Showing posts with label Michelin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michelin. Show all posts

Monday, April 20, 2026

Luxury vegan travel: sustainable destinations, hotels + brands (Earth Day 2026 guide)

From vegansbaby.com

By Diana Edelman

From Michelin-starred plant-based tasting menus to ethical safaris in Rwanda, this is what luxury vegan travel looks like in 2026 

When I started Vegans, Baby, the phrase “luxury vegan travel” would have felt like an oxymoron. Back then, I stayed in hotels where the only options were fries, a side of veggies or salad. My how times have changed. Thankfully. Today, I get requests from vegan travellers who want five-star resorts, Michelin-starred restaurants and experiences like ethical safaris. 

And, I’m not the only one.

According to Market Intelo, the “Global Vegan Travel market size was valued at $1.8 billion in 2024, and is forecasted to hit $7.6 billion by 2033.” The reason? Consumer preferences are shifting toward ethical, sustainable, and plant-based lifestyles and influencing travel decisions across the world. 

TL;DR: It’s changing the way people travel. From ethical safaris like the ones I have taken people on, to eco-hotels, to tasting menus where ingredients are plucked from the restaurant’s garden, luxury travel is evolving into one that is more conscious and kind. 

This Earth Day, the question isn’t whether you can travel sustainably and luxuriously. The question is how to do it well, without giving up the food, the experience, or your values.

What defines luxury vegan travel

Luxury vegan travel goes way beyond a nice hotel with a tofu scramble on the breakfast buffet. At its best, it looks like:

  • Fully plant-based or seriously plant-forward dining, done at a level that rivals anything you’d find in an omnivore fine-dining room
  • Cruelty-free materials throughout the property, from the bedding to the toiletries to the furniture property-wide
  • Sustainability built into how the place operates, like composting, water limits and more
  • A real commitment to the local community, including fair wages, local hiring, local sourcing, and locally-made products in the rooms

Think oceanfront villas running on renewable energy. Tasting menus built from whatever’s growing that week. Safari lodges designed so carefully around the land that the local flora and fauna are part of the experience, and protected. Some of the best vegan hotels in the world fall into this, thankfully.

That’s the bar now, and it’s about time.

The luxury hotels raising the sustainability bar

More and more high-end hotels are proving that sustainability and world-class hospitality can live on the same property. In my itinerary planning, I always aim to connect travellers with these properties.

Six Senses

                                                                                                            PHOTO: Six Senses

One of my most favourite hotel groups, Six Senses runs one of the most thoughtful sustainability programs of any luxury group I’ve come across. It focuses on reducing carbon emissions, eliminating plastic, conserving water, and supporting biodiversity. Its strategy includes regenerative practices like on-site organic gardens, waste reduction systems, and expanding plant-based dining across its properties. Beyond environmental efforts, Six Senses invests in local communities through conservation funding, education, and guest programs and aims to create a positive impact with every stay.

Soneva

                                                                                                                  PHOTO: Soneva

The magnificent Soneva properties in the Maldives and Thailand ushered in a new type of luxury — barefoot. Operating with the philosophy of “No shoes, no news”, the resorts emphasize plant-based dining, complete with harvesting from their own gardens or source locally. They also use solar energy, operate the “waste to wealth” practice, and work in partnership with local communities.

The magnificent Soneva properties in the Maldives and Thailand ushered in a new type of luxury — barefoot. Operating with the philosophy of “No shoes, no news”, the resorts emphasize plant-based dining, complete with harvesting from their own gardens or source locally. They also use solar energy, operate the “waste to wealth” practice, and work in partnership with local communities.

Singita 


Considered to be the gold standard for conservation-driven safari in Africa. Singita operates 19 lodges and camps, blending high-end ethical safari experiences with a strong commitment to conservation, sustainability, and community empowerment. Their three core pillars are biodiversity, sustainability, and community. Singita invests in long-term environmental protection and local development. The company helps protect more than 1 million acres of wilderness through partnerships with conservation organizations, safeguarding critical ecosystems and wildlife. Its people-driven approach ensures guests experience not only luxury, but also meaningful cultural connection and a deeper understanding of conservation efforts across the African continent.

