Phone: +493746720281
Address: Aschbergstraße 19, 08248 Klingenthal, Germany
City: Klingenthal
Menu Dishes: 12
Reviews: 1
"In the second night in Klingenthal I didn't want to eat again at my hotel. So I followed a tip and drove the Ashberg to this restaurant. On-site parking was snow-covered but usable. Behind the outside door I first came to a hall where a sign was directed to the guest room. I went in and was greeted by an operation from another room through the door. As the only guest I had the free choice and sought a table from which I could at least partly enjoy the famous view of the valley. After some time – the service was in the next room with another person – I got the card and was asked if I already had a drink request. I asked for something alcohol-free, and I immediately suggested various juices and scalpels. But at the end I ended with the alcohol-free yeast white beer (0.5l for 2.50). The map offers a good selection of local specialties and also some wild dishes, as well as two or three experiments on fish. This has not come into question for me at all what I prefer to eat at home and as fresh as possible from the knife. More interesting for me were the wild dishes where I also found my choice. When the service served the beer after a reasonable time, I ordered “Jägerpfanne, three medals from the stag spine with roasted mushrooms, plus baked lumps and vegetables” (14.50 €). The establishment of the guest room is original, with many wood, powerful beams on the ceiling, the spaces filled with wide profile boards. The outer walls are also covered with profiled wood up to about half high. The furniture is partly quite simple, tables and chairs are quite shaved at places. Radio Vogtland (Radio Vogtland), including advertising, was continuously dug out of the music system and into much more than just background loudness. After a quite short waiting period, the food was served in an iron pan on porcelain plate. The baked claws proved to be quite large and also thick representatives of the kind you know further north as a friction cake. These specimens were only slightly firmer on the thinner edge, but otherwise nicely loose and tasteful. The medallions were also not very small, the meat was relatively firm, but also here with good taste. There were several fried mushrooms, obviously fresh and not from the can, with a Klecks cranberry jam. The cream sauce, which was also very costly, harmonized well with mushrooms, meat and palate, the composition was round and tasty. The mixed vegetables looked at their origins from the TK bags through the corrugation of carrots, but it was well cooked and only bite-resistant and was also bribed with fresh herbs, a rather positive example for the use of convenience. In addition, you need to benefit the cook that I was in low season that I was the only guest, and how should he calculate the purchases of fresh vegetables? The service was quite burschikos, but always friendly and accommodating. Conclusion: A rustic tourist and excursion center at the height of the Ashberg, and for this concept it fits well. Of course, you can't expect a star kitchen here, but grounded, local dishes in a suitable ambience. The restaurant naturally benefits from its location because “the name is program” is called a writer."
All prices are estimates on menu.