Lyon and the Alps Restaurants

We’ve compiled the best of the best in Lyon and the Alps - browse our top choices for Restaurants during your stay.

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  • 1. Auberge du Père Bise

    $$$$

    For anyone who's never dined in one of France's grand old restaurants, this two-star stunner would be a fine start, set in a century-old chalet-inn in the tiny storybook village of Talloires on the incomparably beautiful Lac d'Annecy. From start to finish you'll be pampered in the old style. Although chef Jean Sulpice has updated the cuisine, dishes like veal carpaccio with white caviar and horseradish cream; poulet de Bresse stuffed with truffles and foie gras; and steamed lake fish with scallops, fennel, and ginger beurre blanc feature all the luxe ingredients that distinguish French gastronomy. On a warm day, a table on the gracious terrace overlooking the lake is a must. Prices are not for the fainthearted, but good memories are priceless.

    303 rte. du Port, Annecy, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 74290, France
    04–50–60–72–01

    Known For

    • Stunning lakeside setting
    • Distinguished menu of French classics
    • Legendary restaurant

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues., Wed., and mid-Dec.–mid-Feb., Reservations essential
  • 2. Comptoir Abel

    $$ | Presqu'île

    About 400 years old, this charming house is one of Lyon's most frequently filmed and photographed taverns. Simple wooden tables in wood-panel dining rooms, quirky art on every wall, heavy-bottom pot lyonnais wine bottles—every detail is obviously pampered and lovingly produced. The salade lyonnaise (green salad with homemade croutons and sautéed bacon, topped with a poached egg) or the rognons madère (kidneys in a Madeira sauce) are standouts.

    25 rue Guynemer, Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 69002, France
    04–78–37–46–18

    Known For

    • Authentic Lyonnais specialties
    • Unbeatable atmosphere
    • Reasonable prices

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 3. Flaveurs

    $$$$

    If you think the Pic empire has a lock on Valence gastronomy, think again: the extraordinary precision and refinement of Baptiste Poinot's cooking makes a foodie stopover in Valence an absolute must. Though the dining room itself is a bit on the quirky side, there is nothing to quibble over when it comes to the gorgeous presentation and scintillating tastes in dishes like melt-in-your-mouth trout fillet with salsify puree and crunchy grains of roasted buckwheat all in a cloud of curried foam. Desserts are equally tantalizing and the bountiful cheese cart is a sight to behold. The €38 lunch menu is a good introduction to this marvelous Michelin-starred cuisine.

    32 rue Grande, Valence, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 26000, France
    04–75–56–08–40

    Known For

    • Exquisite presentation
    • Off-the-charts innovation
    • Exceptional cheese cart

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends and mid-Dec.–Jan. No lunch Mon., Reservations essential
  • 4. Flocons de Sel

    $$$$

    Emmanuel Renaut's Flocons de Sel ("flakes of salt"), located in Leutaz, brings new meaning to the world of haute cuisine—and even with the drive out of town it's more than an excellent Megève dining option, it's a pilgrimage point. Though the extravagant 10-course tasting menu is pricey, it offers a rare experience from one of France's great three-star chefs, based on simple but carefully selected ingredients—freshwater crayfish, scallops en croute with sea salt, and roast wood pigeon are just a few of the creatively prepared specialties. The dining room is rustic-simple, allowing the food to take center stage. Surrounded by a series of chalets and much natural splendor, the establishment also offers nine exquisite guest rooms and two private chalets for crawl-away convenience.

    1775 rte. du Leutaz, Megève, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 74120, France
    04–50–21–49–99

    Known For

    • Three Michelin stars
    • Gorgeous rustic dining room
    • Finest dining around

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues., Wed., May, and Nov. No lunch Mon., Thurs., and Fri., Reservations essential
  • 5. Georges Blanc

    $$$$

    In the village of Vonnas, a simple 19th-century inn with 30 rooms full of antique country furniture doubles as one of the greatest gastronomic addresses in all of Gaul. Poulet de Bresse, truffles, and lobster are just some of the divine dishes featured on the legendary menu created by three-Michelin-star chef Monsieur Blanc, whose culinary DNA extends back to innkeepers from the French Revolution. He serves his traditional-yet-nouvelle delights in a vast dining room, renovated—overly so, some might say—in a stately manner, replete with Louis XIII–style chairs, fireplace, and floral tapestries. Wine connoisseurs will go weak at the knees at the cellar here, overflowing with 130,000 bottles. The guest rooms range from (relatively) simple to luxurious. A block south you can repair to Blanc's cheaper, more casual restaurant, L'Ancienne Auberge, most delightfully set in a 1900s fabrique de limonade (soda-water plant) and now festooned with antique bicycles and daguerreotypes.