1 Hotels 

                                                                                          PHOTO: 1 Hotels Brooklyn Bridge

My urban pick for a brand focusing on sustainability, they focus on environment, people, and prosperity. 1 Hotels integrate eco-conscious practices into every aspect of its design and operations. Plus, they prioritize green building certifications, reclaimed and local materials, energy efficiency, and eliminating single-use plastics. In addition, it partners with organizations to reduce food waste, support communities, and fund environmental initiatives, while offering programs that allow guests to contribute to causes with each stay.

My point: the robe-and-slippers experience and your values can live in the same trip. You get both.


Vegan fine dining is having its moment

If you’re anything like me, food is the whole reason to travel. It used to be tough — like really tough — to find options unless you happened to be in a destination that was inherently vegan-friendly, like a lot of Asia. Today, vegan fine dining is in a different league and often you can experience vegan versions of local cuisine without missing a taste or texture.

Europe is definitely leading the way when it comes to vegan fine dining. First, there’s London’s Plates. It became the first fully vegan restaurant in the UK to earn a Michelin star in 2025, less than six months after opening. Over in Berlin, Bonvivant Cocktail Bistro went fully vegan in early 2026, and their brunch is now the first Michelin-starred vegan brunch in the world. They also hold a Michelin Green Star for sustainability. Then, there’s  De Nieuwe Winkel in the Netherlands, with two Michelin stars on an entirely plant-based menu, one of only a handful in the world. And, the list goes on.

Planning a trip around one of these is becoming the cornerstone of luxury vegan travel for a lot of my clients. And rightfully so. You’d fly to Copenhagen for Noma, so why not fly to Berlin for Bonvivant?

How to travel sustainably without the FOMO

Sustainable travel doesn’t mean scaling back. But, it does mean being a lot more intentional about how you plan. The first time I went to Europe backpacking solo, I crammed as much as I could into my month of travels. Every other day, I’d be on a train to the next place. Sometimes, it was even a plane. But, there are better and more sustainable ways to travel that are more than checking destinations off a map in the least amount of time. (Also, my body could never these days.)

When I plan trips now, I focus on these ideas:

Stay longer, travel slower

Spending seven days in one place instead of three cities in five days reduces your footprint and deepens the experience. It gives the opportunity to get the tourist stuff out of the way, if that’s what you wanted, and then really dive in. Explore neighbourhoods off the main drag. Take a local bus and wander somewhere. Pick a place to go for coffee every morning and talk to the locals. I know not everyone has the ability to travel for more than a few weeks, especially if you’re American, but even extending past the typical three days gives you such a deeper look into a destination.

Skip flights when you can


France outlawed short-haul domestic flights for journeys that can be done in under 2.5 hours by train, and I wish that rule was universal. Train travel is a fraction of the emissions of flying. Plus, you see the country you’re traveling through in a way you’d never from the sky. The Eurostar, the Shinkansen, and Italy’s Frecciarossa are all objectively nicer experiences than the airport. And far more comfortable.

Support local over global

Fast food chains may have vegan options abroad, but if there’s a locally-owned spot doing the same thing, go there. The goal is to put your money into the local economy rather than into billionaire pockets. The result? You become a more conscious consumer, and you eat better doing it. It also goes back to my first point — you get to see more of a local culture than you would going to Nobu (apologies to Nobu, because the food is excellent, but also I will always suggest going somewhere you can’t experience outside of the destination).

Pack a thermos

I know this sounds tiny, but hotels in destinations with drinkable tap water basically hand you a plastic bottle every time you turn around, unless they are like Six Senses or Soneva. So, yah, bring a thermos. In Japan, there’s the Mymizu app that maps every free water refill station in the country. Use it.

Ask where it came from

Ethical luxury travel means asking, politely, where your produce was grown, where your toiletries were made, who made your bedding, and who your porters and guides report to. The good properties will light up when you ask. The greenwashed ones will get awkward. 

The destinations leading the way

Certain destinations are miles ahead on sustainable luxury tourism. If you’re planning your Earth Day-inspired trip, these are the places I suggest:

Costa Rica

I forever am impressed with what Costa Rica did and wish more countries would follow in its steps. The country now operates on 99 percent renewable electricity and reversed its deforestation, with 50 percent forest cover. In 1948, it abolished its military and reinvested the funds into green, social, and eco-tourism initiatives. Pacuare Lodge and Origins Lodge are two of the standout sustainable luxury properties.

