Karlsruhe Karlsruhe

Karlsruhe è conosciuta per il suo layout cittadino a ventaglio e la vibrante scena culturale, con piatti tradizionali come Maultaschen e Flammkuchen, che riflettono la sostanziosa cucina locale.

Alte Bank

Alte Bank

Herrenstr. 30, 76133, Karlsruhe, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany

Barren • Kaffee • Deutsch • Kneipen


"We stumbled upon Alte Bank by accident! We were wandering looking for a restaurant - any restaurant (though preferably German cuisine)! It was 7pm and we were hungry! - suitable for our family: two adults and two small children. We spotted a family with a small child in Alte Bank and decided to give it a try.We ordered what we consider to be basic German fare but were really impressed at the quality of our food. The entrees were delicious (and big!). We had schnitzel (perfectly crunchy!), pork tenderloin (nicely cooked with a delicious sauce) and spatzle (great texture, and so good with the sauce!). Our toddler ate from the kids menu (a huge serving of spaghetti and red sauce, which he loved!). The food came quickly once we placed our order. Everything was the right temperature and the prices were very reasonable, especially considering the large portion sizes.Our server was a very friendly women with very good English. She helped us navigate the menu (we have very little German). Even more, she anticipated our needs. We didn't know if they had a high chair (and didn't know how to ask!) - she brought one a few minutes after taking our drink order. When our youngest started making a fuss, she brought him some coasters to play with and then a basket of some fresh baguette (no charge!) to nibble. It was a very down-to-earth, no-fuss dinner with good beer, good food and good service.We would go back for sure - with or without our kids in tow!"

Brauhaus 2.0

Brauhaus 2.0

Egon-Eiermann-Allee 8, 76187, Karlsruhe, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany

Bier • Steak • Kaffee • Deutsch


"We have been here for a couple of times now, and in most of the cases everything was somehow neither good nor bad at all. When sitting outside, the weather let us forget the little things about the service, i.e. "it is not allowed to sit on this part of the terrace" or "sorry I forget your xyz" or "sorry that the xyz is cold - I will tell the kitchen". Last Sunday we went here and had the Rumpsteak for 24 EUR and the Pfännle for around 18 EUR - my steak was ok but not hot, the Pfännle was cold. We returned the Pfännle and asked for some extra heat or fire to get a hot meal. They gave it back with some extra hot sauce, but this hot sauce covered only a still frozen meal... lucky us, they never asked us if everything is ok after our first complains. So, to make a long story short: We were really annoyed about this and had a bad experience and afternoon for a little over 50 EURs (including 3 drinks). Usually I wouldn't complain here about this - but it happened now 3-4 times and they make a habit out of it: Every time they beg the one with the cold meal for sorry and offer him or her a coffee - while the others have to wait as they do not get a coffee for free OR have to buy a coffee so that the other person does not need to drink the coffee alone.So, Brauhaus 2.0 - here is an idea: Offer the whole table a free coffee, when you are not able to serve hot meals, as the whole table suffered from the one bad meal - this is what I would call Brauhaus 2.5 - or even better: simply serve hot meals -or- only salads and ice cream, which would make you almost immediately my Brauhaus 3.0."

Yangda Nudelspezialitäten

Yangda Nudelspezialitäten

Kaiserstraße 114, 76133 Karlsruhe, Germany

Bier • Asiatisch • Europäisch • Chinesisch


"With the Yangda, more precisely the three Yangdas in Karlsruhe, we have an alternating history. I'll just get a little. 2015 (the blue waterline is fortunately back away The restaurant in Kaiserstraße (the original was opened in 2011). It's pretty hidden in the upper floor, and you have to go through a narrow house corridor. So it took a while to discover the restaurant. At the end of 2015 we climbed the first time through the stairwell and were surprised in many ways. Inside it looked pretty bulging, with furniture from the 50s, dead flower gods on the window bench and beer boxes stacked around the counter. The audience consisted mainly of Chinese students (or student-looking non-students. Together, we had interpreted both as a safe sign that we had a short trip to China here. And so it came. The card was very long and also contained several mute samples, such as pork ears or all sorts of components of the Swedish digestive tract. However, we got in quite normal and moved the mute samples to a later visit. I still know that we had an excellent Beijing soup, not a pudding that can be put on the head. I don't remember the rest. At that time, we did not know that the card does not consist of a huge number of different dishes, which in the end all taste the same, because the same sauce is tipped over everything, i.e. the senogermanian uniform kitchen, but that each dish has its own provenance and touch. At one of the next visits, I had ordered Dim Sums, hoping that they reached the level of the experience so far, and was bitterly disappointed. The things served on a plate were bought and tasted like that. At the bottom the water ran out so that the poor dough pieces soon stood in an unappetitious puddle. On my question, I was told that Dim Sums did too much work. Well, then. After that we made a wide arc around the restaurant until it was closed for half a year at the end of 2017. In the meantime, however, two deputies of the same name had been opened (I can't say in what order that led on TripAdvisor to a holy mess. In the Passagehof branch the mentioned mute sample took place, a powerfully sharp soup with pork intestine and likes, shrimps and plentiful tofu. With a bite of the latter, I was able to recover from the dizzy stomach intestine ingredients. I'll show this here, even if it's strictly not part of the Kaiserstrasse branch, but it might have looked the same way. My wife had only looked at me all the time with a headache; that you can hunt with internals. I can also understand that not everyone and every woman value it when what swims in the soup looks like pathological cuts. That was then the first and at the same time the last test of courage, and then we were no longer in the Passagehof. This was due to the fact that we also discovered the branch in the Ettlinger Avenue for us, which we have since visited for many reasons about once a month. The main reason is the cumin lamb, which I order every second time. Back to the original. In the summer of 2018, after a successful reconstruction, reopened. The counter was migrated and the beer boxes were gone. The essential change, however, was that the kitchen had been radically changed: instead of a panchinese offer, there were exclusively uigurian cuisine, according to which the decoration was also designed. We are, of course, equally happy, even against the background that Uighur culture deserves every form of support. That we were the only guests, about three weeks after the opening, had scared us. After us came another couple; Chinese no longer showed up. This may have had political reasons, but could also have been located on the kitchen. My cattle Laghman (noodles still tasted very well, while my wife didn't bring her completely dried chicken kebabs down. I had to trade. This should be good for about half a year or did not go well, at least in the beginning of 2019 the kitchen was turned back to the normal Yangda offer, extended by a few specialties that exist only in this branch. Since then we have been there twice; both times we were surprised how empty it was still at the best lunchtime. (In the meantime, we know that practically at the same time and not too far away the Monkey King opened. All the Chinese are sitting there. Here it used to be full One of the specialties was steamed egg with shells. As always open for unusual combinations, I had to order them. It turned out to be a rather gliberous flan, from which large clams of Venus looked out in their shells, but which was neither sufficiently stocked nor somehow seasoned the most exciting, nor the overcrowded spring onions. We believe that the recipe must still be used. The steamed Wolfsbarsch was good, but also here it is necessary to say that the cook at Ettlinger Straße gets the Tunke more original. The waiting period was for us to actually sit alone in the restaurant quite long. Epilog: Five minutes after we left the restaurant, it started to rumor in my gut so that I just managed to get to the next public toilet in supreme need. It must have looked very funny, but it wasn't. If that was a coincidence, but a very unusual one, because I've never seen anything like that. Probably it was a lot of half-gar egg. "Now you know. Do whatever it is, your thing, I can't take care of everything. Your Olaf.”"