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Where to eat… Dutch food in Amsterdam

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By Vicky Hampton

In all honesty, I don’t eat a huge amount of Dutch food. Yes, I live in the Netherlands – but it seems that even the average Dutch person doesn’t eat that much of their national cuisine – especially those who live in Amsterdam. Yes, we might order some bitterballen or ossenworst with our beer, or perhaps indulge in Dutch pancakes on a hungover Saturday, but a full a full meal of Dutch food? Not so much. And yet, when I’m approached to write articles, it’s the topic I’m most likely to be asked to write on. And so, I thought long and hard and I came up with this list of Dutch restaurants in Amsterdam… These places range from traditional to modern, and from cafés where you might eat just a lunchtime snack to restaurants for a splash-out dinner. I say this all the time, but on this occasion the words are especially appropriate: Eet Smakelijk!
 

Dutch food tours in Amsterdam

Before we get into the list of actual restaurants, a quick note about food tours. I’ve taken absolutely loads of food tours (partly because I was editorial manager at a food tours company for three years) and I genuinely think they’re an excellent way to get to know a city. In Amsterdam’s case, they’re also a great way to get to know Dutch food, as they allow you to taste lots of small snacks without having to commit to an entire meal. I recommend the food tours by Eating Amsterdam and Devour Tours although there are other options on TripAdvisor. If I may offer one further piece of advice: if you’re only in Amsterdam for a long weekend or a short stay, take your food tour on day one. No only with it help you to get your bearings geographically, but your tour guide can also give you recommendations for where to eat over the coming days.

Want to eat more than Dutch food in Amsterdam? Download my Amsterdam Restaurant Guide:

Best Dutch Restaurants in Amsterdam

Fine dining: Floreyn

There’s very little Dutch food in Amsterdam that’s both sophisticated and true to its traditions. But Floreyn walks that line perfectly. Think bitterbal, but then filled with Messeklever cheese and served with smoked beetroot, radish, apple and fennel. Or mustard soup that’s been deconstructed into a clear broth with a cheese foam and three types of mustard. Even the dessert we ate used local, seasonal vegetables: carrot and parsnip ice cream with a sweet hutspot and citrusy crème brulee. This is very accomplished cooking that stays true to its Dutch roots. It may not be cheap, but the quality of Floreyn’s food and wines, as well as its great location in de Pijp, is more than worth the price tag.

Restaurant Floreyn - Dutch cheese bitterbal
Dutch fine dining at Floreyn

Modern: Wilde Zwijnen

Wilde Zwijnen translates as “wild boar” in English, although I’ve been disappointed never to see it on the menu. That said, you won’t be disappointed with the creative, seasonally led Dutch cuisine on offer at this modern classic restaurant. They serve a fixed three-, four- or five-course menu that can be vegetarian, fish-based or meat-based (including game) depending on your preferences. And everything comes from Dutch soil, waters or fields.

Salad Eetbar Wilde Zwijnen Amsterdam
Wilde Zwijnen: the new Dutch cuisine

Local: de Kas

You can’t get much more local than plucking your fruit, veggies and herbs from your own garden or greenhouse. And that’s exactly what de Kas (meaning: greenhouse) does at their Amsterdam restaurant adjacent to the Frankendael Park. What they can’t source from their own grounds, they procure from nearby farms. The menu is heavy on vegetables (unsurprisingly) so dinner at de Kas leaves you feeling light and a little virtuous, too.

Ultra-local food at de Kas (Dutch for greenhouse)
Ultra-local food at de Kas (Dutch for greenhouse)

Hotel restaurant: Carstens

Hotel restaurants went through a decade or two of falling out of fashion, but thankfully they’re now holding their own – and housing some of Amsterdam’s best restaurants. I was recently invited to Carstens Brasserie, in the Park Plaza Victoria hotel – handily located right next to Centraal Station. Perhaps unusually for a restaurant catering to visitors, the menu really does focus on Dutch food – right down to the wine list that featured no less than three Dutch bottles from the south of the country. We ordered the four-course chef’s menu, and particularly enjoyed the roasted tomatoes with hangop (a strained yoghurt that’s similar to labneh) and the pork belly with Dutch seaweed and a tart beurre blanc. It all paired perfectly with the Apostelhoeve Cuvée XII: a white blend of Müller-Thurgau, Auxerrois and Pinot Gris from Limburg, the Netherlands’ southernmost (and hilliest) province.

