Head-to-Head · Munich
JAN vs Tohru in der Schreiberei
Munich's two three-star tables: Jan Hartwig's refined Franco-German classicism against Tohru Nakamura's German-Japanese fusion. Book JAN for polish, Tohru for cross-cultural nerve.
The Verdict
JAN is the classicist. Jan Hartwig opened his eponymous restaurant on Luisenstrasse near Konigsplatz in May 2022, having already earned three stars at his previous kitchen, and reclaimed all three at JAN within months, one of the fastest ascents in German dining. The cooking bridges French haute technique and German classics, turning meatloaf, egg with mustard sauce and Handkas mit Musik into precise, layered dishes across a fixed seven-course menu. It scores 9 for food, 9 for the room and 8 for value, and it is the more polished, Franco-German of the two.
Tohru in der Schreiberei is the bridge-builder. Munich-born, German-Japanese chef Tohru Nakamura earned his third star in 2025, making his restaurant the second three-star table in the city, set in the Schreiberei, one of Munich's oldest townhouses. His cooking moves between Japanese, French and Bavarian registers within a single dish, tilting the balance one way then the other. It scores 9 for food, 9 for the room and 8 for value, and it is the more cross-cultural, adventurous of the two.
Both hold three stars and both bridge cultures, so the choice is accent. JAN leans French-German and classical, the more composed and refined plate; Tohru leans German-Japanese and exploratory, the more surprising one. One perfects a tradition, the other crosses several.
Scores, Side by Side
| Score | JAN | Tohru in der Schreiberei |
|---|---|---|
| Food | 9 / 10 | 9 / 10 |
| Atmosphere | 9 / 10 | 9 / 10 |
| Value | 8 / 10 | 8 / 10 |
Which One for Which Occasion
| Occasion | Editorial Pick |
|---|---|
| A classical three-star dinner | JANJan Hartwig's Franco-German precision and fixed seven-course menu make it the more polished, traditional choice. |
| An adventurous, cross-cultural meal | Tohru in der SchreibereiTohru Nakamura's German-Japanese-French cooking is built for diners who want surprise over orthodoxy. |
| A milestone celebration | JANOne of the fastest three-star ascents in German history makes JAN the table with the bigger occasion story. |
| A design-and-history setting | Tohru in der SchreibereiDining in one of Munich's oldest townhouses gives Tohru the more atmospheric, historic room. |
| A connoisseur's treat | JANReworked German classics under French technique reward a diner who knows the canon being reinvented. |
Price and How to Book
The split is classicism versus crossover. JAN seats its Maxvorstadt room near Konigsplatz, runs a fixed seven-course menu and books well ahead for its three-star service; the full picture is in the JAN review. Tohru in der Schreiberei serves Tohru Nakamura's German-Japanese menu in a historic Altstadt townhouse and also releases tables in advance; the detail sits in the Tohru review. Both anchor our Munich dining guide.
For cuisine context, weigh JAN against the best modern European restaurants worldwide and Tohru against the world's finest Japanese-influenced kitchens. For occasion fit, see our picks for an anniversary and a first date. More Munich match-ups sit on the compare index, including JAN vs Tantris.