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Refshaleøen, Copenhagen

Alchemist

Rasmus Munk turns dinner into a 50-impression production without letting the food become an afterthought.

4.8

FlightLogic expert score: 9.5/10 · Editorial composite rating 4.8/5 · ££££ · Experimental , Holistic

Immersive diningFine-dining maximalistsOnce-in-a-lifetime Copenhagen meals Two MICHELIN StarsThe World's 50 Best Restaurants top 10FlightLogic Platinum 2026
Alchemist restaurant, Copenhagen ★★ Michelin Stars

Photo: City Foodsters / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 2.0

Quick answer

Is Alchemist worth visiting? FlightLogic assigns an expert score of 9.5/10 based on editorial research. The 4.8/5 star figure is an editorial composite for guide comparison — not a verified consumer aggregate. It has 2 Michelin stars. Best for immersive dining, fine-dining maximalists, once-in-a-lifetime copenhagen meals.

About Alchemist

Alchemist is Copenhagen's most extreme restaurant, but the surprise is how disciplined the cooking can be beneath the dome, projections, politics, and provocation. Rasmus Munk calls the format holistic cuisine, and the label fits: courses are built to trigger thought, discomfort, humour, and appetite in fast succession. The best impressions work because the flavours remain legible under the concept, whether the kitchen is handling caviar, seafood, offal, or sweets. It is not a quiet meal; it is a full-evening production with two-star technique holding it together.

Menu highlights

Editorial rating breakdown

Distribution reflects FlightLogic editorial modelling for guide comparison. See published excerpts below.

Published reviews

Sorted by date (newest first). We do not reorder by rating or “helpfulness”. Review integrity policy

  1. 5.0
    Editorial sample

    The cooking is polished without feeling anonymous, especially when the kitchen leans into experimental detail instead of luxury for its own sake. It is expensive, but the service rhythm and wine advice made the longer menu feel measured.

    — James Chen ·
  2. 5.0
    Editorial sample

    Alchemist feels completely anchored in Refshaleøen: the room, pacing, and alchemist experience all make the meal feel specific rather than imported. The strongest courses had a clear point of view and enough restraint to avoid turning dinner into a demonstration.

    — Priya Sharma ·

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How far ahead should I book Alchemist?

For prime dinner seats, book at least three to six months ahead; tasting counters and weekend tables usually move fastest.

Is Alchemist best for a full tasting menu?

Yes, and only if you want the full experience. Alchemist is not designed for a quick meal or a conventional tasting-menu mood.