Restaurant in Vienna, Austria
SHIKI Brasserie & Bar
435ptsJapanese-European hybrid that earns its Michelin Plate.

About SHIKI Brasserie & Bar
SHIKI Brasserie & Bar holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and a White Star wine recognition at the €€ price point in Vienna's 1st district. The Japanese-European hybrid kitchen runs on a specialist-chef model, making it one of the city's most accessible credentialed options for mixed-preference groups. Book one to two weeks ahead — counter seating is the best seat in the house.
Who Should Book SHIKI — and When
If you are in Vienna with a group that splits between raw-fish enthusiasts and committed European-cuisine diners, SHIKI Brasserie & Bar at Krugerstraße 3 in the 1st district is one of the few places in the city where both sides leave satisfied. It holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, earns a White Star recognition on Star Wine List, and sits at the €€ price point — making it one of the more accessible Japanese-European crossover addresses in a city where serious dining typically runs to €€€€. Book it for a relaxed weeknight dinner, a date where the food preferences do not fully align, or any occasion where you want something more considered than a standard sushi counter without committing to a full tasting-menu spend.
The Room and the Energy
SHIKI reads as a brasserie in the truest sense: the energy is lively without tipping into loud, and the atmosphere sits closer to a polished neighbourhood room than a hushed fine-dining temple. The name itself translates as "the four seasons," and the We're Smart Green Guide recognition signals that the kitchen takes seasonal sourcing seriously , a commitment that gives the room a certain coherence you notice without necessarily being able to name it. This is not the place to come if you want silence and ceremony. The ambient feel is conversational and social, which makes it well-suited to groups of two to four who want to talk as much as eat.
The counter and bar seating at SHIKI are worth requesting specifically. In a format that blends Japanese and European technique across multiple specialist chefs , each responsible for their own section of the kitchen , sitting at the counter gives you proximity to the production that a table in the main room does not. For the explorer-type diner who wants to watch the interplay between Japanese precision and European brasserie rhythm, this is the vantage point that earns its seat. If you are booking for two, ask for counter placement when you reserve.
The Food and Drink Credentials
The kitchen is structured around specialists rather than a single head chef, with different sections of the menu , Japanese, European, and the overlap between the two , handled by dedicated cooks. The We're Smart Green Guide notes that the plant-based dishes are genuinely well-executed, not tokenistic additions, which matters if your group includes anyone eating that way. The Michelin Plate recognition, held across both 2024 and 2025, confirms consistent kitchen quality without placing SHIKI in the upper tier of the city's tasting-menu circuit. Think of it as a reliable, well-run room rather than a destination meal. The Star Wine List White Star points to a wine program with real curation , relevant if you plan to drink beyond the basic by-the-glass options.
For context on where SHIKI fits in Vienna's Japanese dining picture: UNKAI offers a more formal, traditional Japanese experience at a higher price point, while Mochi skews younger and more casual with a tighter, izakaya-influenced menu. SHIKI occupies the middle ground , more European integration than UNKAI, more polish than Mochi.
Booking and Practical Details
Reservations at SHIKI are categorised as easy to secure. The Michelin Plate recognition brings a degree of demand, but this is not a room where you need to plan six weeks out. One to two weeks ahead is generally sufficient for weekday evenings; aim for the same window on weekends to be safe. Reservations: Easy , one to two weeks ahead covers most dates, counter seating on request. Dress: No stated dress code, but the 1st district address and brasserie format suggest smart-casual is appropriate. Budget: €€ , among the more accessible options for this style of cooking in Vienna's Innere Stadt. Address: Krugerstraße 3, 1010 Wien.
How It Compares: Vienna's Dining Context
SHIKI does not compete directly with Vienna's Michelin-starred circuit. Steirereck im Stadtpark, Amador, and Doubek are all operating at a different level of ambition and price. If you are visiting Vienna specifically to eat at the leading of the city's creative dining scene, those are your targets. SHIKI earns its place for a different reason: it delivers a credentialed, multi-specialist kitchen at a price that does not require a special-occasion budget. For food-focused travelers who want to eat well across multiple nights without front-loading every meal, SHIKI is a sensible addition to a rotation that might also include a single big-ticket booking at one of the starred addresses.
If you are exploring Austria more broadly, the country's serious dining scene extends well beyond Vienna. Döllerer in Golling an der Salzach, Ikarus in Salzburg, and Griggeler Stuba in Lech each represent different registers of Austrian fine dining worth planning around. And for travelers who use Vienna as a base before or after Japan, comparing SHIKI's Japanese-European hybrid approach against the source material at addresses like Myojaku or Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo is a useful exercise in understanding what the transplant gains and loses in translation.
For a full picture of what Vienna offers across every category, see our full Vienna restaurants guide, our full Vienna hotels guide, our full Vienna bars guide, our full Vienna wineries guide, and our full Vienna experiences guide.