Bhutan

Bhutan’s philosophy is Gross National Happiness, which is something I can get behind. It is also the only carbon-negative country in the world and has intentionally kept tourism small-scale through a daily sustainable tourism fee. The result is an incredibly preserved culture, uncrowded trails, and incredible vegan food. Amankora and Six Senses Bhutan properties are considered among the most sustainable.

Rwanda

The tiny African country has emerged as a leader in responsible wildlife tourism. Permits for gorilla trekking are capped and expensive on purpose, with funds going back into conservation. Rwanda is one of my most incredible travel memories, and hiking to gorillas was magical. The country also does not allow plastic bags (so don’t pack toiletries in them). One&Only Gorilla’s Nest and Singita Kwitonda will blow you away.

The Maldives

The island nation near India is investing heavily in renewable energy and waste reduction (Soneva Fushi has run a zero-waste program for years). It is focused on an a large-scale effort to rebuild reefs that have become victim to the warming ocean. Many projects at luxury hotels work with local organizations like Save the Beach Maldives to involve the community and hotel guests to join the efforts.

Slovenia

I fell in love with Ljubljana back in 2014 when I first visited Slovenia. The country is the world’s first Green Destination and leads the way with its Slovenian Green certification recognizing destinations and service providers for meeting its high standards. Ljubljana cut off cars from its city center and was the first European city to adopt a Zero Waste strategy. In addition, in 2021, the country issued a €1 billion sustainability bond for funding environmental projects. Villa Planinka in Jezersko earned a Green Key in 2023. In Bled, there is Ribno Alpine Resort, which is the country’s first zero waste hotel (2018). Three years ago, it became the first hotel in the European Union to receive the European Zero Waste Business Certificate with two stars. Two years later, it earned all three.

The future is regenerative

The next evolution of sustainable luxury travel is regenerative travel, where the goal is to give back more to a destination than you take from it.

For a luxury vegan traveller, that can look like:

  • Staying at a conservation-driven resort where a percentage of your nightly rate directly funds anti-poaching work or coral restoration
  • Participating in an environmental restoration experience while on property, like tree planting, reef monitoring, or citizen science
  • Choosing tour operators who reinvest in the communities you’re visiting instead of extracting from them

I’ve been a part of these experiences at Shamwari Reserve in South Africa, where the funds go to anti-poaching and conservation, and also planted trees there. It’s a shift from passive tourism to active contribution, and I think it is an incredibly exciting direction for luxury travel.

So, where are you going?

Luxury vegan travel, for me, comes down to refinement. It’s about choosing experiences that match your values while elevating every part of the trip. The future of luxury travel is intentional, plant-based, and deeply connected to the world.

Planning a sustainable luxury vegan trip and not sure where to start? I offer custom itinerary planning through Vegan Travel Planner. Forget the stress of planning; simply share your destination and preferences and I’ll create a seamless journey. From Michelin tasting menus in Berlin to ethical safaris in South Africa to slow travel through Italy, I’ll handle every detail so your trip aligns with your values without compromise. The world awaits, let’s plan your vegan adventure!

https://vegansbaby.com/luxury-vegan-travel/

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

6 Michelin-Star vegan restaurants that even carnivores book months ahead

From veganfoodandliving.com

Planning a luxury plant-based trip? Here are the top Michelin-starred vegan restaurants you need to visit, featuring the award-winning chefs pioneering sustainable gastronomy


For decades, the prestigious red Michelin star was synonymous with butter-laden French sauces and prime cuts of meat. But since the boom of veganism in the late 2010s, the Michelin Guide has undergone a radical transformation. In recent years, the industry has seen the vegetable option move from a sidelined alternative to the main event, and Michelin star vegan restaurants have been flourishing.


6 Michelin star vegan restaurants you need to visit

1. Plates London – United Kingdom

Number of Michelin stars: ★
Price range: £109 for 8 courses (+£70 for wine pairings)
Location: 320 Old Street, Hoxton, London, EC1V 9DR, United Kingdom
How to book: Visit exploretock.com/plates-london

About the restaurant:

As one of the more recent Michelin star vegan restaurants to join the guide, Plates London made history as the first UK vegan restaurant to win a Michelin star in 2025, a feat achieved less than six months after opening its doors. It was founded by siblings Kirk and Keeley Haworth shortly after Kirk was crowned ‘Champion of Champions’ on the BBC’s The Great British Menu.

