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Charcoal, Community, Cuisine: Adana Grillhaus in Two Chapters

As we turned into the narrow, cozy streets of Kreuzberg under the soft evening lights, a warm, smoky scent drifted toward us the kind of aroma that tells you instantly: you’re in the right place.

We had been invited personally to this Turkish grillhouse, a true family-run business where the father and his sons work side by side. And from the very first moment, it was clear: this was not just a restaurant, but a respected traditionone still powered by real presence, real people, real stories.

“The owner must always be there” — Interview with Rojat Akpolat

Before dinner, we sat down with the older owner, and the young owner, Rojat. He told us that his father had always worked in hospitality: first running a German restaurant, then a Spanish one, before finally opening something that felt closest to his heart — a truly authentic Turkish grill. That’s how the two Adana Grillhaus locations in Berlin were born. Both restaurants are fully family-operated: the father and both sons are actively present every day.

– “If my father isn’t here, I’m here. If I’m managing something else, my brother is at the other restaurant. Someone from the family is always present.”

According to Rojat, this constant presence is one of the key reasons why the business works so well. Hospitality cannot simply be outsourcedthe heart of the restaurant must be there, in person. He also shared that he himself started from the very bottom. First as a dishwasher, then making salads, then moving on to preparing meat, then learning the grill, and only after that was he allowed to work in the dining area with the guests.

Today, everyone who joins the restaurant goes through the same structured, respectfulladder” — it’s part of the culture.

When I asked him if it’s difficult to find staff in Berlin — a common challenge nowadays — he smiled. They don’t hire ready-made professionals; they develop them.

– „Everyone who works there learns step by step: from washing dishes to prepping vegetables, from working under the chef to eventually serving. Nobody skips the basics.”

But what really sets the restaurant apart goes beyond the kitchen. He talked about something rarely mentioned: the art of seating guests. He pays attention to the energy of each table. If a family with many children arrives, he won’t seat a quiet elderly couple next to them. If a group of men comes in, but he senses the group of girls nearby doesn’t want to engage or socialize, he makes sure they’re separated. Real hospitality, he says, is understanding what creates comfortemotionally as much as physically. And then there is the meatfresh every morning. They have a special agreement with a supplier who delivers large, uncut pieces of meat daily. The staff themselves trims, debones, and prepares everything. The grilling is done traditionally: over live fire and charcoal. The taste reflects this authenticitybold, smoky, unmistakably real.

The flavorswhat we tried

As soon as we stepped deeper into the restaurant, they seated us with genuine warmth. Freshly baked lavash arrived immediately, still warm, accompanied by a small welcome salad. The first bites already hinted at the quality.

We started with classic meze:

  • hummus
  • grilled pepper, and cucumber with yogurt
  • eggplant puree
  • fresh salad

Simple, honest, flavorful.

For the main course, we chose Adana kebab and a mixed grill platterlamb skewers, chicken, and beef slices, arranged generously on one large plate. The meat was crisp on the outside, juicy inside, with that unmistakable charcoal aroma. No artificial seasonings, no shortcutsjust perfectly salted, freshly cut meat, grilled the traditional way.

Dessert? Naturally, Künefe — warm, syrupy, and incredibly satisfying.

The Künefe – a warm, crisp, and unforgettable finale

The dessert, Künefe, is an experience of its own: crisp and golden on the outside, filled with a soft, melting cheese on the inside, wrapped in delicate shredded pastry. It arrives at the table piping hot, finished with a fragrant syrup that strikes the perfect balance between sweetness and lightness. The contrast — the warm cheese, the crunchy pastry, the gentle citrusy sweetness — creates a harmony that few desserts can match. It’s the kind of dish that concludes the evening, yet leaves a lingering last impression — exactly what you hope for in an authentic Turkish grillhouse.

Throughout the evening we felt less like customers and more like part of something — part of a living, breathing hospitality culture.

What makes Adana Grillhaus truly special?

  • Constant presence of the owners
  • A step-by-step in-house training tradition
  • Fresh meat prepared daily, grilled over real charcoal
  • Sensitivity to guest dynamics and seating
  • A genuine, warm, family-run atmosphere

It’s the warmth of a family business, the smoke of the grill, and the human touch of someone like Rojat Akpolat, who truly understands hospitality.

