For the fourth out of five years, I've been invited to speak at a conference in Europe, the week after Thanksgiving. One of these days I'll get to an LTH Holiday party again. Previous ones were in Barcelona, Vienna and Nice (I missed last year's Zurich by not submitting an abstract early enough, but I'm looking forward to Dublin next year).
This year, had a great time in Munich, it's a terrific food town, especially during Christmastime, as the Weihnachtsmarkt/Christkindlmarkt booths serve a wide variety of food and drink.
Our habit is usually to tank up on breakfast (especially if it's free at the hotel), and nosh for lunch, topping off with a big dinner, so there's not a lot of lunchy places listed. The fact is that if you can't find lunch between the Viktualienmarkt and all the Christmas Markets (at least this time of year), you need a cane and a dog. There were a couple street food items I never got around to: currywurst and little potato pancakes -- maybe next time. Note that there's no reports on beer, we just don't drink beer.
If you're going to Munich and looking for a place to eat, I'd recommend looking a block or two off the Marienplatz -- prices will be lower, more variety. In general, meals are not cheap - a street wurst might be only 1-4 Euros, but I don't think I ever saw an entree under 10 (about $12.50 US), and getting charged 3E for 200ml of water can really sting. Bread service is not complimentary most places -- you'll get charged upward of a Euro if you eat a pretzel.
SundayWe got into town from the airport around 11AM, and planned to do our usual first-day jet-lag plan: Hit museums until we're exhausted, then nap and dinner.
The Belle Bleu Zentrum hotel is just two short blocks from the Hauptbanhof, in a neighborhood with a lot of strip clubs (relatively quiet and unseedy) and middle-eastern places (which we never got around to trying). Just before entering the Neue Pinakothek, we spotted a cafe that looked hopping, and had a reasonable-priced menu. We split an excellent pumpkin soup and a caesar salad (not quite standard dressing, more creamy, less salt but otherwise delicious).
Tresznjewski Cafe
Theresienstraße 72
80333 München
+49 (0) 089 282349
tresznjewski.com
(Tram 27 Pinakotheken)
For dinner we decided to try the Ratskeller based on recommendations above, and we were in the area -- I'm glad we did this on Sunday, because the rest of the week the Marienplatz neighborhood was packed with people coming down to the Christmas markets which started Monday. Sue had a roast pork dish, I had a braised beef which was pretty tasty... but nothing too special. A good intro to Bayern cuisine, though.
Ratskeller
Marienplatz 8
80331 München
+49 (0) 89 21 99 89 0
http://www.ratskeller.com(Marienplatz U-Bahn)
MondayMonday morning, we grabbed stuff from the Viktualienmarkt - cheese, sausage, bread and olives - and ate it after a marathon tour of the Residenz. The Viktualienmarkt isn't as vibrant as, say, the Boqueria in Barcelona, or the Naschmarkt in Vienna -- they shut down completely around 6PM, for one, and there's less exotic produce, more butchers. There was a vendor with about 14 different types of potato, and some very nice cheese shops.
(Marienplatz U-Bahn)
For dinner, we were back in the Marienplatz area, and stopped at the Augustiner, again based on recommendations above. We forgot to look for the seashell room, and just ate in the main hall. I had a Wienerschnitzel -- I very much like the Münchener version -- it's a toastier, darker crumb than the ones we had in Vienna.
Augustiner
Neuhauserstr. 27
80331 München
Tel. +49 (0) 089 - 23 183-257
http://www.augustiner-restaurant.com(Between Marienplatz and Karlsplatz U-bahn)
TuesdayWe spent most of the early part of the day at Dachau... not the most hunger-inducing tourism. Late lunch was a couple little bratwurst on a
semmel (bread roll) from Marienplatz Weinachtsmarkt. It's kind of funny to see two sausages sticking out of a roll three times as wide as they are. The only long roll I saw was for an extra-long wurst some vendor was selling. .
For dinner we went to look for Nage & Sauge referenced above, but wandered around in the freezing drizzle on
Marienstrasse instead of
Marienenstrasse and never found it, and instead meandered back to the neighborhood between the Viktualienmarkt and the Stadtmuseum, where we'd seen a number of small restaurants. We found a little Italian place, the menu is whatever's written on the blackboard. A nice soup, I had a Pasta Arrabiata with scamorza, Sue had a risotto which I thought was very good, if perhaps lacking a bit of zing (but that's my opinion of a lot of risottos: some sort of crisp, acidic or spicy garnish would elevate risotto nicely).
Baricentro
Sebastiansplatz 5
80331 Munich, Germany
089 23259980
baricentro.de
(Between Marienplatz and Sendinger Tor U-Bahn)
For dessert, we had previously seen a vendor in Marienplatz selling dampfknodel, or steamed dumpling, and Sue was anxious to try it. Imagine an unfilled
bao about the size of a baby's head, covered with vanilla sauce and cinnamon sugar (zimtzucker), although not as sickeningly sweet as that sounds. Tasty, but not something I need to eat again.
WednesdayWe'd moved to another hotel at this point on the east side of town. We took a tram back, and spent most of the day, including lunch, at the Deutschesmuseum. A fascinating place that's like the Museum of Science and Industry, but perhaps less kid-focused (and a model train layout almost as good as the old one at the MSI, even if it's HO-scale). There's a little internet cafe at the back of the second floor (behind the computers exhibit which includes a couple Enigma devices and a Univac), where I ordered a couple of weisswurst. It's a bland, spongy sausage, probably veal, and nearly snow-white in color. It's greatly improved by the sweet, spicy mustard served with it.