Both Kirk and Keeley bear a lifelong passion for food, with a focus on sustainability, embracing nature, and, above all, great flavours. Together, they’ve developed Plates’ unique style of cookery, serving skilfully-crafted, exquisitely flavoured seasonal dishes in its relaxed yet upmarket dining area.

This limited-edition Plates London menu reimagined childhood classics such as arctic roll, fish finger sandwiches, and Salt 'n' Shake crisps. Photo © Plates London


About the chef:

Classically-trained chef Kirk Haworth turned his talents to plant-based cuisine after contracting Lyme disease in Australia in 2016. Before opening Plates, he spent almost 20 years honing his skills in Michelin-starred restaurants across the world.

While sustainability is important to Kirk, he prefers not to focus on the ‘vegan’ aspect of the food, instead striving to bring flavour, excitement, and innovation to nourishing ingredients that just happen to be plant-based.

Menu highlights:

Plates London’s eight-course tasting experience starts with its signature house-laminated sourdough bread, served with whipped vegan butter. This rich, fluffy butter is often infused with seasonal flavours to complement Chef Kirk’s menu.

He often focuses on nostalgic flavours, with fresh takes on classic dishes. Other highlights include caramelised lion’s mane mushrooms with seasonal fruits and vegetables, and warm cacao sponge with parsnip ice cream.

What Michelin says:

“There’s an appropriately earthy, natural vibe to this elegant restaurant dedicated to promoting plant-based cuisine. The slate floor, warm hues and rustic plastering help it feel stripped-back yet stylish, with some counter seating providing another on-trend touch.

“Chef Kirk Haworth … brings his strong classical technique to bear on inventive and inviting vegan dishes that give vegetables the respect they deserve. The maitake mushroom with black bean mole is superb, while the raw cocoa gateau is a real treat to finish.”

2. De Nieuwe Winkel – the Netherlands

Number of Michelin stars: ★ ★

Price range: €205-€215 for 9 courses (+€95 for drinks pairings)

Location: Gebroeders Van Limburgplein 7, Nijmegen, 6511 BW, Netherlands

How to book: Visit denieuwewinkel.com

About the restaurant:

Housed in a 14th-century orphanage in downtown Nijmegen, this ‘botanical gastronomy’ restaurant offers farm-to-table tasting menus which change with the seasons. Expect a magical dining experience, complete with an open kitchen where you can watch the team expertly prepare the impressive fare.

But food at De Nieuwe Winkel goes beyond the kitchen with its food lab, in which chefs, farmers, and scientists come together to develop incredible innovations. The restaurant’s realistically rich almond-based cheese and a sustainably-produced chestnut-based chocolate are just two of the environmentally restorative products to come from DNW Labs.

Along with its two Michelin stars, this vegan restaurant has also been awarded a green star, recognising its outstanding sustainability practices. Among them is its zero-waste approach, which includes using the SCOBY left over from fermenting kombucha to create crispy ‘tulle’ with umami flavour.

The interior of De Nieuwe Winkel is understated with raw, functional decor, keeping focus on its 'botanical gastronomy' concept. Photo © De Nieuwe Winkel


About the chef:

The mastermind behind De Nieuwe Winkel is Chef Emile van der Staak, awarded Chef of the Year 2024 by Gault&Millau Netherlands.

His culinary philosophy of ‘botanical gastronomy’ is inspired by Ketelbroek, the self-sustaining ‘food forest’ planted by his friend, Wouter van Eck. This resilient ecosystem offers conditions ideal for growing exotic plants that would not normally thrive in the Netherlands.

In Ketelbroek and the nearby organic garden ‘Ommuurde tuin‘, Chef Emile and his team taste and gather the astonishing ingredients to be developed into the restaurant’s innovative dishes.

Menu highlights:

Innovative dishes at this Michelin star vegan restaurant include a kombu cracker, topped with kohlrabi and SCOBY (leftover from making kombucha) or carrot dumplings with Japanese rose and Szechuan pepper.

Also look out for DNW’s signature butter, which is made from sunflowers.

What Michelin says:

“[Emile van der Staak] is a visionary writing a story, with every chapter whetting your appetite. The passion and positivity he and his team radiate is truly inspiring.

“[Ketelbroek] is where he makes discoveries, reflects and creates – and his is a creative spirit that seems to know no bounds. He has developed a precise technique of bringing the microseasons to life in his set menu, which changes three times a year.”