    Pl. du Marché, Vonnas, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 01540, France
    04–74–50–90–90

    Known For

    • Stellar wine list
    • Stately, over-the-top dining room
    • Stiff prices

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon.–Wed. and Jan. No lunch Thurs., Reservations essential
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  • 6. L'Auberge du Pont de Collonges

    $$$$

    The late great Paul Bocuse—who kick-started nouvelle cuisine back in the 1970s and became a superstar in the process—may no longer be with us, but dishes like the legendary black-truffle soup in pastry crust he created in 1975 to honor President Giscard d'Estaing always will be. So will the frogs' leg soup with watercress; the green bean and artichoke salad with foie gras; and the "tripled" wood pigeon, consisting of a drumstick in puff pastry, a breast roasted and glazed in cognac, and a dark aromatic pâté of the innards. For a mere €330 per person, the Paul Bocuse Menu includes two of the master's most famous dishes: soup aux truffes and the volaille de Bresse truffée en vessie "Mère Fillioux" (Bresse hen cooked in a pig bladder with truffles), which comes to the table looking something like a basketball. Like the desserts, the grand dining room is done in traditional style.

    40 quai de la Plage, Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 69660, France
    04–72–42–90–90

    Known For

    • One of the best restaurants in Lyon with two Michelin stars
    • Serves all Paul Bocuse's greatest recipes
    • Extravagantly priced tasting menu

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential, Closed Mon. and Tues.
  • 7. L'Étage

    $$$ | Presqu'île

    Hidden over Place des Terreaux, this semisecret upstairs dining room in a former silk-weaving loft prepares some of Lyon's finest and most daring cuisine. A place at the window (admittedly hard to come by), overlooking the facade of the Beaux Arts academy across the square, is a moment to remember—especially during December's Festival of Lights. The six-course €59 tasting menu at dinner is a steal for this quality of dining.

    4 pl. des Terreaux, Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 69001, France
    04–78–28–19–59

    Known For

    • Tiny, elegant dining room
    • Stunning cuisine
    • Great value three-course lunch menu

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Mon., and late July–late Aug., Reservations essential
  • 8. La Cachette

    $$$$

    Set on the edge of Valence's Old Town, a few minutes from the Parc Jouvet, this hidden gem is one more reason to get thee to Valence. Chef Masashi Ijichi's Japanese roots and pedigreed French training (at the House of Pic) merge in a stunning cuisine that is virtuosic without being bombastic. Ijichi's delicate flavor pairings and poetic presentation rely on the intrinsic virtues of the freshest ingredients: an inky black sea urchin filled with golden pumpkin whipped cream and jellied lobster or white chocolate mousse and bright mango puree. The pared down dining room is an excellent backdrop to highlight the food, but be sure to leave some time, as this is a moment to savor.

    20 rue Notre Dame de Soyons, Valence, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 26000, France
    04–75–55–24–13

    Known For

    • Virtuosic Japanese-inflected French cuisine
    • Laid-back dining room
    • Michelin star

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential
  • 9. La Dame de Pic – Le 1920

    $$$$

    The exceptional Domaine du Mont d'Arbois Four Seasons hotel has doubly distinguished itself by the enviable accomplishment of having scored a partnership with chef Anne-Sophie Pic, hands down France's most famous female chef and one the most starred cooks in the country, whose three-star restaurant in Valence is one of the most famous in France. Unlike most celebrity chefs, Pic stands by her reputation, insisting on actually cooking in the kitchen that bears her name. Meaning you're assured a stellar meal that makes the steep price of both dining room and hotel well worth the splurge.