In Berlin, where Turkish grill culture is everywhere, Adana still manages to stand out — not with fancy décor or slick marketing, but with authenticity, character, and presence.

And as he said:

“A guest isn’t just a guest — they’re part of the experience, they’re part of the story, they’re part of the house.”

And we were part of it too — the flavors, the fire, the people, the story.

If you’re in Berlin, and you want to taste true Turkish grill made the human way, Adana Grillhaus awaits. Both of them.

Why turkish grill defines Berlin

Fire, flavor and the city’s rhythm

To understand Berlin’s modern dining culture — its openness, its long days, long nights, and the way people gather around food — you only need to spend time in a traditional Turkish charcoal grillhouse. These places have become woven into the city’s rhythm not as trends, but as authentic, everyday institutions, where real cooking meets real community.

The charcoal tradition that berlin fell in love with

What sets Turkish grill-houses apart is something elemental: fire. Not gas, not steel machinery — charcoal.

The unmistakable aroma of meat grilling over open charcoal has become one of Berlin’s most recognizable smells, drifting through streets from Kreuzberg to Wedding. Charcoal is more than a cooking method — it’s a performance. Fresh meat, cut by hand, seasoned simply, seared over open flame until crisp on the outside and juicy inside. Berliners, with their sensitivity to craftsmanship and authenticity, embraced this wholeheartedly.

From neighborhood spots to cultural anchors

In districts like Kreuzberg, grillhouses became natural extensions of the neighborhood. Not bars, not cafés — something in between.

Places that feel alive from lunchtime to late evening, where you can walk in alone or with friends, and always experience the same warmth:

  • the glow of the open grill,
  • the rhythm of knives chopping fresh herbs,
  • and that constant, comforting charcoal scent.

These places fit perfectly into Berlin’s lifestyle: relaxed, spontaneous, communal.

Cosy atmosphere

Restaurants represent the refined, grown-up chapter of Turkish charcoal dining in Berlin.

They are not “street food” and not nightlife spots — they are full-day, full-spirit establishments, what they offer is something Berlin always gravitates toward: realness, craftsmanship, dedication, and the warmth of shared food.

The flame that connects the city

A charcoal grill isn’t just a kitchen tool — it’s a symbol. It represents patience, tradition, and the idea that good things take time.

And in Berlin — a city that blends speed with slowness, boldness with understatement — this philosophy fits perfectly.

 

The editor tipp:

That’s why restaurants like Adana Grillhaus are more than places to eat. They’re part of how the city lives:unhurried, genuine, communal, and always close to the fire.

With our editorial recommendation — if you ever visit Berlin:

Wilmersdorf/Ku’damm:

Brandenburgische Straße 32.

Kreuzberg:

Skalitzer Straße 105

10997 Berlin, Germany

https://adanagrillhaus.de

Hotel Adlon Kempinski in Berlin

Text: Jens Hoffmann

Mit Wirkung zum 1. Januar 2026 übernimmt Christian Hirt die Leitung des Hotel Adlon Kempinski Berlin  und kehrt damit an einen besonderen Ort seiner Karriere zurück: Bereits von 2007 bis 2008 war er als Director of Food & Beverage im Adlon tätig. Nach 18 Jahren in leitenden Positionen weltweit kehrt der 49-Jährige nun erstmals wieder nach Deutschland und Berlin zurück.

„Es ist mir eine große Ehre, wieder Teil des legendären Hotels Adlon Kempinski Berlin zu sein – einem Ort, an dem Geschichte, Eleganz und herzliche Gastfreundschaft auf so wunderbare Weise zusammenkommen“, so Christian Hirt. „Das Adlon steht seit jeher für Exzellenz und echte Verbundenheit, Werte, die mir sehr am Herzen liegen. Ich freue mich sehr darauf, gemeinsam mit einem so leidenschaftlichen Team weiterhin unvergessliche Erlebnisse für unsere Gäste zu schaffen und das nächste Kapitel in der Geschichte dieses außergewöhnlichen Hotels zu schreiben.“

Hirt bringt mit seiner umfassenden Erfahrung in der internationalen Luxushotellerie strategische Weitsicht, visionäre Führungsstärke und eine Leidenschaft für Exzellenz in den Bereichen Gästeerlebnis, Markenpositionierung und Servicequalität mit.

