Restaurant in Vienna, Austria
die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt
100ptsFirst-District Provisions Counter

About die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt
Die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt is a specialty food shop at one of Vienna's most central addresses, Neuer Markt in the 1st district. It's the right stop for quality-focused shoppers after Austrian regional produce, charcuterie, and pantry goods — walk-in, no booking required. For a sit-down meal, look elsewhere; for serious sourcing, it's a practical first-district option.
Verdict
Die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt sits at one of Vienna's most central addresses — Neuer Markt 10/11, in the heart of the 1st district — which tells you something useful before you even step inside: location is doing real work here. As a specialty food shop and delicatessen, it occupies a category that Vienna does well, and if you're the kind of visitor or local who returns to a good producer-driven counter looking for what's new or what's seasonal, this is a reasonable place to build that habit. Whether it's the right stop for your specific errand or meal depends on what you're comparing it against, so read on before committing.
About die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt
The name signals the format: Feinkosterei means fine food shop, and the Neuer Markt address puts it within easy reach of the Stephansdom quarter, the Albertina, and the main hotel corridor along the Ringstraße. For a visitor staying centrally, that's a practical advantage over delicatessens that require a tram ride. Vienna's delicatessen tradition is well-established , the city has long supported high-quality charcuterie, cheese, preserved goods, and regional Austrian specialties at the retail level, and venues in this category tend to live or die by the quality of their sourcing relationships with producers in Austria, Styria, and the broader Alpine region.
Sourcing is the metric that matters most in this format. A good Viennese Feinkosterei will stock items you cannot find in a supermarket: raw-milk cheeses from small dairies, single-origin honeys, dry-cured meats from regional farms, and vinegars or oils that justify a detour. The question for die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt is whether its sourcing rises to that standard. Without confirmed menu or product data in our records, we cannot make that call with precision, but the address and format suggest a venue aimed at the quality-conscious shopper or visitor rather than the budget end of the category.
If you've been once and found the selection worthwhile, the case for returning is direct: specialty food shops at this price tier tend to rotate stock seasonally, and a second visit in a different month will likely surface different producers and preserved goods. Austrian autumn and winter, for instance, bring distinct regional products , pumpkin seed oil from Styria, game-season charcuterie, new-harvest dried pulses , that would not appear on a summer visit. That seasonal rhythm is part of what makes a return visit to any serious Feinkosterei worth planning.
For those exploring beyond Vienna, Austria's broader fine-dining and artisan food scene is worth knowing: Döllerer in Golling an der Salzach and Obauer in Werfen are two of the country's most serious producer-driven kitchens outside the capital, and both work with the kind of suppliers a leading Viennese Feinkosterei should be drawing from. Landhaus Bacher in Mautern an der Donau is another reference point for Austrian ingredient sourcing done seriously.
Within Vienna's restaurant scene, venues like Steirereck im Stadtpark and Mraz & Sohn set the benchmark for how regional Austrian produce can be treated at the highest level. A good delicatessen in the same city should be sourcing from overlapping producer networks. You can also browse our full Vienna restaurants guide, our full Vienna bars guide, our full Vienna hotels guide, our full Vienna wineries guide, and our full Vienna experiences guide for broader planning context.
Practical Details
Address: Neuer Markt 10/11, 1010 Wien, Austria. Reservations: Likely walk-in; no booking data confirmed. Budget: Not confirmed , expect pricing consistent with a central-Vienna specialty food shop. Dress: No dress code expected for a delicatessen format. Groups: Leading suited to small parties or solo visitors browsing and buying; large groups are not typical for this format. Accessibility: Ground-floor address on a central square; likely step-free but confirm directly.
How It Compares
Vienna Restaurants Worth Knowing
- Steirereck im Stadtpark , Vienna's most acclaimed creative kitchen; book well ahead.
- Konstantin Filippou , Modern European precision; strong tasting menu offer.
- Amador , Creative fine dining worth considering for a special occasion.
- Doubek , A more casual creative option in the city.
- Mraz & Sohn , Modern Austrian with serious sourcing credentials.
- Ois in Neufelden and Schwarzer Adler in Hall in Tirol , Austria beyond Vienna for those extending their trip.
- Restaurant 141 by Joachim Jaud in Mieming , Worth the drive if you're heading west.
FAQ
- What should a first-timer know about die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt? It's a specialty food shop at a prime 1st-district address, so expect quality-focused retail rather than a full sit-down dining experience. Go with a list of what you're looking for , charcuterie, cheese, regional pantry goods , and treat it as a sourcing stop rather than a destination meal.
- How far ahead should I book die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt? No booking data is confirmed, but delicatessen-format venues in Vienna are generally walk-in. Check directly if you're planning around specific opening hours, particularly on Sundays or public holidays when central-Vienna retail schedules vary.
- What should I order at die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt? No confirmed product list is available in our records. For a venue of this type, Austrian regional specialties , cured meats, alpine cheeses, oils, and preserved goods , are the category to focus on. Ask the counter staff what's arrived recently; that's the most reliable guide in any serious Feinkosterei.
- Can die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt accommodate groups? Delicatessen formats are not typically built for large groups. For a group meal in Vienna, you'll get a better experience at a restaurant like Mraz & Sohn or Amador, which can handle bookings and table coordination.
- Does die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt handle dietary restrictions? No confirmed information available. For a retail food shop, the onus is on you to check labels and ask staff , there's no kitchen translating a menu. Call or visit directly for specifics.
- Can I eat at the bar at die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt? Unknown , venue format data is limited. Some Viennese Feinkostereien offer stand-up tasting counters or small plates alongside retail; others are pure retail. Confirm before visiting if that's your goal.
- What should I wear to die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt? No dress code is expected for a delicatessen. Smart casual is fine anywhere in central Vienna; there's no formality required here.
- Is die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt good for solo dining? Yes , if the venue has an eat-in counter, solo visitors are well-suited to this format. Browsing and buying at a specialty food shop is also a natural solo activity. For a full solo dining experience, Doubek or the counter seats at Konstantin Filippou are stronger options.
Compare die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt | Easy | ||
| Steirereck im Stadtpark | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Konstantin Filippou | Modern European, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Mraz & Sohn | Modern Austrian, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Silvio Nickol Gourmet Restaurant | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| APRON | Austrian, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
How die Feinkosterei Neuer Markt stacks up against the competition.
More restaurants in Vienna
- Steirereck im StadtparkAustria's most decorated restaurant by a wide margin — three Michelin stars, a top-25 World's 50 Best ranking, and a La Liste score of 98 points. Getting a table is genuinely hard (book four to six weeks out minimum), but Steirereck im Stadtpark justifies every effort with research-driven Austrian cuisine, an extraordinary wine programme, and service that makes three-star dining feel welcoming rather than forbidding.
- AmadorJuan Amador's three-Michelin-starred restaurant in Vienna's 19th district combines Spanish-influenced creativity with Austrian produce and Austria's top-ranked wine program. La Liste scores of 94-95 points and an OAD European ranking of #47 make the case clearly. Book at least six to eight weeks out for weekdays; Saturday tables require three to four months' notice minimum.
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