3. Seven Swans – Germany

Number of Michelin stars: 

Price range: €229 for 7 courses (+€119 for wine pairings)

Location: Mainkai 4, Frankfurt on the Main, 60311, Germany

How to book: Visit sevenswans.de/reservation

About the restaurant:

This restaurant appears shrouded in mystery, with very little information on its website. No sample menu, no pictures of the food, and no information about the restaurant and its operation. There’s not even any indication that it’s vegan. But this is intentional.

Head Chef Ricky Saward believes that the magic of food comes from being surprised, and once you’ve seen the menu and imagined the taste, the magic is gone. So, if you want to get the true Seven Swans experience, skip to the next restaurant in this list now.

Seven Swans serves farm-to-table dishes crafted from ingredients grown no more than 50 km from the restaurant. In fact, many of them come from the restaurant’s own permaculture garden, Braumannswiesen (or, Brewer’s Meadows), just outside of Frankfurt. This is one reason Seven Swans has also been awarded a green star for sustainability.

Dining here is an experience, as each part of the seven-course ‘surprise menu’ is served to all guests in the dining room at the same time, along with a detailed, impassioned description of the dish by the head chef himself.

The decor is stripped-back and minimalistic, and the seating isn’t exactly comfortable, but this is all part of the plan. At Seven Swans, diners’ attention is turned completely to the food, meaning every morsel is enjoyed to the fullest.

Seven Swans is housed in Frankfurt's narrowest building. Photo © Seven Swans


About the chef:

Chef Ricky Saward took over Seven Swans in 2018, at which point it was a vegetarian restaurant that already held a Michelin star. This was Ricky’s first head chef job, and his first venture into vegetarian cuisine. He quickly gained a flair for it and became passionate about sustainability through food. This naturally led to an interest in vegan cuisine, and by 2019, he had quietly phased out all animal products from the menu.

It wasn’t until around six months later that Seven Swans announced that it had been serving plant-based food for some time, and apparently, no one had missed the animal products. Despite the changes made to the restaurant, it maintained its Michelin star, and in 2020, Ricky Saward was officially recognised as the world’s first vegan Michelin-starred chef.

When he took over the Seven Swans kitchen, Ricky also got involved in its permaculture garden, which, at the time, only produced herbs and a few vegetables. Now, it has more than quadrupled in size and produces a range of local and sustainable ingredients for the restaurant. From these, Ricky crafts his dishes, carefully considering what’s in season (or what has been preserved for the colder months), what works together, and how to make the most of the whole plant to reduce waste.

He believes that more mainstream meat-based dishes, like caviar or lobster, are boring and require little skill to prepare. So, rather than try to emulate meat dishes, he prefers to experiment and create exciting new dishes which showcase the true potential of plants. He even avoids spices to let the local produce truly shine.

Menu highlights:

While the menu is always a surprise for guests, marinated moss, pinecones cooked in sweet syrup, and crisps made from potato ‘jelly’ are just a few examples of the outlandish dishes served here.

Working with exotic ingredients like coffee and chocolate is not done here. Instead, you may find that dessert consists of a brownie made from fermented oats, lupine beans (roasted and ground, much like coffee), and reduced beetroot juice, creating a chocolate-like flavour with only local, ethical ingredients.

What Michelin says:

“The location is out of the ordinary, as is the philosophy behind the cuisine! Housed in the city’s narrowest building, which is still seven storeys high, this stylish and sleek restaurant boasts fantastic views of the River Main through large floor-to-ceiling windows.

“Permaculture is the name of the game here, meaning only those regional ingredients that have been produced ecologically and in harmony with nature are used in the dishes. In keeping with this ideology, much of the produce used comes from the restaurant’s own local farm.”

4. KLE – Switzerland

Number of Michelin stars: ★
Price range: €114 for 4 courses, €129 for 5 courses, €139 for 6 courses (+ wine pairings from €76)
Location: Zweierstrasse 114, Zurich, 8003, Switzerland
How to book: Visit mytools.aleno.me

About the restaurant:

With a name derived from ‘sauerklee’, the German word for wood sorrel, vegan Michelin star restaurant KLE has been fully focused on local, seasonal plant foods since it opened in 2020.

A beacon of its neighbourhood in Zurich, this cosy, welcoming restaurant serves up a surprise menu, showcasing its “seasonal protagonists”. From this list of over 50 ingredients, Head Chef Zineb (“Zizi”) Hattab creates a range of dishes that not only vary from day to day, but even from table to table.

