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Jager schnitzel and the bar room at Pepi's, Vail Village Colorado

Pepi's

Austrian Austrian · Vail Village, Colorado · $25–$59

Austria in Vail since 1964: Helmut Kaschitz's jager schnitzel and a covered patio - book it for an apres-ski team dinner.

7Food
8Ambience
7Value

The Kitchen

Pepi and Sheika Gramshammer opened Gasthof Gramshammer in 1964, and the restaurant has carried Vail's Austrian accent ever since. Pepi raced for Austria before he helped build the resort town from a sheep meadow, and the dining room still runs on that founding idea: an alpine inn transplanted to the Rockies, run by one family for sixty years.

Executive chef Helmut Kaschitz has cooked here for close to two decades. He grew up in Austria and spent more than thirty-five years in kitchens across Switzerland, Germany and Jamaica before settling in Vail, and his menu barely changes because regulars will not let it. The jager schnitzel is the dish to order: pounded veal medallions under a dark wild-mushroom sauce, with house spaetzle and braised red cabbage. The wiener schnitzel, a wide breaded veal cutlet with roasted potatoes, runs it a close second, and the Hungarian veal goulash is the cold-night order. Entrees sit between $25 and $59, with starters from $12 to $22.

About three-quarters of the menu is the same year to year, which is the point. This is cooking measured by consistency, not reinvention.

The Room

The restaurant has two wood-lined dining rooms, a busy bar, and a large covered patio at 231 East Gore Creek Drive that is one of the best people-watching perches in Vail Village. The sound level is conversational early and loud by seven, when ski groups arrive in their boots. Lighting is warm, tables are close, and the dress code is whatever you skied in. Service is unhurried and familiar; many of the staff have been here for years.

Best for Team Dinner

Book Pepi's for a team dinner because it absorbs a big, loud, hungry table better than almost anywhere in Vail: the portions are generous, the schnitzels and goulash travel well across a shared table, and the bar keeps a group fed and watered while the kitchen plates. After a day on the mountain, a long table on the covered patio with steins and spaetzle does the work of a morale meeting without anyone calling it one.

Not for

Not for a quiet tasting-menu evening. This is a loud, schnitzel-and-spaetzle apres-ski room that fills with ski boots and large tables by six, and the kitchen does not do delicate.

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