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    Restaurant in Berlin, Germany

    NaNum

    210Pearl Points

    Michelin-noted Korean precision, below starred prices.

    NaNum, Restaurant in Berlin

    About NaNum

    NaNum earns its Michelin Plate with ingredient-led Korean contemporary cooking rooted in fermentation and Brandenburg-sourced produce. At €€€, it's a price tier below most of Berlin's Michelin-recognised creative dining rooms, with a natural wine pairing and a calm, conversation-friendly room opposite the Jewish Museum. Book two to three weeks out for the seven-course Friday or Saturday service.

    Verdict

    NaNum is one of Berlin's most focused contemporary Korean restaurants, and at €€€ it sits a price tier below most of the city's Michelin-recognised creative dining rooms. The Michelin Plate (2025), a Google rating of 4.8 across 327 reviews, and a format built around ingredient-led precision make this a confident booking for food-focused diners. If you want a quiet, considered dinner with natural wines and a kitchen you can actually watch, this is a better choice than louder, higher-ticket alternatives like Rutz or Nobelhart & Schmutzig.

    The Restaurant

    NaNum operates on a tight schedule: five-course set menus (vegetarian or with meat) on Wednesdays and Thursdays, seven-course set menus (vegetarian or with fish) on Fridays and Saturdays. That's four services a week, which tells you this is a kitchen working at its own pace. Chef Jinok Kim draws on Korean fermentation traditions and sources some ingredients from the restaurant's own garden in Brandenburg, giving the menu a regional specificity that distinguishes it from more generically European creative dining rooms.

    The open kitchen is visible from the dining room, which keeps the atmosphere engaged without being theatrical. The space itself is pared back — no dramatic interior design to distract from the food. Noise levels are calm; this is a room suited to conversation, not celebration noise. If you're looking for comparable Korean contemporary cooking elsewhere, Nae:um in Singapore and Restaurant Ki in Los Angeles operate in the same register, though NaNum's fermentation focus and Brandenburg garden sourcing give it a distinctly local character.

    The Drinks Program

    Natural wines are the pairing format here, matched to both the vegetarian and the meat or fish set menus. This is not a venue with an extensive cocktail program or a deep cellar built for exploration — the drinks function as an extension of the food's ethos: low-intervention, ingredient-aware, and in service of the menu rather than competing with it. For diners who find conventional wine pairings at creative tasting-menu restaurants either too formal or too generic, NaNum's natural wine approach is a practical differentiator. If a serious independent wine program is your primary reason for booking a tasting-menu dinner in Berlin, Rutz offers greater depth. But if you want the wine to support the food without overshadowing it, NaNum's approach is well-matched to its format.

    Location and Atmosphere

    The address is Lindenstraße 90 in Kreuzberg, on a small square opposite the Jewish Museum and close to Checkpoint Charlie. The terrace is a practical asset in warmer months , it's an unusually pleasant outdoor setting for this part of central Berlin. The building also houses Jinok Kim's ceramics studio, and the crockery used in the restaurant is made there, which gives the dining experience a material coherence that most restaurants can't claim. Service is described by Michelin as very friendly, which at this price point and format is worth noting: tasting-menu restaurants in Berlin can run toward formal stiffness, and NaNum appears to avoid that.

    Who Should Book

    NaNum works leading for two people who want a focused, ingredient-led dinner without the formality or the price tag of Berlin's starred rooms. The limited weekly schedule (four services) means you're booking into something intentional rather than a restaurant running at volume. It's a good fit for food-focused visitors who want Korean contemporary cooking interpreted through local German ingredients, and for diners who prefer natural wine to conventional pairing menus. It's less suited to large groups, last-minute plans, or anyone who wants an à la carte option. For more context on what else is worth booking in the city, see our full Berlin restaurants guide, our Berlin bars guide, and our Berlin hotels guide.

    Booking

    Booking difficulty is rated Easy. Given the limited weekly schedule and the Michelin recognition, securing a table two to three weeks out is advisable, particularly for Friday and Saturday seven-course services. Walk-in availability is unlikely given the format.