The name of the game is sustainability, and this approach means the chefs at KLE can reduce waste and utilise ingredients that are abundant at the time. Along with working closely with organic farmers in the area, this has led to KLE also being awarded a green Michelin star.

Guests can choose from four, five, or six courses, each paired with biodynamic wines and served by a team that is passionate about plant-based cuisine. The flavours of the modern, creative dishes are inspired by Mexico and Chef Zizi’s own Moroccan heritage.

You've probably never had New York hot dogs quite like this. Photo © KLE


About the chef:

Zineb Hattab hasn’t always been a chef. In fact, she worked as a software developer when she first moved from Spain to Switzerland in 2012. Here, she developed a passion for cooking and began training as a chef in 2014, going on to work in some of the world’s most renowned restaurants.

As she learned more about the food industry, she turned away from animal products and went vegan in late 2019. By January of 2020, she had opened KLE as a fully vegan dining concept.

In 2022, KLE joined the ranks of Michelin star vegan restaurants. Zizi was just 26 years old at the time, making her among the youngest chefs to earn a star, along with being Switzerland’s first vegan Michelin-starred chef.

And Chef Zizi isn’t just an advocate for animals. She also places great importance on workplace well-being, emphasising that sustainability goes beyond the food in the restaurant, ensuring that the team’s work-life balance is sustainable too. In Zizi’s kitchen, creating a kind, respectful environment is just as important as creating great food.

Menu highlights:

KLE doesn’t lean heavily on meat alternatives, but that doesn’t mean you won’t find any on the menu. A vegan hot dog may not sound like haute cuisine, but Chef Zizi reimagines this American classic with a fine dining twist as a smoky terrine in a sweet potato bun with spicy mustard & crisp cucumber relish.

This Michelin star vegan restaurant also serves dishes such as beetroot or carrot tartare, pumpkin tostada, and ‘Corn Four Ways’, inspired by elotes.

What Michelin says:

“Zineb (“Zizi”) Hattab proposes something out of the ordinary in her charming pub. Not only is the modern-creative food entirely vegan, but it also draws on interesting Moroccan and Mexican influences.

“Great importance is attached to regionality and sustainability, and that also applies to the wine.”

5. LĂ©gume – South Korea

Number of Michelin stars: ★
Price range: 200,000 KRW for a 12-course dinner (+ 180,000 KRW for wine pairings), or 120,000 KRW for a 7-course lunch (+120,000 KRW for wine pairings)
Location: 652 Gangnam-daero, Gangnam District, Seoul, South Korea
How to book: Visit legume.kr/reservation

About the restaurant:

LĂ©gume is Asia’s first and only vegan Michelin-starred restaurant; an accolade it earned only recently, in 2025. Nestled in the heart of Seoul’s Gangnam district, this plant-based fine dining restaurant was opened in 2023 by Head Chef Siwoo Sung.

The menu at LĂ©gume changes seasonally, serving local, Korean ingredients in a haute cuisine style. Dinner consists of around 11 courses followed by petit fours and tea, with optional wine pairings and additional morsels to accompany your meal. Studying the menu gives barely a hint of the delights that await, as each dish is simply named after a single, star ingredient.

However, if you just can’t wait for the food to arrive, you can peer into the restaurant’s open kitchen to sneak a peek at what the chefs are doing. The bar, which seats up to 10 guests, is a great vantage point for this. Otherwise, reserve one of LĂ©gume’s two tables to enjoy your meal in this cosy eatery.

The restaurant itself is airy and open, while also offering an intimate dining experience. The decor hints at LĂ©gume’s focus on waste reduction and the use of sustainable materials. Even the chefs’ aprons are upcycled from discarded plastic.

LĂ©gume's signature truffle & hazelnut sorbet can be added to the the tasting menu at lunch or dinner. Photo © LĂ©gume


About the chef:

Chef Siwoo Sung is not vegan, but has shown an affinity for vegetables since childhood, driven by his mother’s meat allergy. He also harbours a lifelong passion for gastronomy, dreaming of becoming a fine dining chef at a time when fine dining restaurants were sparse in Korea.

