Restaurant in Graz, Austria
Restaurant Kornati
150ptsDalmatian Coast, Austrian Glass

About Restaurant Kornati
Restaurant Kornati sits on Franckstraße in Graz, recognised by Star Wine List with a White Star for the depth of its wine program. The address places it outside the city's historic centre, in a part of Graz where serious wine-focused dining tends to operate away from tourist traffic. For visitors building a Graz itinerary around wine pairings and considered cooking, Kornati belongs on the shortlist.
Wine-Forward Dining in a City That Takes the Glass Seriously
Graz has quietly assembled one of Austria's more compelling provincial dining scenes, not on the back of Michelin spectacle alone, but through a network of wine-literate restaurants that treat the cellar as seriously as the kitchen. The city sits at the northern edge of Styria, a wine region producing Sauvignon Blanc and Gelber Muskateller of genuine international standing, and that proximity shapes what ends up in the glass across the better tables in town. Restaurant Kornati, located on Franckstraße 44 in the western residential belt of Graz, sits within this tradition. Its recognition by Star Wine List as a White Star establishment places it in the tier of Graz venues where the wine list is not an afterthought but an organisational principle.
Star Wine List's White Star designation signals a wine program of considered depth: varied by region, attentive to vintage, and curated rather than simply populated. In a city where several restaurants operate at the intersection of serious food and serious wine, that credential carries weight. For context, the broader Graz restaurant scene ranges from farm-to-table producers working at the €€ tier through to creative tasting-menu formats at €€€€. Kornati's White Star places it in a specific niche: restaurants where the wine list is a primary reason to book, rather than a complement to a set menu.
The Dalmatian Thread: What Croatian Coastal Cuisine Brings to Graz
The name Kornati references the Kornati archipelago off the Dalmatian coast of Croatia, a chain of more than a hundred limestone islands in the northern Adriatic. That geography is not incidental. Dalmatian cuisine is one of the Mediterranean's more restrained regional traditions, shaped by the scarcity of the islands' terrain and the abundance of the surrounding sea. Fish, shellfish, olive oil, dried herbs, and white wine are the structural elements. The cooking tends toward simplicity in technique and intensity in ingredient quality, which puts it at the opposite end of the spectrum from central European gastronomy's richer, pork-and-cream registers.
For Graz, a city with deep roots in Styrian pork, cured meats, and root vegetable cookery, a Dalmatian-inflected restaurant represents a genuine counterpoint. The Adriatic is not far in terms of Austrian geography, and the cultural connection between Styria and the former Yugoslav coast runs through decades of postwar travel and migration. Croatian seafood restaurants have appeared in Austrian cities precisely because the culinary culture fits a gap in the local offer: clean flavours, wine-friendly cooking, and a Mediterranean rhythm that contrasts with the heavier regional palette. That context matters when considering where Kornati sits in Graz's broader dining picture, alongside venues like Mohrenwirt, which works the regional Styrian tradition, and Kehlberghof, where the emphasis falls on seasonal Austrian produce.
Wine as the Anchor: How the White Star Changes the Conversation
When Star Wine List published Kornati in January 2023 with a White Star, it was recognising something specific: a wine list with the range and coherence to stand alongside the food rather than simply accompany it. In a coastal Croatian-influenced restaurant, that likely means an engagement with both Dalmatian producers and the wider Adriatic wine belt, regions producing Pošip, Grk, and Plavac Mali that remain underrepresented on Austrian wine lists. Styrian whites, given the proximity and the flavour logic, are natural companions to Mediterranean seafood cooking, and the overlap between regional Austrian viticulture and Adriatic cuisine is more coherent than it might initially appear.
For comparison, consider where Kornati sits relative to Graz's other wine-serious tables. Artis operates at the creative €€€€ end, where the wine program supports complex tasting menus. Arravané and Genießerei am Markt each bring distinct editorial approaches to Styrian and international produce. Kornati's White Star positions it as the wine-anchored option within a more specific culinary tradition, rather than competing on the same terms as the tasting-menu circuit.
Franckstraße and the Off-Centre Dining Model
The address on Franckstraße 44 places Kornati in a residential-commercial part of western Graz, outside the Altstadt tourist radius. This is consistent with a pattern seen in several Austrian cities: the most wine-serious restaurants tend not to cluster in the pedestrian centre, where rents and footfall logic push toward broader, more casual formats. The off-centre location requires intention to visit, and restaurants that require intention tend to attract a more focused clientele. The trade-off is that first-time visitors to Graz may not encounter Kornati through casual discovery; it rewards prior research.
