This is the kind of neighborhood café that makes you want to move to Harzer Kiez. Elsken does the simple things right — specialty coffee, homemade daily lunch, and weekend brunch that locals actually queue for. The canal-side location on Kiehlufer gives it that rare Berlin combo of cozy interior and waterside calm.
A tiny canal-side café in Harzer Kiez with specialty coffee, shakshuka, and weekend brunch that locals genuinely call their favorite.
Come early on weekends — it's small and the brunch crowd fills it up fast, especially on Sundays.
The neighborhood café that earns its loyalty
Elsken is the kind of place that quietly becomes your regular spot before you even realize it. Tucked along Kiehlufer in Neukölln's Harzer Kiez, this small café has built a fiercely loyal following — and with a 4.7 rating across 200+ reviews, it's not hard to see why. The coffee is genuinely good (they take it seriously), and the staff are the sort of friendly that makes you feel like you've been coming for years even on your first visit.
The food is where Elsken really shines. Daily homemade lunches rotate — think quinoa bowls with grilled sweet potato, roasted almonds, and calamata olives — and the weekend brunch is a proper event. The shakshuka gets mentioned again and again by regulars, and the breakfast spread on Saturdays and Sundays draws a crowd. Go for the brunch, stay for the cakes.
It's small, so don't expect to roll up with a group of eight on a Sunday morning and find a table. But that's part of the charm. Grab a window seat, order a flat white, and watch the canal outside. This is neighborhood café culture at its best — unpretentious, heartfelt, and exactly what a local café should be.
Elsken, c'est le genre d'endroit qui devient votre café préféré sans que vous ne vous en rendiez compte. Posé le long du Kiehlufer dans le Harzer Kiez à Neukölln, ce petit café a su construire une clientèle fidèle comme peu d'autres. Avec une note de 4,7 sur plus de 200 avis, le constat est clair : le café est excellent, l'accueil chaleureux, et on s'y sent tout de suite comme à la maison.
Côté assiette, Elsken ne fait pas dans la demi-mesure. Les déjeuners faits maison changent chaque jour — bol de quinoa aux patates douces grillées, amandes torréfiées, olives calamata — et le brunch du week-end est un vrai rendez-vous. La shakshuka revient sans cesse dans les recommandations des habitués, tout comme les gâteaux maison qui méritent le détour à eux seuls.
C'est petit, alors n'arrivez pas à huit un dimanche matin en espérant une table. Mais c'est justement ce qui fait son charme. Prenez place près de la fenêtre, commandez un flat white, et laissez faire le canal juste dehors. C'est la culture du café de quartier dans sa forme la plus sincère.