    447 chemin de la Rocaille, Megève, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 74120, France
    04–50–21–25–03

    Known For

    • Sumptuous decor
    • Classic French cooking raised to new heights
    • Full disclosure of where everything on the menu comes from

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 10. La Mère Brazier

    $$$$ | Presqu'île

    This is a legendary location in Lyon—even more so now that Mathieu Viannay, one of the top names in the city's contemporary cuisine scene, has honored gastronomy pioneer Eugénie Brazier—the founder of nouvelle cuisine and the first woman to gain three Michelin stars in 1933—by opening a restaurant in her former space. A winner of the coveted Meilleur Ouvrier de France prize, Viannay continues to experiment with taste, textures, and ingredients in this carefully restored and recently remodeled traditional house. He describes the menu as "mixed" between completely modern cuisine and "Mère Brazier recipes revisited" such as the poularde de Bresse demi-deuil (Bresse poultry in "half mourning," that is, with black truffles under the breast skin).

    12 rue Royale, Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 69001, France
    04–78–23–17–20

    Known For

    • Upscale authentic Lyon dining
    • Pricey but worth it
    • Bresse chicken with black truffles under the skin

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends, Reservations essential
  • 11. La Pyramide

    $$$$

    Back when your grandmother's grandmother was making the grand tour, La Pyramide's Fernand Point had already perfected haute cuisine for a generation and become the first superstar chef, teaching a regiment of students who glamorized French dining the world over. Many decades later, La Pyramide has dropped its museum status and now offers contemporary classics by acclaimed two-Michelin-star chef Patrick Henriroux, accompanied by a peerless selection of wines featuring local stars from the nearby Côte-Rôtie and Condrieu vineyards. Both classical and avant-garde dishes triumph here, from crème soufflée de crabe au croquant d'artichaut (creamy crab soufflé with crunchy artichoke) to the veau de lait aux légumes de la vallée (suckling veal with vegetables from the Drôme Valley). For those who wish to sleep off the feast, there are contemporary guest rooms at hand.

    14 bd. Fernand-Point, Vienne, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 38200, France
    04–74–53–01–96

    Known For

    • Good-value fixed-price menus
    • Warm welcome
    • Extensive wine list covering all regions of France

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues., Wed., early Feb.–early Mar., and 1 wk in Aug., Reservations essential
  • 12. Le Bouillon

    $$

    Set back near the river in Annecy's picturesque old town, this casual, laid-back restaurant is a place the locals would rather keep to themselves. From the first amuse-bouche to dessert, diners can't wait to taste what's next from a cuisine anchored in French technique and enhanced with plenty of far-flung influences. Prices are gentle for this quality of food and its a favorite in town, so be sure to reserve.

    9 rue de la Gare, Annecy, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 74000, France
    04–50–77–31–02

    Known For

    • Great-value French cuisine
    • Charming atmosphere
    • Reservations usually necessary

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 13. Le Garet

    $$ | Presqu'île

    From quenelles to the house favorite, andouillettes, this is the perfect primer in bouchon fare. Salade lyonnaise (frisée lettuce, pork lardons, croutons, and a poached egg, with a Dijon vinaigrette) is an institution at this famous dining room near the Hôtel de Ville. The roast veal chop and ratatouille provide a welcome break from the standard porcine bouchon lineup. The cozy and joyful atmosphere is, perhaps even more than the food itself, what makes Lyon's version of the French bistro so irresistible.

    7 rue Garet, Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 69001, France
    04–78–28–16–94

    Known For

    • Picturesque atmosphere
    • Way above the average bouchon
    • Historic setting

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends and late July–late Aug., Reservations essential
  • 14. Le Kitchen Café

    $

    Though delicious coffee, croissants, and pastries are on the all-day menu, Swedish chef Connie Zagora and her pastry chef husband, Laurent Ozan, dish up one of the more exciting gastronomic lunches in town in this luminous little café. A new concept that's catching hold in Paris and Lyon alike, the restaurant is open from 8 am to 6:30 pm, serving an all-day menu of sweet or savory breakfast foods (think broiled eggs with soy sauce, trout gravlax with dill cream, homemade granola, and fromage frais) and a range of homemade pastries. But the real star is the three-course (€29) lunch menu, offering such gourmet delights as velvety green parsley and leek vichyssoise, followed by marinated cod or steak with parsnip cream black sesame and shiitake mushrooms. All ingredients are locally sourced and the chef is vegetarian friendly.