Visitors exploring Graz beyond the Schlossberg and Hauptplatz will find that the city's restaurant geography spreads further than the old town suggests. The full Graz restaurant guide maps the spread, and pairing a meal at Kornati with time in the surrounding neighbourhood offers a more textured read of the city than the historic centre alone provides. For accommodation, the Graz hotels guide covers the range of options across the city's districts. The Graz bars guide is worth consulting for pre- or post-dinner options, particularly for venues with Styrian natural wine lists that extend the evening.
Austrian Context: Where Kornati Sits in a Wider Framework
Austria's serious restaurant tier extends well beyond Vienna, and the provincial cities have developed distinct identities. Ikarus in Salzburg operates a rotating guest-chef format that positions it as a European destination in its own right. Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof in Sankt Anton and Griggeler Stuba in Lech serve the alpine luxury market. In Vienna, Steirereck im Stadtpark represents the apex of the Styrian produce tradition in a metropolitan context. Graz, as the Styrian capital, holds its own with a table spread that runs from the wine-specialist tier Kornati occupies to the creative and regional formats of its peers.
For international comparison, the wine-focused seafood restaurant is a format with strong precedents at both ends of the ambition spectrum. Le Bernardin in New York represents one pole of seafood-as-primary-subject fine dining. Emeril's in New Orleans demonstrates how regional culinary identity can anchor a long-running restaurant in a specific city context. Kornati operates at a different scale, but the logic of a restaurant anchored in both a specific seafood tradition and a serious wine program is consistent across all three.
Planning Your Visit
Restaurant Kornati is located at Franckstraße 44, 8010 Graz. The Star Wine List White Star recognition, published in January 2023, is the primary credential available in the public record. Given the off-centre address and the specialist wine program, advance booking is advisable, particularly for weekends when the broader Graz dining circuit fills. Phone and website details are not held in the current EP Club database; checking current contact information directly through search or map platforms before visiting is the practical approach. Visitors combining Kornati with Graz's wider wine scene should also consult the Graz wineries guide and the Graz experiences guide for a fuller picture of what the city offers beyond the table.
For Styrian wine-focused dining further afield, Landhaus Bacher in Mautern an der Donau and Kräuterreich by Vitus Winkler in Sankt Veit im Pongau represent the Austrian regional fine dining tradition at its most developed, and are worth considering for visitors building a multi-stop Austrian itinerary.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Restaurant Kornati?
The restaurant's name and its Star Wine List White Star recognition both point toward seafood and wine as the organisational logic of the menu. In a Dalmatian-inflected restaurant, the fish and shellfish courses are where the cuisine's identity is most legible. Order with the wine list in mind: the White Star designation suggests the list has the depth to reward pairing choices rather than defaulting to a house pour.
Do they take walk-ins at Restaurant Kornati?
The off-centre address on Franckstraße and the specialist wine program suggest a clientele that books ahead. In Graz, Star Wine List-recognised restaurants tend to fill on weekends through reservations rather than walk-in traffic. If you are in the city without a booking, it is worth calling ahead; without confirmed contact details in the current database, check current listings directly before visiting.
What makes Restaurant Kornati worth seeking out?
White Star from Star Wine List, published in January 2023, is the clearest credential available: it places Kornati in the tier of Graz restaurants where the wine list is a primary draw, not a secondary consideration. The Dalmatian culinary reference also gives it a distinct register within a city whose dining scene is otherwise weighted toward Styrian and central European traditions. For visitors who eat around wine rather than the reverse, that combination is genuinely specific.
What if I have allergies at Restaurant Kornati?
Specific menu details and allergen policies are not available in the EP Club database for Kornati. In Austria, restaurants are legally required to disclose major allergens on request, so staff should be able to address dietary needs directly. Contact the venue in advance if allergies are a concern; current phone and website details are leading sourced through current online listings given the information available here.
Is Restaurant Kornati a good choice for a wine-focused dinner in Graz?
Among Graz restaurants with a documented wine credential, Kornati's Star Wine List White Star, awarded in January 2023, is a concrete signal of list quality. The Dalmatian culinary frame makes it a coherent pairing for visitors interested in Adriatic whites and Croatian grape varieties alongside Styrian producers, a combination not widely available elsewhere in the city. For those specifically building an evening around wine, the White Star designation makes Kornati a logical first stop in the research process.
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