Deutschesmuseum
Museumsinsel 1, 80538 München, Germany
+49 89 21791
deutsches-museum.de
(Tram 16 Deutschesmuseum stop)
We stopped at a tram stop about midway back to find a restaurant. Some of the best Bavarian food we had was at the Hofbräukeller:
We started with
obatzda, a cheese spread a lot like beer cheese, made from camenbert and butter, topped with chives and red onion, served with brown bread and pretzels (we were charged separately for the pretzels, which I find bad form, as they were served with the other bread). I can't remember what Sue had, but I had an outstanding
schweinshaxe - crispy pork shank. Crisp cracklings around tender meat, served with a dark beer sauce and a potato dumpling. Dessert was apple fritters, which were made from battered appel slices, with a nice vanilla ice cream.

Hofbräukeller
Innere Wiener Straße 19
81667 Munich, Germany
089 4599250
hofbraeukeller.de
(Tram 16 Max Weber Platz)
ThursdayThursday and Friday I was stuck in the business conference while Sue was out playing tourist. Our sales guy took a bunch of folks out for dinner at Andescher am dom, a Munich restaurant that's an arm of the Andescher monastery brewery mentioned upthread. We had quite a feast, as shown in the photos below. Great food, lots of beer flowing (but not for me).
Appetizers: Obatzda, brown bread with butter and chives, brown bread with schmalz and crisp-fried onions, ham, sliced daikon, beef tartare

Mains: Wiener Schnitzel, Roast Pork, Sausage with kraut, potato salad, potatoes (the yellow things are lemons in cheesecloth)

Dessert (sorry for the dark photo): Cheese struedel, apple fritters, something with chocolate I can't remember

Andechser am Dom
Weinstraße 7a, 80333 München, Germany
+49 89 298481
andechser-am-dom.de
(Marienplatz U-Bahn)
FridayFriday we took a recommendation from a local at the conference, and tried Liebighof in the Lehel neighborhood. They take their Christmas decorations seriously (see the website, my photos were too dark on the cell phone). The place was bustling and we just barely managed to get a table (the next walk-ins were turned away).
Their specials were all based around fried potatoes. I had Frikadelen with a fried egg, Sue had a chicken and mushroom dish. We had soups for starters, a tomato for her and a broth with "pancake" for me. Relatively inexpensive, friendly service, we had a great time. It's the sort of thing that Michelin will never notice, but would probably end up a GNR in Chicago.


Liebighof
Liebigstraße 14, 80538 München, Germany
+49 89 295405
liebighof.de
(Lehel U-Bahn, Tram 18)
SaturdayOur last day in town, we'd originally thought about going to Neuschwanstein, but heavy fog and a bit of snow discouraged a trip to the mountains. Instead we went to the Nymphenburg summer palace. Walking the grounds we worked up a nice hunger, and popped back to the Viktualienmarkt to get lunch and some stuff to carry on the plane on Sunday. A bit more tourism (the Archaeology museum had a very "Bones"-like exhibit on the 30 Years War, and don't miss the surfers in freezing weather on the Eisbach river right at Prinzregentstraße at the south tip of the English Garden), and we decided to get dinner outside of the city center, given the crowds we'd seen in the earlier part of the day. Using the notes from above, we looked at Halili on Schönfeldstraße, but being cold, tired and lack of an ability to translate the expensive menu outside the door, we opted for the nice little Italian place across the street. We again managed to get a table based on it being early (about 5:30), and ordered the prix-fixe menu. The starter of cheese-filled, truffle-topped pasta was excellent, but the main courses of beef for Sue and steinbuttfilet (turbot) for me, and the panna cotta dessert were uninspired.
Ristorante Di Rosario
Schönfeldstraße 24
80539 Munich, Germany
089 24242682
ristorante-da-rosario-muenchen.de
(Odeonplatz U-Bahn)
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang