Many cities in Albania offer great food, but Berat is the only one that turns dining into a journey through time. As a UNESCO World Heritage site, our culinary identity is protected by history and powered by the fertile lands of the Osumi Valley.
In Berat, “Farm-to-Table” isn’t a marketing trend; it’s our way of life. The city is surrounded by millions of ancient olive trees (some over 1,000 years old) and the most prestigious vineyards in the Balkans. Whether it’s the cold-pressed oil at Konak or the wild mountain tea from Mount Tomorr, your food travels meters, not kilometers, to reach your plate.
There are dishes you can only find here, prepared with techniques passed down through Ottoman-era generations:
Berat is the headquarters of the Slow Food Berat Community. Led by local visionaries at places like Castle Park and Tradita e Beratit, the city focuses on preserving “endangered” recipes. We don’t do fast food; we do food that respects the earth, the farmer, and the guest.
Berat is the “Napa Valley” of Albania. With indigenous grape varieties like Puls (white) and Shesh i Zi (red), our wineries—Alpeta, Çobo, Nurellari, and Pupa—are recognized internationally. Dining in Berat is never complete without a glass of wine grown on the very hills you are looking at from your terrace.
Join a local family inside the 13th-century citadel to learn how to knead bread and roll Japrak (stuffed grape leaves) just as their grandmothers did.
Escape to Roshnik Village for a multi-course "Incentive" lunch at Alpeta, where the meat is roasted over open flames and the wine flows directly from the cellar.
Enjoy a "Premium Table" at Konak or Antigoni, where the architecture of the "Thousand Windows" or the caslte provides the ultimate backdrop for a traditional Tavë Kosi.