On the IJ, at IJdok 185, sits a restaurant that has been proving for nearly a decade that you don't necessarily have to go downtown for a Michelin star. MOS has panoramic views over the water, and that's not a setting that bores quickly. Big windows, the IJ shifting by, and on the other side a plate worth seeing. Such a combination is rare in this city.
Egon van Hoof is chef-patron here. He opened MOS in 2015 together with maître Henry Pattiwael, and a year later the Michelin star hung on the facade. Since then, that star has never come off. That says something about how the business is run: not with the ambition of someone who wants to score once, but with the discipline of two people who keep it up for years. Van Hoof is known for his technical precision in the kitchen, combined with presentations that stand out visually. Pattiwael handles the service, and that runs like a machine you can't hear.

The dining room takes maximum advantage of its location. The panoramic view over the IJ is not an afterthought, it is part of the evening. Outside, a boat sails; inside, a dish is laid out that demands just as much attention. The space is understated, which suits the cuisine: here the dishes don't scream, they convince. Everything is focused on what is on the table and who is at the table.
The Michelin star hung on the facade a year after opening, and it has never come off since.
MOS is in the northern part of the city, on the waterfront, and that gives the evening its own character. You travel a little farther than you are used to for dinner, but that feeling disappears as soon as you sit down at the table and the IJ is in front of you. If you want, you can visit the neighboring Roommate Hotel after dinner. That turns a dinner at MOS into a full evening out, if desired, without leaving the city.