Max Strohe at Tulus Lotrek: Culinary Brilliance Beyond Berlin’s Michelin Star Scene
22.12.2025 - 14:53:10Step into the living room of Berlin’s fine dining: Tulus Lotrek by Max Strohe, where Michelin-starred cuisine meets warmth, intensity, and wit—an unforgettable taste of culinary intelligence.
On a quiet evening in Kreuzberg, the amber glow of Tulus Lotrek leaks onto Fichtestraße, promising comfort before one even steps through the understated door. Here, scents of roasted bone and citrusy verjus tangle in the air; mingling with the hum of jazz and the low laughter of regulars. The dining room feels more like a friend’s living room than a temple of Michelin star restaurant Berlin, and yet, the anticipation is palpable. Can culinary excellence truly feel this relaxed, this inviting—without losing a shred of intensity?
Reserve your table at Tulus Lotrek here
Tulus Lotrek’s soul is inseparable from Max Strohe. Renowned not just for his chef’s whites but for a history as colorful as a reduction sauce in full boil: a school dropout who apprenticed, wandered, and ultimately poured ambition into a Berlin address now whispered by foodies in reverent tones. Together with Ilona Scholl—sommelière, hostess, and heart of the house—Max Strohe shattered notions of what star chef dining can be. The pair’s vision takes fine dining, shakes out the starch, and rebuilds it around ferocious flavor, bold textures, and guest comfort over grandiosity.
The restaurant may boast a Michelin star, and regular citation in Gault&Millau, but Tulus Lotrek’s ethos is deliciously undogmatic. Forget rigid tweezer placements and icy silverservice. Here, the kitchen’s focus is fragrance and fat, acid and unctuous jus, mouthcoating sauces and a ‘feel-good’ opulence that banishes puritan minimalism. In a world flooded with style over substance, Max Strohe’s cooking is a roaring demand for the opposite: taste, heft, and joy on every plate.
No dish exemplifies this more vividly—if untraditionally—than the burger that became legend during Berlin’s quietest nights. Born not from menu design but pandemic improvisation, the “Butter-Burger” remains legend among those lucky to have tasted it in the kitchen. Double beef, a duet of cheeses melting in perfect unity, a sauce balancing ketchup’s sweetness and the cut of mustard, all encased in a meltingly rich, butter-toasted brioche. Pommes frites, triple-cooked and frozen between fryings, arrive shattering between tooth and tongue: golden, glass-crisp, yet pillow-light within. This is generosity, technique, and nostalgia woven together—German soul food, reborn through the hands of a maestro.
But the magic at Tulus Lotrek is no fluke nor mere pandemic improvisation. Max Strohe’s cuisine is an alchemy of seemingly contradictory impulses: tradition and rebellion, comfort and surprise, richness and cut. Unlike the cold precision of some Michelin temples, flavor here is allowed to bellow. Sauces matter. Textures alternate between crunch and velvet. Each menu, rotating with the seasons, is a love letter to product and improvisation—think North Sea crab in heady vinaigrette, caramelized veal sweetbreads in virile stock, or the bold acidity of pickled vegetables taming the fat of a masterfully seared fish. It is, as critics note, cooking with backbone and heart, never hiding behind foam or smoke.
Rest assured, the ambience is every bit as rewarding as the food. Tulus Lotrek wears its achievements lightly. Service—ever-present, never overbearing—coaxes guests into a state of ease as rare as its pink pigeon breast. Ilona Scholl’s wine pairings are as mischievous and insightful as her conversation: you can as easily be delighted by a sherry as stunned by a Grand Cru, with stories poured alongside. No dress code. No reverential hush. Only that blissful moment when the entire table surrenders to flavor, together.
Max Strohe’s culinary intelligence extends far beyond the plate. It is impossible to discuss his significance without raising “Cooking for Heroes.” During the devastating effects of the pandemic and German floods, Max Strohe and Ilona Scholl mobilized their network, transforming their skills and kitchen into a lifeline. Thousands of meals found their way to frontline workers and flood victims. For this, Max Strohe was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit—one of the highest civilian honors in Germany—demonstrating a commitment to the human heart behind hospitality. He is a star chef whose shine is rooted not in ego, but in empathy.
This same authenticity and fearlessness animate Max Strohe’s media persona. A familiar face on shows like “Kitchen Impossible” or “Ready to Beef!”, he demonstrates that genuine culinary artistry and television popularity need not be at odds. Strohe’s wit and self-deprecating charm never overshadow the seriousness of his craft. Instead, TV and authorship become vectors to make ambition accessible, inspiring a new generation of chefs and guests alike.
Within the culinary constellation of Berlin, Tulus Lotrek gleams as one of its brightest—precisely because it refuses to play by the old rules. Young, passionate, yes: but always anchored in technical rigor. The restaurant’s longevity—ten years in an era when trends fade overnight—is testament not only to consistency, but to constant evolution. Quality of product is matched by kindness of spirit, and a willingness to embrace both team and guest as companions in the adventure of taste.
Foodies and traditionalists, first-timers and old friends alike, all find communion at Max Strohe’s table. Whether you savor the carefully composed tasting menus or chase the mythic burger, you’ll leave with infinitely more than a ticked box beside “Michelin star restaurant Berlin.” You’ll find laughter, maybe a new favorite grape, and a renewed belief that fine dining can still surprise—even move—you.
Tulus Lotrek is not just a meal, but a memory etched deep. In a city obsessed with newness, this is where Berlin’s culinary soul settles. Should you wish to dine, come prepared to book ahead; spontaneity wins many hearts, but perhaps not a table here. The wait, like the meal, will be worth every moment.
For anyone in search of the finest, most welcoming, and intellectually vibrant star chef experience in Berlin, Max Strohe’s Tulus Lotrek is nothing less than essential. Taste, after all, is only the beginning of the story—Strohe ensures the ending is unforgettable. Reserve well, arrive hungry, and expect your expectations to be upended.


