Pepi’s in Vail stands out as a ski-town restaurant

Editor’s note: This is part of The Know’s series, Staff Favorites. Each week, we offer our opinions on the best that Colorado has to offer for dining, shopping, entertainment, outdoor activities and more. (We’ll also let you in on some hidden gems). 


I have favorite ski areas, backcountry ski tours, hikes and bike rides, and it’s always hard for me to decide which ones I like best. But when it comes to ski town restaurants, one stands far above the others: Pepi’s Restaurant and Bar in Vail.

Located only 500 feet from Gondola One in the Vail Village base area, Pepi’s has been serving authentic Austrian cuisine since the early days of Vail in 1964. It was founded by Pepi Gramshammer, an Austrian ski racing star of the 1950s, along with his wife Sheika. Together they built Pepi’s and an adjoining hotel called Gasthof Gramshammer into one of Vail’s most iconic destinations. Pepi died in 2019 at 87, but Sheika is still around.

Pepi Gramshammer was an Austrian ski racing star of the 1950s who became a pioneer of the Vail Ski Resort dating back to the town's early days. He and his wife, Sheika,,started a restaurant and hotel in 1964 that helped give Vail international credibility. (Provided by the Colorado Snowsports Museum)
Pepi Gramshammer was an Austrian ski racing star of the 1950s who became a pioneer of the Vail Ski Resort. He and his wife, Sheika, shown here in an undated photo, started a restaurant and hotel in 1964 that helped Vail gain international credibility. (Provided by the Colorado Snowsports Museum)

German food is part of my heritage, so for me, no trip to Vail is complete without lunch or dinner at Pepi’s. The food is fantastic, and the ambiance vividly reminds me of ski trips to Kitzbuehel and St. Anton in Austria, Grindelwald and Lenzerheide in Switzerland.

Pepi was one of Vail’s most colorful and beloved characters for more than 50 years. The bar has a glass display case crammed with trophies and medals he won while racing on Austrian teams that included the legendary Toni Sailer and Anderl Molterer. During world championships held at Vail/Beaver Creek in 1989, 1999 and 2015, Gasthof Gramshammer was officially designated “Austria House” by the Austrian ski federation, so you could count on Arnold Schwarzenegger and Franz Klammer paying a visit. Gramshammer was instrumental in Vail’s bidding for those events with the International Ski Federation, which boosted Vail’s stature in international skiing circles.

I got to spend a wonderful day skiing with Pepi in St. Anton, considered the birthplace of alpine skiing, when we both were there for the 2001 world championships. Everywhere we went on that mountain, people called out his name and shouted heartfelt greetings.

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