Carstens Brasserie – part of the Park Plaza Victoria hotel

Editor’s note: I was invited to eat at Carstens Brasserie as a journalist, and I didn’t pay for my meal. Obviously I try to be as objective as possible, but I always disclose when I’ve had a freebie.

Dutch eetcafes: Cafe Hesp and Myrabelle

The funny thing about eetcafes (literally, casual cafés that you eat in) is that a quick glance at the menu might not scream Dutch food – but they’re an inextricable part of Dutch culture. They’ll generally serve hearty, meaty fare like a simple steak & chips or pork schnitzel with salad (although there will always be at least one veggie option). My favourite Dutch eetcafe staple, however, is the satay: a skewer of marinated meat (generally chicken or pork) with lashings of sweet-savoury peanut sauce. It’s a bastardised verison of an Indonesian dish, which has become a national favourite the way chicken tikka masala has become a national favourite in the UK. Unsurprisingly then, satay generally comes with chips (fries) and mayonnaise, a few pickles and some prawn crackers. A classic Dutch eetcafe will always serve satay alongside a selection of beer and jenever (and lots of other drinks besides), and should be cosy and dark and look like it hasn’t been repainted in a few years. My eetcafes of choice are currently Cafe Hesp on Weesperzijde and Myrabelle on the Canal Belt, but they tend to vary depending on what’s closest to my apartment or my office.

Cosy interior at Dutch eetcafe Myrabelle

Lunch café: Gartine

While Gartine has its own moestuin (allotment), it’s not quite as close to the restaurant as de Kas’s – which is hardly surprising given that Gartine is sandwiched between the Kalverstraat and the Rokin in the centre of town. I should more properly call it a “tearoom”, as it’s open for breakfast, lunch and high tea, but not dinner. The location is delicate and classy, but in an old-fashioned way – as if your grandma had taken a degree in interior design. The food is likewise: eggs benedict with salmon for breakfast, crayfish rillettes for lunch, and a plethora of tarts and cupcakes at tea time. While the menu doesn’t exactly scream Dutch, everything is made with such local products that I think it classifies for inclusion.

Pancakes: Pannenkoekenhuis Upstairs and Pancakes Amsterdam

You can’t visit Amsterdam without trying the legendary Dutch pancakes, and I have two top tips for where to taste them. My most-loved Dutch pancake house is Pannenkoekenhuis Upstairs, which is (unsurprisingly) up an extraordinarily steep and narrow flight of stairs – even by Holland’s standards. It’s a tiny place, and easy to miss, but worth it once you get inside. Teapots hang from the ceiling in every size and shape, while the pancakes are the diametre of dinner plates and as thick as pizzas, with both sweet and savoury toppings. Try a hearty classic like ham and cheese (add pineapple if you’re feeling the Hawaiian thing), or go sweet with apple, cinnamon and whipped cream.

Traditional Dutch pancakes are a must when visiting Amsterdam

Meanwhile, Pancakes Amsterdam serves some of the best pannenkoeken in the city, and while you will see plenty of tourists, locals do treat themselves to the occasional pancake there too. Of course, you can order the regular toppings (ham and cheese, apple and stroop, and so on), but you’ll also find some more adventurous combinations. I tried one of the house specials: camembert, ham, chicory and raspberry sauce – it sounds odd, but it was strangely addictive. Mr Foodie went for a sweet-n-savoury combo of bacon, bananas and chilli – it was equally tasty so I demanded we share.

Want to eat more than Dutch food in Amsterdam? Download my Amsterdam Restaurant Guide:

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