Restaurant in Grafenstein, Austria
Moritz
450ptsCarinthia's best-kept Michelin table. Book ahead.

About Moritz
Moritz holds a Michelin star (2024) in rural Carinthia, with Chef Roman Pichler's region-driven tasting menus served in a conservatory-style room that opens to the garden in summer. At €€€€, the five- or seven-course surprise menu is the only format worth considering. Book four to six weeks ahead — the intimate room fills quickly.
Moritz, Grafenstein: Should You Go Back?
If you visited Moritz once and left thinking it was a pleasant surprise, a second visit will confirm something more durable: this is one of Carinthia's most consistent Michelin-starred rooms, and the case for returning is stronger than the case was for going the first time. The setting outside Grafenstein, surrounded by meadows and working fields, has not changed — but what you notice on a return trip is how deliberately the kitchen and the host have calibrated every element around the experience of a full evening, not just a meal.
The dining space works harder than it looks on first impression. The conservatory-style room fills with natural light during the day, and in the warmer months the glass walls open entirely onto the garden, collapsing the boundary between inside and out. The scent that meets you when those walls are open is genuinely distinctive: cut grass and garden herbs threading through the room, mixing with whatever is coming from the kitchen. For a second visit, this is the argument for booking a summer evening rather than a midwinter lunch — the spatial transformation when the garden becomes part of the room is one of the things that makes Moritz worth a return journey rather than simply a first trip.
Hostess Anja-Margaretha Moritz runs the room with the kind of calm attentiveness that is easy to underestimate until you compare it against the more formal service culture you'll encounter at Vienna's leading tables. The atmosphere here reads as intimate without being precious , which matters at the €€€€ price point, where some rooms can feel like they are charging you for the tension as much as the food.
Chef Roman Pichler's cooking is built on regional produce treated with a precision that shows clearly in the plating and the structure of each course. The Michelin description of the beetroot dish , dill, mustard seeds, fennel blossoms, marigold, oxalis , gives you a sense of the approach: strong herbal and floral registers used to create contrast within a dish that still resolves as harmonious. This is not food that chases novelty for its own sake. It is cooking oriented around balance, and on a return visit you are better positioned to read it that way rather than simply being surprised by the level.
The surprise menu , five or seven courses , is the format Moritz is built around, and it is worth knowing that you can preview the menu in advance if you prefer not to go in blind. That is a small but practical detail that removes one reason some diners hesitate with tasting menus. For returning guests, the seven-course format is the one that gives Pichler's kitchen the most room to sequence the meal properly. The five-course option works well if you are pairing the evening with a longer drive.
On the drinks side, Moritz does not appear to have an independent bar program that functions as a destination in its own right , the venue's strength is the full dinner format, and the wine pairing is where the drinks program matters most in context. Austrian regional producers, particularly from Styria and Burgenland, are the natural fit for cooking of this style, and a well-chosen pairing at this level can move the value calculation meaningfully. If you dined here before without a pairing, that is the single clearest upgrade available on a return visit. A glass program or flight built around the local Austrian wine culture is more appropriate here than a broad international cellar, and the regional framing of the food makes the case for leaning into that on a second visit.
Practically: Moritz is a hard booking. The Michelin star earned in 2024 has materially increased demand for a room that was already limited in capacity. The intimacy of the space , described as almost intimate even in the Michelin citation , means you are dealing with a small number of covers. Book four to six weeks ahead as a baseline assumption, and do not treat this as a walkable table. The restaurant's position outside Grafenstein also means you need to plan transport. It is not accessible by casual foot traffic, and the rural setting makes driving or a dedicated transfer the practical options.
The Google rating of 4.9 from 156 reviews is a useful signal here: at small-room venues with a loyal local following, that number tends to reflect genuine consistency rather than volume-driven averaging. It is the kind of rating that holds because the room is not taking many tables per night.
If you have been once and enjoyed it, the reasons to return are specific: the garden experience in summer is materially different from a winter visit; the seven-course format gives more depth than the five; and the regional wine pairing is the clearest upgrade available to someone who already knows the food. Go with that agenda and Moritz will meet it.
Quick reference: €€€€ pricing, Michelin 1 Star (2024), surprise menu (5 or 7 courses), garden dining available in summer, hard booking , allow 4-6 weeks minimum.
How It Compares
See the full comparison section below.
Further Reading
- Our full Grafenstein restaurants guide
- Our full Grafenstein hotels guide
- Our full Grafenstein bars guide
- Our full Grafenstein wineries guide
- Our full Grafenstein experiences guide
- Steirereck im Stadtpark in Vienna
- Döllerer in Golling an der Salzach
- Schwarzer Adler in Hall in Tirol
- Griggeler Stuba in Lech
- Restaurant 141 by Joachim Jaud in Mieming
- Senns in Salzburg
- Landhaus Bacher in Mautern an der Donau
- Obauer in Werfen
- Ois in Neufelden
- Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof in Sankt Anton am Arlberg
- Stüva in Ischgl
- Frantzén , Modern Cuisine in Stockholm
- Maison Lameloise , Modern Cuisine in Chagny
Compare Moritz
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moritz | €€€€ | Hard | — |
| Steirereck im Stadtpark | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Mraz & Sohn | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Döllerer | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Landhaus Bacher | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Obauer | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Moritz and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Moritz?
Go with the surprise menu rather than ordering individually. The kitchen builds dishes around regional produce with precise balance — the beetroot preparation with dill, mustard seeds, fennel blossoms, marigold, and oxalis is specifically cited in Michelin notes as a standout. If you want to preview the menu before arriving, Moritz allows that, which is worth doing if you have dietary needs.
Is lunch or dinner better at Moritz?
The venue data does not confirm separate lunch and dinner seatings, so this is not something Pearl can call definitively. What is confirmed: the glass walls open in summer to create a terrace feel, which makes a daytime visit particularly compelling given the meadow setting. Contact Moritz directly to confirm current service hours before booking.
Can I eat at the bar at Moritz?
No bar seating is documented for Moritz. The dining space is described as conservatory-style with a relatively intimate atmosphere, which suggests the experience is structured around table service. This is not a drop-in venue — the surprise menu format requires a seated booking.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Moritz?
Yes, at the €€€€ price point, the 5- or 7-course surprise menu is the format the kitchen is designed around, and the Michelin 1 Star (2024) backs the execution. You can choose between five or seven courses, and individual dishes can technically be ordered à la carte — but you lose the progression that earns the kitchen its recognition. Book the full menu.
Is Moritz good for a special occasion?
It is well-suited to it. The combination of a Michelin-starred kitchen, an intimate dining room, and attentive personal service from hostess Anja-Margaretha Moritz creates a setting that feels considered rather than corporate. For a milestone dinner in Carinthia, there is no comparable option at this standard closer to Grafenstein.
How far ahead should I book Moritz?
Book at least 3 to 4 weeks out, more if you are planning around a summer visit when the garden terrace is in use. The intimate atmosphere the venue is known for implies limited covers, which means availability disappears faster than the rural address might suggest. No online booking portal is confirmed, so plan to check the venue's official channels.
What are alternatives to Moritz in Grafenstein?
There are no direct Grafenstein alternatives at this level. For comparable Michelin-starred modern Austrian cooking, Döllerer in Golling and Obauer in Werfen are the reference points in the broader Alpine south — both are further afield but similarly destination-worthy. If proximity to Graz matters, Steirereck im Stadtpark in Vienna operates at a higher tier but requires a full city trip.
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