    34 rue Chevreul, Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 69007, France
    06–03–36–42–75

    Known For

    • Delicious all-day breakfasts
    • One of the best lunches in town
    • Bright, friendly atmosphere

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed.
  • 15. Les Apothicaires

    $$$ | Brotteaux

    Chefs Tabata and Ludovic Mey made instant waves when they opened this stylish but casual dining room serving a "liberated and sincere" menu that plays with textures, temperatures, and flavor pairings. Options include crisp white beans paired with velvety smoked eel and cubes of bone marrow with sparks of lemon thyme; you can also enjoy the crunch of roasted chamomile flowers over tender squid, with tart-sweet Meyer lemon and chamomile oil. The eight-course dinner menu (€98) is the best way to explore this virtuosic cuisine.

    23 rue de Sèze, Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 69006, France
    04–26–02–25–09

    Known For

    • Stunning flavor pairings
    • Minute attention to details
    • Superb wine list

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends, Reservations essential
  • 16. André

    $$$

    If Maison Pic, superstar chef Anne-Sophie Pic's gastronomic mothership, is too much of a splurge (and a splurge it is), her gourmet bistro just two steps away will set you right up. Named for her grandfather, founder of the Pic empire, the menu riffs on all the French classics that built the Pic name. The handsome wood-and-leather decor and swanky lighting feel both classic and contemporary, much like the menu of such timeless stalwarts as snails and parsleyed roasted potatoes, pâté en croute, filet de dorade royale, grilled entrecôte, and leeks vinaigrette, all at a fraction of what you'd pay next door.

    285 av. Victor Hugo, Valence, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 26000, France
    04–75–44–53–86

    Known For

    • Quiet, chic decor
    • Excellent service
    • Contemporary-classic recipes

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 17. Bistrot des Clercs

    $$

    Stepping through the door of this ravishing Belle Époque brasserie is a bit like traveling back in time, so beautifully preserved is its turn-of-the-century ambience, with classic globe lighting, tile floor, linen-bedecked wooden tables, and the expansive menu. The spell is only enhanced by a traditional menu of all the classics: delicious steak tartare, moules frites (mussels and fries), foie gras, and escargots, all washed down with a local Côtes du Rhône. If you still have room, the cheese plate or a homemade classic dessert (like pavé au chocolat Valrhona or crème brûlée) assure a happy ending.

    48 rue Grande, Valence, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 26000, France
    04–75–55–55–15

    Known For

    • Gorgeous historical atmosphere
    • All the classic dishes
    • Delightful desserts

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 18. Brasserie Georges

    $$ | Perrache

    This inexpensive brasserie at the south end of Rue de la Charité is one of the city's largest and oldest, founded in 1836 and housed in a palatial building dating from 1925. Meals range from hearty veal stew or sauerkraut and sausage to more refined fare. Cooking is less than creative—stick with the great standards, such as saucisson brioché (sausage in brioche stuffed with truffled foie gras)—and, like the vast room setting, service is a bit impersonal and can be very slow. Nevertheless, the Art Deco style is as delicious as it comes.

    30 cours Verdun, Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 69002, France
    04–72–56–54–54

    Known For

    • Eye-popping, Art Deco atmosphere
    • Traditional Lyonnais food
    • Beer brewed on premises

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 19. Café des Fédérations

    $$ | Presqu'île

    For 80 years this sawdust-strewn café with homey red-check tablecloths has reigned as one of the city's leading bouchons, and although its glory days are long past, it's still a good bet for an authentic experience. For a taste of classic Lyon gastronomy in a historic setting, the deftly prepared local classics like boudin noir, boudin blanc (white-meat sausage), or andouillettes (veal and pork tripe sausage) are hard to beat.

    8 rue du Major-Martin, Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 69001, France
    04–78–28–26–00

    Known For

    • Well-priced prix-fixe lunch menu
    • Authentic atmosphere
    • Great for families

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed late Dec.–Jan. No dinner Sun.
  • 20. Café du Jura

    $ | Presqu'île

    The gâteau de foies de volaille aux raviolis (chicken-liver ravioli) is a masterpiece at this eatery founded in 1864. Game and steak dishes are robust, as is the cassolette d'escargots (stew of beans, mutton, and snails). For dessert, stick with the terrific cheese selection. The rows of tables, the mosaic-tile floor, and the absence of anything too decorative gives this place the feel of a men's club.

    25 rue Tupin, Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, 69002, France
    04–78–42–20–57

    Known For

    • Top-notch Lyonnais charcuterie
    • Authentic atmosphere
    • Decent prices

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Mon., and Aug.

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