FAQs
What should a first-timer know about SHIKI Brasserie & Bar?
SHIKI is a Japanese-European hybrid at the €€ price point in Vienna's 1st district. The kitchen runs on a specialist model , different chefs handle different sections , so the menu covers more ground than a standard Japanese restaurant. Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025 confirms consistent quality. First-timers should note the plant-based dishes are genuinely well-executed, the wine program has real credentials (White Star, Star Wine List), and counter seating gives a better read on how the kitchen operates than a standard table. For comparison, it sits between Mochi (more casual) and UNKAI (more formal and expensive) in Vienna's Japanese dining spectrum.
How far ahead should I book SHIKI Brasserie & Bar?
Booking difficulty is rated easy. One to two weeks ahead is sufficient for most weekday slots; for weekends or specific counter seating, book toward the two-week end. The Michelin Plate status adds some demand, but SHIKI is not in the category of Vienna's hardest reservations , unlike addresses such as Steirereck im Stadtpark, which books out significantly further in advance.
What should I wear to SHIKI Brasserie & Bar?
No formal dress code is listed, but the 1st district Innere Stadt location and the brasserie format both point toward smart-casual as the appropriate register. Think clean, put-together rather than jacket-required. At the €€ price point this is not a room where jeans will get you turned away, but the neighbourhood and the room's quality level suggest making an effort is the right call.
Is SHIKI Brasserie & Bar good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. SHIKI works well for a birthday dinner, anniversary, or any occasion where the group has mixed food preferences, because the Japanese-European hybrid format accommodates a wider range of tastes than a single-cuisine restaurant at this price point. Michelin Plate recognition and a curated wine list give it enough credential to feel like a proper occasion booking. For a more formally impressive special-occasion meal, the €€€€ tier , Amador or Doubek , sets a higher table. But if budget is a factor, SHIKI delivers a credentialed room without the full-tasting-menu spend.
Is the tasting menu worth it at SHIKI Brasserie & Bar?
Specific tasting menu details are not confirmed in the available data, so a direct price-per-course assessment cannot be made here. What the record does support: SHIKI holds two consecutive Michelin Plates and a White Star wine recognition at the €€ price bracket, which positions any structured menu offering as strong value relative to Vienna's €€€€ fine-dining circuit. The multi-specialist kitchen model and the We're Smart Green Guide plant-based recognition both suggest a tasting format would reflect the kitchen's range well. For confirmed menu details and pricing, check directly with the restaurant at Krugerstraße 3, 1010 Wien.
Compare SHIKI Brasserie & Bar
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| SHIKI Brasserie & Bar | Japanese | €€ | 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 |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about SHIKI Brasserie & Bar?
SHIKI runs a split-kitchen model: different specialist chefs handle the Japanese and European sections of the menu, so you are not locked into one cuisine direction at the table. The Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) signals consistent kitchen execution rather than destination-level ambition. At the €€ price point, it sits comfortably between Vienna's casual sushi counters and its starred dining rooms. The address on Krugerstraße puts it squarely in the first district, walkable from the main hotel corridor.
How far ahead should I book SHIKI Brasserie & Bar?
Reservations are generally easy to secure — this is not a room where tables disappear weeks in advance. Booking a few days ahead should suffice for most visits, though weekend evenings in peak tourist season warrant a little more lead time. The Michelin Plate status adds a degree of demand, but SHIKI is not operating in the same scarcity bracket as Steirereck or Konstantin Filippou.
What should I wear to SHIKI Brasserie & Bar?
The brasserie format and €€ pricing suggest a relaxed but presentable standard — think neat city clothes rather than formal attire. SHIKI draws a younger crowd that engages seriously with Japanese food, so the room skews stylish rather than stuffy. Overdressing for a starred restaurant would be out of place here.
Is SHIKI Brasserie & Bar good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. The Michelin Plate recognition and the specialist-kitchen structure give it enough polish for a meaningful dinner, and the Japanese-European range means mixed groups are well accommodated. It works well for occasions where you want quality and a lively atmosphere without the formality or price pressure of Vienna's starred circuit. For a milestone dinner with serious ceremony, Silvio Nickol or Konstantin Filippou set a different tone.
Is the tasting menu worth it at SHIKI Brasserie & Bar?
The menu format at SHIKI is not documented in detail in available venue data, so a specific tasting-menu verdict can change here. What is clear is that the kitchen is organised around specialists across Japanese and European sections, and the We're Smart Green Guide has flagged the plant-based dishes as genuinely well-executed. At the €€ price range, the value proposition across both a la carte and any set formats sits well below what Vienna's starred rooms charge for comparable kitchen ambition. Check the venue's official channels for the latest details.
Recognized By
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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