The 6 Best German Restaurants in St. Louis

The dining hall at Bevo Mill. | Cody Krogman   ” class=”uk-display-block uk-position-relative uk-visible-toggle”> The dining hall at Bevo Mill. | Cody Krogman During these cold winter months, we sit and daydream about our favorite fortifying comfort foods. This week, we’re craving hearty German fare — schnitzel (a thin boneless meat coated in bread crumbs and […]

Written by Sara Graham
02/26/2015
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During these cold winter months, we sit and daydream about our favorite fortifying comfort foods. This week, we’re craving hearty German fare — schnitzel (a thin boneless meat coated in bread crumbs and fried), wurst (sausage), spaetzle (potato dumplings) brezen (pretzels) and sauerbraten (vinegar- or wine-marinated pot roast), to name a few. St. Louis is no stranger to German cuisine, given Missouri’s deep German roots, but do you know where to go today for a proper German repast? Let us help you find the perfect spot to treat yourself, and don’t forget wash it all down with a cold beer.

See also: The 10 Best Mediterranean Restaurants in St. Louis

Bevo Mill
(4749 Gravois Avenue; 314-832-6776)

Many will recognize Bevo Mill for its huge working windmill, which is 60 feet in diameter and rotates on a 24-foot shaft extended through a marble bearing. The restaurant is a landmark for the city as well, defining a neighborhood once populated by German Americans. Recently renovated, the venue hosts a German night every third Friday of the month with a traditional German buffet, live fifteen-piece German brass band and rotating German craft beers. Every Sunday brings one of the largest brunch spreads in the city, with more than 45 items on the menu, including traditional German favorites like bratwurst, sauerkraut, knockwurst, Hungarian sausage, hardwood smoked bacon, whole-hog pork sausage, pickled salads and potato pancakes.

Schneithorst’s Restaurant and Bar
(1600 South Lindbergh; 314-993-4100)

Established in 1917 and family-owned since 1956, Schneithorst’s Restaurant and Bar offers traditional Bavarian-style cuisine along with American fine-dining favorites. The building is unmistakable, with timber beams that looks like they were plucked right out of a German village. A specialty of the haus is the traditional sauerbraten — flank steak marinated in an herbed burgundy red-wine sauce, grilled and simmered until it’s fork-tender and served with spaetzle and sweet and sour red cabbage. A customer favorite is the German sausage platter with bratwurst and knackwurst.

Al Smith’s Feasting Fox Restaurant & Pub
(4200 South Grand Boulevard; 314-352-3500)

Originally built in 1914 in Dutchtown, the building that now houses Al Smith’s Feasting Fox Restaurant & Pub has survived Prohibition, a devastating fire and years of neglect. It has recently been restored to its original timber-and-stucco glory, including the distinctive steeply pitched roof and corner turret. The menu leans heavily German, with American steaks and seafood sprinkled throughout. German specialties include Wiener schnitzel, Holsteiner schnitzel, pork jaeger schnitzel, sauerbraten, Black Forest sweet and sour pork and backbraten (meatloaf). Don’t even think about leaving without dessert — choose between a Black Forest torte, German chocolate cake or traditional apple strudel.

Urban Chestnut’s Grove Brewery and Bierhall
(4465 Manchester Avenue; 314-222-0143)

Urban Chestnut’s Grove Brewery and Bierhall serves traditional northern European dishes with an American twist. The menu’s most popular dish is the pork schnitzel sandwich with Missouri pork loin that has been breaded, fried and served on Companion sourdough bread with cabbage slaw and Dusseldorf mustard. Chef Andrew Fair’s current favorite dish is the Apotheosis pork sausage (made with Urban Chestnut’s Apotheosis beer), served with lentils and a leek vinaigrette. To satisfy your sweet tooth, try the Liege waffles (sugary crisp flattened waffles) or the German doughnuts.

Schlafly Tap Room
(2100 Locust Street; 314-241-2337)

The Schlafly Tap Room, one of St. Louis’ first craft breweries, offers a European pub-inspired menu alongside a full menu of beer-pairing-optimized American dishes. You’ll find traditional dishes such as pork schnitzel, the “plate of swine” (a sampler platter that includes a grilled pork chop, a Hefeweizen bratwurst and beer-battered bacon), Bavarian-style pretzels, pickled herring and beer bread.

Stone Hill Winery’s Vintage Restaurant
(1110 Stone Hill Highway, Hermann; 573-486-3479)

If you’re in the mood for a day trip, travel to Stone Hill Winery’s Vintage Restaurant in the German-settled town of Hermann. The menu offers a journey back in time with traditional German cuisine. For small plates, a wurst sampler includes two German sausages with sauerkraut, housemade pickles, pickled red onion, whole-grain mustard and grilled caraway rye. The wild mushroom strudel features sautéed local wild mushrooms with spinach and Swiss cheese baked in phyllo served warm with a Stone Hill Chardonel crème sauce. Entrées include a cornucopia of German flavors — pork schnitzel, sauerbraten, grilled pork Kasseler rippchen, breaded chicken schnitzel with housemade spaetzle and a pretzel-crusted Atlantic salmon.

Follow Sara Graham on Instagram at @EngageTaste and Twitter at @EngageTaste. E-mail the author at [email protected].


 

 

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