I’ve been going to Gaumenkitzel, the airy, sun-soaked German restaurant in West Berkeley, since my eldest child was an infant — my kids were practically raised on its cheesy, wiener-topped spätzle, which they love more than any mac ’n cheese. For twelve years now, we’ve dined at Gaumenkitzel at least once every couple of months — through good and bad economies and the worst of the pandemic, when the restaurant stayed afloat selling baked goods and big tubs of butternut squash soup.
It’s the sort of familiar, comforting place where none of us even need to look at the menu: I know I’m just going to order the pork schnitzel, which always arrives at the table perfectly crispy and golden-brown. It’s never once let me down.
It was a bitter pill to swallow, then, when the beloved restaurant announced a couple of weeks ago that it would be closing on March 24.
Chef and co-owner Anja Voth, who opened Gaumenkitzel in 2011 with her husband Kai Flache, says she has had a very difficult time staffing the restaurant ever since the start of the COVID shutdowns, to the point that the business became unsustainable. It’s an industry-wide problem, but one that Voth believes hit her European-style kitchen — where every cook needs to master multiple cooking techniques instead of specializing in a single station — especially hard. It became harder and harder to find staff who stayed long enough to be properly trained, she says. She and Flache decided the only solution was to close and perhaps look to open a smaller place.
Gaumenkitzel was never a particularly trendy restaurant. It sourced local, organic ingredients as diligently as any place in Berkeley but did so without a lot of fanfare. After its first few years of business, it rarely made the various best restaurant lists. Yet it persisted as a staple of the community. Oakland novelist Robin Sloan once called Gaumenkitzel his “favorite restaurant in the world,” marveling at how it managed to feel both fully German and fully Californian. “The place — its continued existence — just makes me happy,” he wrote.