki room or a strict omakase counter; it is a Hamburg interpretation of Asian-influenced cooking at a level the Michelin inspectors found worth noting two years running. For diners coming from a first visit, the practical question is which format works leading for the occasion you are planning , and the venue's format appears designed for flexibility rather than a single rigid experience.
The Große Elbstraße address is part of Hamburg's established waterfront restaurant corridor, which makes weekend lunch and late-morning weekend visits worth planning around. Hamburg's harbour-side strip attracts high foot traffic on Saturday and Sunday mornings, and Henssler Henssler's profile , recognisable name, Michelin credential, scenic setting , means weekend slots fill earlier than weekday equivalents. If brunch or a weekend midday meal is what you are after, earlier booking is the practical move even though overall booking difficulty is rated easy. Aim to secure a weekend table at least one to two weeks ahead; weekday lunch and dinner slots are more flexible.
Hamburg's waterfront is at its leading in the warmer months from May through September, when the Elbe-facing position adds genuine value to the meal beyond what you get from the plate. The Große Elbstraße strip in summer draws the full range of Hamburg dining traffic, so the restaurant operates at higher capacity pressure during this window. If you are planning a special-occasion visit and want the waterfront atmosphere as part of the experience, book for a weekend lunch slot in summer and confirm availability two weeks out. For quieter conditions with the same quality of cooking, weekday evenings in spring or autumn give you the room without the weekend crowd dynamic.
For solo diners, the venue's format and price point make it a workable choice in a city where solo fine-casual dining can feel awkward at the €€€€ tier. At €€€, Henssler Henssler offers enough substance to justify a solo visit without the financial exposure of Hamburg's more expensive tasting-menu rooms. Confirm counter or bar seating availability when booking if that is your preference , the venue's seating configuration is not specified in available data, but asking directly at booking is worth doing.
Hamburg's recognised dining scene at the €€€ and €€€€ tier gives you several reference points. The Table Kevin Fehling and bianc both operate at €€€€ with higher Michelin credentials; if you want the most technically ambitious cooking Hamburg offers, those are the addresses. Heimatjuwel sits at the same €€€ tier with a German and creative focus , useful if you want a peer comparison at the same price point but with a European rather than Asian-influenced menu. Henssler Henssler's specific value is the Asian-influenced format at a Michelin-recognised quality level, which is a narrower niche in Hamburg's dining landscape than the city's more prevalent creative-European rooms.
For broader Hamburg dining context, the full Hamburg restaurants guide covers the range from casual to multi-starred. Elsewhere in Germany, comparable Asian-influenced cooking at recognised quality levels appears at venues like MAIN TOWER Restaurant & Lounge in Frankfurt, which offers a useful benchmark for the format in a different German city context.
Henssler Henssler is at Große Elbstraße 160, 22767 Hamburg. Pricing sits at €€€, which for Hamburg fine-casual means expect a meaningful spend but not at the level of the city's starred rooms. Booking difficulty is rated easy, meaning walk-in attempts are more viable here than at Hamburg's most in-demand addresses, but weekend and waterfront-season slots warrant advance planning. Direct booking details including phone and website are not listed in Pearl's current data , check OpenTable, Resy, or a direct Google search for current reservation availability. Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 is the clearest external quality signal available.
If you are building a Hamburg dining itinerary around more than one meal, the Hamburg hotels guide, Hamburg bars guide, and Hamburg experiences guide cover the surrounding context. For a comparison of where Henssler Henssler fits among Hamburg's more formal end of the spectrum, Restaurant Haerlin and 100/200 Kitchen represent the creative-French and boundary-pushing ends of the Hamburg market respectively.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Henssler Henssler | €€€ | — |
| The Table Kevin Fehling | €€€€ | — |
| bianc | €€€€ | — |
| Lakeside | €€€€ | — |
| Heimatjuwel | €€€ | — |
| Zeik | €€€€ | — |
How Henssler Henssler stacks up against the competition.
Book at least two to three weeks ahead, particularly for weekend evenings and summer months when the Elbe-facing position draws higher demand. The venue holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, which keeps it on enough radar that last-minute tables are a gamble. Midweek slots at €€€ pricing are your best shot at a shorter lead time.
It depends on the format. Asian-influenced restaurants at the €€€ tier in Hamburg often offer counter or bar seating that works well for solo diners, but the specific setup at Große Elbstraße 160 is not confirmed in available data. Call ahead to check seating options — a solo visit at €€€ is a meaningful spend, so clarifying this before arrival is worth the effort.
No dietary policy is documented in the venue data. Given the Asian Influences cuisine format and Michelin Plate recognition, the kitchen is likely equipped to adapt dishes, but check the venue's official channels before booking to confirm. Do not assume substitutions are available without prior notice at this price point.
For a step up in formality and price, The Table Kevin Fehling and bianc both operate at €€€€ and carry stronger award credentials. Heimatjuwel and Zeik offer Hamburg-focused menus at comparable or lower spend. Lakeside is worth considering if you want waterfront dining with a different flavour profile. Henssler Henssler sits in a specific lane: Michelin-noted Asian-influenced cooking at €€€, which none of those directly replicate.
Yes, with caveats. The Michelin Plate recognition for both 2024 and 2025 gives it a credible special-occasion case, and the Elbe waterfront location adds atmosphere. At €€€, the spend is meaningful without reaching the €€€€ tier of Hamburg's most formal addresses. It works well for occasions where you want a recognised dining address without the rigidity of a full tasting-menu format.
No menu format or pricing detail is confirmed in the venue data, so a direct verdict on a tasting menu is not possible here. If a tasting menu is available, the Michelin Plate credential suggests the kitchen has the consistency to support it — but verify the format and price directly with the restaurant before committing at the €€€ tier.
At €€€ with a Michelin Plate for two consecutive years and over 3,700 Google reviews averaging 4.4, Henssler Henssler has the track record to justify the spend for Asian-influenced cooking in Hamburg. It is not the cheapest way to eat well on the waterfront, but it sits below the €€€€ ceiling of The Table Kevin Fehling or bianc. If the cuisine format fits what you are after, the value case holds.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.