Restaurants obsessed with provenance usually express that obsession quietly, in the language of menus and sourcing notes. Baest does something different: it puts the production on show. Above the dining room, a micro-dairy produces fresh mozzarella every morning; beside the kitchen, a salumeria cures the charcuterie that arrives at the table as the evening's first act. The result is a pizzeria that feels like walking into someone's agricultural project — one designed by a chef whose previous restaurant held a Michelin star and whose standards never adjusted downward simply because the format changed.
Christian Puglisi opened Baest in Norrebro in 2015, shortly before closing the celebrated Relae. The brief was Italian in spirit but Nordic in execution: organic flour, Danish dairy, seasonal vegetables from the farms that supplied Relae, fermented everything. The wood-fired oven produces pies with a particular character — the crust blistered and yielding, the toppings restrained in the way that only happens when you trust what's underneath. Alongside the pizza, the family-style format sends out plates of grilled meats, house charcuterie, and vegetables prepared with the kitchen's characteristic attention.
The room is large by Copenhagen standards, with exposed brick, communal energy, and a soundtrack that rarely dips below enthusiastic. This is not the place for a proposal or a private negotiation — it is the place where a group of ten people discovers that dinner can be one of the evening's genuinely memorable events rather than its preamble. Book ahead: Baest fills quickly and its reputation among both locals and international visitors has not diminished since opening.
The wine list reflects Puglisi's natural wine sympathies — a tight selection of orange and minimal-intervention labels from producers who share the kitchen's philosophy. Ask the floor team for guidance and accept whatever they suggest with the seasonal menu. The combination, on a good night in Norrebro, is hard to improve upon anywhere in the city.