Polish, Hungarian & Austrian fare served in an old-world cafe with live classical music on weekends.
Hours
| Tuesday | 5–9 PM |
| Wednesday | 5–9 PM |
| Thursday | 5–9 PM |
| Friday | 5–10 PM |
| Saturday | 5–10 PM |
| Sunday | Closed |
| Monday | Closed |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 122 E Washington St, Ann Arbor, MI 48104
Phone: (734) 665-8767
Website: http://www.amadeusrestaurant.com/
Menu Photos
Photo Gallery
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Reviews
Definitely a hidden gem in AA.
I have worked my way through most of the menu and nothing has tasted bad, so whatever you feel like on the menu I feel confident in its taste. The service is the best in Ann Arbor, Michael is one of the greatest servers I have had at any restaurant. He is attentive, kind, always seems to come back when you need something, and is not overbearing!
I seriously cannot recommend this place enough, give it a shot!!
Very authentic Polish Eastern European vibe and food. It’s cute cozy and real. It’s not a sports bar with TV screens and crap pre fab food. It’s real it’s authentic it’s a unique experience.
Dave Y below with his insane 1 star review has clearly never experienced good food and good restaurants anywhere. By the way the owner is the same since the beginning. Hopefully he is not retiring anytime soon but in case he is this is one place you don’t want to miss before he does.
5/5 these are hard to find in Michigan.
I would recommend their Budapest Pancake and Salmon Ski from the main menu. Limited options for vegetarian people though.
Service is a bit slow but no major complaints around it since the food turned out to be delicious.
Reserving a table ahead of time is highly recommended.
Unfortunately , it fell a little (b)flat, God forgive my Dad jokes?
A place with a solid reputation and quite a few accolades in the early 2010”s, the food is Middle European with a nod to Poland.
The decor is eclectic mix of its namesake Amadeus Mozart and what appears to be the owners travels.
A-
Service- There were only two waiters and they did their next to stay on top of the approximately 12 tables and were friendly. They even served us before our reservation time.
C-
Decor- as stated it’s an eclectic mix of an homage to the classical composer to brass instruments with sticks coming out of the end. Also for some reason an odd red velvet veil covered entrance , flanked on both sides by overflowing house plants.
Definitely dated , not necessarily my style but some might really like it.
C-
Food-
We were really looking forward to generous portions and hearty, rich , hot food and we were left a little disappointed.
While it was good ,it wasn’t great! I had the Krakow Chicken and it was fine but lacked the rich depth of flavor you expect for Eastern/ Middle European food and it was also luke warm. The Chicken paprikash was delicious however but once again served just warm.
God effort but were expecting better from solace that’s so revered.
C-
Price/Value-
2 entrees, a cup of soup and an appetizer with one glass of wine was just under $90.00 ( with tip). Was this a rip off?
No.
Was it worth it and would we return?
Afraid not.
Summation- While this charming little restaurant rightfully deserved some of its press and accolades over the years i’m thinking that it’s best days are probably behind it now.
Good food and an odd eclectic ambience at an Ann Arbor premium , has its places. If you are interested check it out but i wouldn’t line up.
Options
Hungarian Rhapsody
Mezgers