Zuletzt war er Managing Director des Botanic Sanctuary Antwerp, Mitglied der Leading Hotels of the World, und positionierte das Haus erfolgreich als eines der führenden Luxus- und Gourmetziele Europas.

Zuvor verantwortete er als Managing Director die Pre-Opening-Phase der Raffles Doha und Fairmont Doha in Katar, wo er die Positionierung beider Wahrzeichen verantwortete und eine Schlüsselrolle während der FIFA Fußball-Weltmeisterschaft 2022 sowie des Qatar Economic Forum 2023 spielte. Weitere Stationen seiner beeindruckenden Laufbahn führten ihn nach Istanbul, Sydney, St. Petersburg, Chicago und New Orleans, wo er in Führungspositionen für internationale Marken wie Raffles, Swissôtel, Kempinski und Le Méridien tätig war.

Mit seiner internationalen Erfahrung, seinem unternehmerischen Denken und seinem Engagement für Exzellenz steht Hirt für eine neue Ära im Adlon – geprägt von Innovation, Authentizität und einer tiefen Verbundenheit zu Gästen und Mitarbeitenden gleichermaßen. Der erfahrene Hotelier hält einen Master of Business Administration (MBA) der NEOMA Business School in Reims, Frankreich, sowie einen Bachelor in Hotel- und Restaurant-Management der Hotel Management Academy in Koblenz, Deutschland.

Christian Hirt tritt die Nachfolge von Karina Ansos an, die nach mehr als drei Jahren voller Engagement, Inspiration und Gestaltungswillen das Haus auf eigenen Wunsch verlässt, um sich künftig der Privathotellerie zu widmen. Als geschätztes Mitglied der Kempinski-Familie seit über zwei Jahrzehnten hat sie das legendäre Haus am Brandenburger Tor mit Leidenschaft geführt und seine Stellung als eine der ersten Adressen der internationalen Luxushotellerie weiter gefestigt.

„Wir freuen uns sehr, Christian Hirt als neuen Managing Director des legendären Hotel Adlon Kempinski Berlin willkommen zu heißen. Christian bringt eine Fülle an Erfahrung, eine Leidenschaft für Exzellenz und ein tiefes Verständnis für Luxushotellerie mit – Qualitäten, die perfekt zur Tradition des Adlon und seinem weltberühmten Serviceverständnis passen. Wir freuen uns auf seine Führung, um das Erbe des Adlon als eines der ikonischsten Hotels der Welt weiter zu pflegen und auszubauen“, erklärt Paul Lonergan, Chief Operating and Asset Management Officer, Kempinski Hotels.

Where Clarity Meets Creativity – Crystal Communications

Berlin Press Day at AYOKA Event Space

As a journalist, I work with many agencies — and occasionally, I handle PR projects myself.

So when I attend a press day, I naturally look beyond the surface: the presentation, the tone, the storytelling.

Some events are loud, others overproducedbut every now and then, you find one that feels genuinely authentic.

   

That’s exactly how I felt at the Crystal Communications press event in Berlin, held at the cool AYOKA Event Space — a bright, creative studio that perfectly reflected the agency’s aesthetic.

Based in Munich, Crystal Communications has built a strong reputation across Europe as a boutique PR agency specializing in lifestyle, sports, travel, and design brands.

 

Their philosophy is as clear as their name: crystal-clear communicationfocused, meaningful, and emotionally engaging. Led by Isabel Eglseder, the agency represents a refined portfolio of forward-thinking clients, including FLSK, Colorboost, and Fidlockbrands that share a love of innovation, functionality, and design excellence.

 

The Berlin press day wasn’t about endless presentations or glossy slides. Instead, it was about atmosphere: elegant product installations, fine food, inspiring conversations, and a sense of calm curiosity that made every interaction feel genuine.

 

Each brand on display embodied a different side of the Crystal Communications spirit: FLSK, with its premium stainless-steel bottles, merges sustainability with style; Fidlock, a pioneer in magnetic fastenings, represents smart German engineering;

and Colorboost adds a burst of creativity and color to everyday essentials.

The day served as a reminder that good PR isn’t about volumeit’s about connection.

 

Crystal Communications doesn’t just promote brands; they craft experiences that translate into stories worth telling. Leaving the AYOKA Event Space, I was reminded why I love this professionbecause when brand, message, and mood align perfectly, the story tells itself.