Find out what Italian restaurants to try in Recklinghausen. Recklinghausen (German pronunciation: [ˌʁɛklɪŋˈhaʊzn̩] ( listen)) is the northernmost city in the Ruhr-Area and the capital of the Recklinghausen district. It borders the rural Münsterland and is characterized by large fields and farms in the north and industry in the south. Recklinghausen is the 60th-largest city in Germany and the 22nd-largest city in North Rhine-Westphalia.
Things to do in Recklinghausen
4 based on 30 reviews
I was here with a group of 12 people - one of whom is Italian. The staff are friendly and efficient, the food authentic. My Italian colleague said the place was "really Italian"
4 based on 12 reviews
Wer auf schwere Sahnesaucen steht, ist hier sicherlich gut aufgehoben... Es war nicht schlecht, aber auch nichts Besonderes. Das Ambiente ist mittelmäÃig, über die sanitären Anlagen schweigt man besser. Preis-Leistungs-Verhältnis stimmt. Kleiner Tipp: Frische Kräuter kosten nicht die Welt und sind um Längen besser als gefriergetrocknetes Zeug.
3 based on 36 reviews
Stopped for a coffee and enjoyed being outside so stayed for lunch and a beer. I decided to have a bruschetta and I could not finish it and is enough for 2. Outside closed for winter but plenty space inside. Open for all meals every day
3 based on 36 reviews
Stopped for a coffee and enjoyed being outside so stayed for lunch and a beer. I decided to have a bruschetta and I could not finish it and is enough for 2. Outside closed for winter but plenty space inside. Open for all meals every day
4 based on 41 reviews
Had a great lunch with excellent service. Menu choices good. Light and bright with comfortable seating areas
4 based on 30 reviews
The antipasti plate was really good, the main dishes were just ok. We had the tagliatelle with salmon, the pasta was a bit tough. Nothing to write home about but ok for a lunch.
4 based on 33 reviews
Technically it's not cash only as they also take EC, but if you are reading this in English, then you probably don't have EC, so effectively it is cash only. On my way out I looked for some type of sign concerning payment. There might have been one but I didn't see it. Thankfully I had (barely) enough Euros to cover the bill. Over the years I've spent several months in Germany and this is the first time I've run across this in something other than a street vendor.The place is nicely decorated. But the nice decor is taken down a few notches by the paper napkins on the table.The pasta dish I had was good as was the service.They don't have a website, just a facebook page. And if they have a menu posted online anywhere, I couldn't find it. Which is important because to me, it's a bit of an odd mix.So between not taking VISA and not having a menu posted online, I don't think they are really interested in the tourist trade. Which might be exactly what you are looking for. But be sure to bring a way to pay.
4 based on 99 reviews
Everyone knows the old cliche about finding a needle in a haystack: about locating a valuable resource in a heap of chaff. That idea applies with joyous vigor to the cleverly named S.Presso, a superb Italian bistro hidden along a twisted route in post-industrial Recklinghausen. To be sure, the venue seems less than promising, with its less-than-optimal view of a 1970s concrete-and-glass shopping bunker across the narrow street. Yet, through force of personality and through clever decorating, the proprietors of S.Presso have created a genuine Italian street-side feel, as if one were dining along a quaint old walkway in the purlieus of Rome. Better still is the cuisine. Inventive and yet solid, traditionally Italian yet also occasionally innovative, the menu at S.Presso, which abounds in both standard dishes and daily specials, presents all the options that a diner at an Italian eatery would expect yet dazzles the imagination with new inventions (for example, the new vegetable, zucchini-based bruschetta). Every dish that we enjoyed during no less than three visits was brilliantly executed, whether the umami-abundant Gorgonzola pasta or the crisply vibrant pizza or the scrumptious appetizers. Service is friendly but pleasantly understated; quiet competence is the watchword. A veritable Cinderella's slipper in amidst the clog-like interior of old Recklinghausen, S.Presso can hold its own against any Italian cafe anywhere in the world. Its food, especially its homemade pasta, is always delicious and is always executed on-point; its atmosphere is friendly, convivial, and uplifting, as if it were irradiated with Italian sunshine.
5 based on 72 reviews
Burgerfleisch hat eine sehr gute Qualität, auf glutenfreie Zubereitung der entsprechenden Speisen wird groÃen Wert gelegt.Noch nie was zu meckern gehabt.
Recklinghausen Food Guide: 10 Must-Eat Restaurants & Street Food Stalls in Recklinghausen
3 based on 36 reviews
Stopped for a coffee and enjoyed being outside so stayed for lunch and a beer. I decided to have a bruschetta and I could not finish it and is enough for 2. Outside closed for winter but plenty space inside. Open for all meals every day
What to do and see in Recklinghausen, Germany: The Best Places and Tips
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