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  • Wursthall Restaurant & Bierhaus opened in San Mateo this winter.

    Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group

    Wursthall Restaurant & Bierhaus opened in San Mateo this winter.

  • The main dining room of the new Wursthall exudes a...

    Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group

    The main dining room of the new Wursthall exudes a Bavarian beer hall-meets-Silicon Valley vibe.

  • J. Kenji Lopez-Alt, chef and partner at Wursthall, is a...

    Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group

    J. Kenji Lopez-Alt, chef and partner at Wursthall, is a James Beard-award winning food writer and consultant for Serious Eats.

  • Wursthall's sausages, including its Chicken & Portobello Wurst, are served...

    Wursthall's sausages, including its Chicken & Portobello Wurst, are served in a top-split bun with mixed greens, house potato salad and condiments.

  • Jonathan Ruedas, chef de cuisine, prepares pretzels at Wursthall.

    Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group

    Jonathan Ruedas, chef de cuisine, prepares pretzels at Wursthall.

  • The craft beer list at Wursthall includes brews such as...

    Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group

    The craft beer list at Wursthall includes brews such as this Saison Dupont.

  • Owners Andy Chin and Jan Wiginton oversaw a renovation of...

    Bay Area News Group File

    Owners Andy Chin and Jan Wiginton oversaw a renovation of the venerable Schroeder's restaurant .

  • Communal tables evoke a beer hall vibe at Schroeder's.

    Bay Area News Group File

    Communal tables evoke a beer hall vibe at Schroeder's.

  • Spaetzle is topped with fresh ricotta, tomatoes, corn and poppy...

    Bay Area News Group File

    Spaetzle is topped with fresh ricotta, tomatoes, corn and poppy seeds at Schroeder's.

  • The 125-year-old German beer hall in the Financial District still...

    Bay Area News Group File

    The 125-year-old German beer hall in the Financial District still has all its Bavarian charm.

  • Alameda's Speisekammer restaurant closes down Lincoln Avenue for Oktoberfest frolic...

    Bay Area News Group File

    Alameda's Speisekammer restaurant closes down Lincoln Avenue for Oktoberfest frolic each fall.

  • Soccer fans cheer a World Cup game at Speisekammer.

    Bay Area News Group File

    Soccer fans cheer a World Cup game at Speisekammer.

  • Ludwig's German Table opened in the old Germania Hall in...

    Ludwig's German Table opened in the old Germania Hall in downtown San Jose in 2016. (Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group)

  • The biergarten at Ludwig's German Table in San Jose can...

    Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group

    The biergarten at Ludwig's German Table in San Jose can fill up quickly on weekend evenings. (Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group)

  • Guest having dinner inside of the Ludwig's German Table, on...

    Guest having dinner inside of the Ludwig's German Table, on North Second Street in downtown San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday, September 28, 2016. Ludwig's German Table, is housed in the historic German social club building. (Josie Lepe/Bay Area News Group)

  • Dish Obatzda Mit Laugenbrezel, pretzel with German cheese spread is...

    Josie Lepe/Bay Area News Group archives

    Dish Obatzda Mit Laugenbrezel, pretzel with German cheese spread is photographed at the Ludwig's German Table, on North Second Street in downtown San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday, September 28, 2016. Ludwig's German Table, is housed in the historic German social club building. (Josie Lepe/Bay Area News Group)

  • Interior of the Ludwig's German Table, is photographed in downtown...

    Interior of the Ludwig's German Table, is photographed in downtown San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday, September 28, 2016. Ludwig's German Table, is housed in the historic German social club building. (Josie Lepe/Bay Area News Group)

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Bratwurst, brewskis and giant pretzels? Yes, please! The last decade’s proliferation of Oktoberfests and beer gardens in California has us wallowing in schnitzel-and-spaetzle heaven these days. Here are five of our favorites, starting with the venerable Schroeder’s, which is celebrating its 125th anniversary this year.

Schroeder’s, San Francisco

This iconic German restaurant in San Francisco’s Financial District first opened its doors in 1893, but it’s since had a $1 million redo. In the hands of Andy Chun and Jan Wiginton, of Press Club fame, the renovation kept Schroeder’s 19th-century Bavarian glory and gemütlichkeit — from Bavarian beer hall steins and communal tables to Wiener schnitzel and spaetzle — but added a modern rustic air and a California-inspired German menu that elevates Oktoberfest fare with seasonal ingredients. It’s sensational.

The communal tables of the beer garden and the back dining room photographed at Schroeder's restaurant in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2014. The century old German beer hall in the Financial District still has all its Bavarian charm, but has been updated to be fresh and current. The areas can be separated by a curtain. (Dan Honda/Bay Area News Group)
Schroeder’s restaurant retains all its Bavarian charm.  (Bay Area News Group file) Bay Area News Group File

The restaurant is celebrating its 125th birthday, by the way, with a “BrewHaHa” ($49) on May 19 with all-you-can-eat food and drink, beer hall games and music by Polkalicious.

Details: 240 Front St., San Francisco; www.schroederssf.com

Wursthall, San Mateo

The crowds began flocking on the very first day that J. Kenji López-Alt, the James Beard award-winning food guru, opened his Wursthall restaurant and bierhaus this winter. And it’s no wonder. Silicon Valley meets German beer hall in this airy space. Strings of Edison-style lights hang above the long beer-hall tables. You won’t find decorative beer steins or Bavarian landscapes here. But you will find some incredible food, from the chicken schnitzel that’s brined first in sauerkraut, to the house potato salad that accompanies eight different kinds of sausages, handcrafted to Wursthall’s specs by Los Altos’ Dittmer’s.

Details: 310 Baldwin Ave., San Mateo; www.wursthall.com

Speisekammer, Alameda

Each September, this cozy German restaurant turns Alameda’s Lincoln Avenue into an expansive Oktoberfest biergarten, with seating for 1,500. Dirndled women dance, lederhosen-clad men raise beer steins and oompah bands play, as the intoxicating scent of grilled sausages and pork steaks wafts from the restaurant’s outdoor grills. But you don’t have to wait for fall to enjoy schnitzel, sauerbraten and sausages at this delicious spot, which serves German fare all year.

Details: 2424 Lincoln Ave., Alameda: www.speisekammer.com

Ludwig’s German Table, San Jose

The biergarten at Ludwig's German Table in San Jose can fill up quickly onweekend evenings. (Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Grou)
The biergarten at Ludwig’s German Table in San Jose can fill up quickly on weekend evenings. (Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group) Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group

Two years ago, this German restaurant reinvigorated Germania Hall, an 1890s Victorian and longtime home for the Germania Verein social club. Now the ground floor has been transformed into an intimate dining area and the courtyard offers a vibrant and very social biergarten. Don’t miss the schnitzels, the Jaeger Pommes and the sausages, which hail from Dittmer’s.

Details: 261 N. Second St., San Jose; www.ludwigssj.com

Brotzeit Lokal Boathaus & Biergarten, Oakland

Who could possibly resist a beer garden AND a boat house all rolled into one? Perched on the Oakland waterfront with estuary views and a boat dock, this Bavarian-inspired biergarten offers housemade sausages, sauerkraut and mustards, freshly baked German pretzels and beers from small German and Austrian breweries, as well as local sips.

Details: 1000 Embarcadero, Oakland; brotzeitbiergarten.com

(Did we say five restaurants? Consider this a first installment, then. Tell us what we missed in the comments!)