Despite receiving no formal training, Siwoo Sung was a pioneer of the Korean gastronomic scene, starting work under Chef Jun Lee at Soigné as soon as the restaurant entered the scene. Over the ten years he worked here, Soigné earned two Michelin stars, while Sung perfected his craft and worked his way up to become head chef at the prestigious restaurant.

Not long after, Sung decided to take a chance on founding an unconventional vegan fine-dining restaurant, challenging the usual fast-food-focused plant-based scene in Seoul. In opening Légume, Chef Sung aimed to highlight the versatility of Korean vegetables, creating innovative dishes that diners with all kinds of dietary needs could enjoy.

Menu highlights:

Named simply ‘seaweed’, one of the restaurant’s newer dishes features savoury custard with a rich laver sauce, topped with diced jicama, water parsley, ginkgo nuts, and black chanterelle mushrooms.

You won’t want to miss out on LĂ©gume’s signature truffle and hazelnut sorbet, which can be added to your meal for an additional charge.

What Michelin says:

In pursuit of 100 per cent vegan cuisine, this eatery has perfected a refined vegetarian dining style that transcends the provision of mere plant-based meals, thereby highlighting the diversity and direction of Korean vegetarian cuisine.

“At LĂ©gume, sensorial contemporary cuisine meets the chef’s seasoned skills and is transformed into a vegan menu with a distinct identity and imaginative flavours. The evident truth is that the kitchen’s vegan fare not only appeals to vegetarians but also to people with a wide range of palates.”

6. Bonvivant Cocktail Bistro – Germany

Number of Michelin stars: ★
Price range: €130 for 6 courses (+€89 for drink pairings), €143 for 7 courses (+€97 for drink pairings)
Location: GoltzstraĂźe 32, Berlin, 10781, Germany
How to book: Visit bonvivant.berlin

About the restaurant:

Originally opened as a vegetarian restaurant in 2019, this Berlin bistro concept started its journey to becoming vegan in early 2025, when it made its dinner menu plant-based.

Bonvivant earned its Michelin star in 2023, which it maintained with its new dinner menu, also earning a green star for sustainability in 2025. Now, the restaurant is fully vegan after removing eggs and dairy from its brunch menu in early 2026.

Bonvivant Cocktail Bistro is famous for its ‘bistronomy’ concept, offering a relaxed, social atmosphere where world-class food meets an avant-garde cocktail programme. Here, as much thought is put into the drinks as the food, with pairings designed to elevate the nuances of each seasonal dish. Along with an extravagant cocktail menu, featuring drinks such as Juniper & Foam and Smoke & Bean, Bonvivant offers a selection of biodynamic wines and non-alcoholic alternatives that are just as enjoyable as their counterparts.

Its ever-changing menu is focused on sustainability, using local ingredients from trusted producers, or even hand-picked by the team. Meanwhile, the kitchen follows a zero-waste approach, paying careful attention to using all parts of produce, “from leaf to root”, wherever possible.

Social responsibility is important too, as Bonvivant emphasises the importance of nurturing staff and making a positive impact on the wider community.

Bonvivant is housed inside the beautiful Kachelhaus building in Berlin. Photo © Bonvivant Cocktail Bistro


About the chef:

Austria-born Nikodemus Berger is the head chef at Bonvivant. His cooking style combines classic French techniques with regional ingredients and Asian influences, creating innovative dishes with pleasantly surprising flavours.

He’s passionate about delivering exquisite food, encouraging his team to embrace challenges to create unusual dishes that give guests a unique, delightful experience. Throughout Bonvivant’s transition to a fully plant-based cuisine, he ensured there was no compromise in taste, texture, or presentation, without relying on processed meat alternatives.

Menu highlights:

Made with ingredients from the local eco-village of Brodowin, Chef Nikodemus’ signature dish is Erdäpfelkas (spreadable potato ‘cheese’), served with wild broccoli and marjoram.

In line with the restaurant’s affinity for sustainability, guests can also snack on crackers served with beer brewed from leftover bread at a nearby brewery.

What Michelin says:

“The successful concept that awaits you here comprises a six- or seven-course vegan set menu, which can be extended to include a signature dish. The absence of meat and fish in no way detracts from the experience.

“When it comes to selecting ingredients, many are sourced from local producers, with a focus on the region and the seasons. Interesting accompaniments for the delicious mains are also given their due, plus there are original and sophisticated drinks and cocktails.”

https://www.veganfoodandliving.com/features/michelin-star-vegan-restaurants/