    Practical Details

    DetailNaNumNobelhart & SchmutzigFACIL
    Price range€€€€€€€€€€€
    CuisineKorean ContemporaryModern GermanContemporary European
    FormatSet menu onlySet menu onlySet menu / à la carte
    Booking difficultyEasyModerateModerate
    AwardMichelin Plate 2025Michelin StarMichelin Star
    LocationKreuzbergMitteTiergarten

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does NaNum handle dietary restrictions?

    Yes, and the format is built around it. Both the five-course and seven-course menus come in explicit vegetarian variants — the Wednesday/Thursday menu offers vegetarian or meat, while the Friday/Saturday menu offers vegetarian or fish. If you have restrictions beyond those categories, check the venue's official channels before booking, as the set-menu format leaves limited room for ad-hoc substitutions.

    What should I wear to NaNum?

    The space is described in Michelin's own notes as pleasantly pared back with friendly service, which points toward relaxed rather than formal. Smart casual is a reasonable baseline — think the level you'd dress for a serious neighbourhood restaurant, not a starred dining room. Overdressing would feel out of step with the atmosphere.

    Is NaNum good for a special occasion?

    Yes, particularly for two people who want something considered without the stiffness of Berlin's starred rooms. The ceramics are made by chef Jinok Kim herself, the terrace opposite the Jewish Museum is a good pre- or post-dinner setting, and the Michelin Plate recognition gives the evening a credential to anchor it. It works better as an intimate occasion than a group celebration, given the limited seating and set-menu format.

    How far ahead should I book NaNum?

    Two to three weeks out is advisable. NaNum only operates four evenings a week — Wednesdays through Saturdays — which compresses demand significantly. The Michelin Plate recognition for 2025 has raised its profile, so weekend sittings in particular are likely to fill faster than the schedule suggests.

    What are alternatives to NaNum in Berlin?

    Nobelhart & Schmutzig is the closest comparison in format — regional-ingredient-led set menus with a strong point of view — but it runs higher on price and formality. Rutz and FACIL operate at Michelin-starred level with broader menus and more conventional fine-dining formats, better suited if you want wine pairings beyond natural. Horváth offers Austrian-influenced contemporary cooking at a similar seriousness level. CODA is a dessert-focused tasting menu and only relevant if you want something genuinely unconventional. NaNum is the right call if Korean fermentation-led cooking and ceramics-as-craft is specifically what you're after at €€€.

    Location

    Lindenstraße 90, 10969 Berlin, Germany

    Compare NaNum

    How Easy to Book: NaNum vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    NaNumKorean Contemporary€€€Easy
    CODA Dessert DiningCreative€€€€Unknown
    RutzModern European, Modern Cuisine€€€€Unknown
    Nobelhart & SchmutzigModern German, Creative€€€€Unknown
    FACILContemporary European, Creative€€€€Unknown
    HorváthModern Austrian, Creative€€€€Unknown

    A quick look at how NaNum measures up.

    Also Consider

    NaNum sits at €€€, which immediately separates it from Nobelhart & Schmutzig, FACIL, Rutz, CODA Dessert Dining, and Horváth, all of which operate at €€€€. If value relative to Michelin recognition matters to your decision, NaNum is the most accessible entry point into Berlin's recognised creative dining scene.

    On format and atmosphere, NaNum is closest to Nobelhart & Schmutzig, both run set-menu-only services, both have a strong ingredient and provenance focus, and both maintain a quieter, more intimate atmosphere than larger rooms. The key differences: Nobelhart operates nightly and carries a full Michelin star; NaNum runs four services a week and holds a Plate. If getting a table easily matters and you're not committed to a German-ingredients focus, NaNum is the more bookable option. For wine depth, Rutz pulls ahead of both.

    CODA is the outlier in this comparison set, its dessert-forward tasting menu format is unlike anything NaNum offers, and the two don't really compete for the same diner. FACIL and Horváth both offer more service formality and a broader European reference point. If your priority is Korean contemporary cooking with local German ingredients and a natural wine pairing in a calm room, none of the €€€€ comparison venues deliver that combination. NaNum does.

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