145 Best Restaurants in France

Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen

$$$$ | Champs-Élysées Fodor's choice

Tucked away in a quiet garden across from the Petit Palais, Ledoyen—open since 1779—is a study in Empire-style elegance (this is where Napoléon first met his eventual wife Joséphine). Star chef Yannick Alléno injects the three-star dining room with a frisson of modernity by putting fresh farmhouse ingredients front and center in his €415, 10-course tasting extravaganza (a seven-course menu is a slightly more reasonable €295). This may seem de trop, but in Alléno's hands dishes like smoked eel soufflé with watercress coulis and candied onion, tender mussels with tart green apple and caviar, or artichoke-and-Parmesan gratin are rendered as light as a feather. The desserts are tiny masterpieces.

Allium

$$$$ Fodor's choice

When you've had your fill of crêpes, head over to this outstanding gastronomic dining room, beautifully set in its own kitchen garden, where each dish is a small work of art. With a wonderful backstory (the restaurant opened with the help of a crowd-funding campaign), flawless presentation, and seasonal organic cuisine that incorporates local (from its own garden) and wild whenever possible, it's no mystery why a Michelin star was earned in 2019. For a comprehensive experience of this marvelous cuisine, the tasting menu is obligatory, but leave yourself at least two and half hours for the six-course Allium menu (€125, other menus are a steal at €38 and €58). Outdoor dining is a pleasure here, and the chef is responsive to food sensitivities.

88 bd. de Créac'h Gwen, Quimper, Brittany, France
02–98–10–11–48
Known For
  • marvelous tasting menus, including a six-course one that can last 2½ hours
  • outdoor dining spaces
  • bright, contemporary decor
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential

Assa

$$$$ Fodor's choice
While Blois is graced with several acclaimed restaurants, Assa is a relative newcomer to the scene and a total standout. The spare, serene dining room offers river views and Japanese-theme touches, which is your first clue of what's to come: masterfully prepared Asian-inflected dishes that are as beautiful as they are delicious. The market-fresh multicourse menus change almost daily and revolve around a theme that might include fish, meat, and vegetables. Although there are plenty of French delicacies—duck breast, foie gras, truffles—dishes are unique; think creamy shiitake soup followed by smoked tuna with lemongrass sauce and baby vegetables. Finish with a plate of Loire artisanal cheeses and a glass of local wine from the impeccable wine list.

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Au Crocodile

$$$$ Fodor's choice

At one of the temples of Alsatian-French haute cuisine, you get a real taste of old Alsace with a nouvelle spin. Founded in the early 1800s, its grand salon is still aglow with skylights, and a spectacular 19th-century painting showing the Strasbourgeoisie at a country fair continues to set the tasteful tone. Chef Romain Brillat heads the team and presents some of the most dazzling dishes around. Drawing inspiration from classic produce such as foie gras, truffles, lobster and seasonal game, Chef Brillat creates sublime dishes that are delightful on the palate and the eye. Not surprisingly, the wine list is extensive.

10 rue de l'Outre, Strasbourg, Grand-Est, 67000, France
03–88–32–13–02
Known For
  • extensive wine list
  • reasonably priced lunch menus Thursday and Friday
  • top-notch cuisine and masterful sauces
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues. and Wed., Reservations essential, Jacket and tie

Auberge du Père Bise

$$$$ Fodor's choice

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues., Wed., and mid-Dec.–mid-Feb., Reservations essential

Auberge du XIIe Siècle

$$$$ Fodor's choice

You half expect Balzac himself to come strolling in the door of this delightful half-timber auberge, so little has it changed since the 19th century, including its centuries-old dining room, now warmed by a fireplace, floral bouquets, and rich wood tables. Balzac's ample girth attested to his great love of food, and he would no doubt enjoy the sautéed lobster or the nouvelle spins on his classic géline chicken favorites served here today. Dessert is excellent, and so is the coffee—a beverage Balzac drank incessantly (which may explain how he had the energy to create 2,000-plus characters). The restaurant and inn is nearly opposite the great author's country retreat.

1 rue du Château, Saché, Centre-Val de Loire, 37190, France
02–47–26–88–77
Known For
  • excellent coffee
  • charming outdoor terrace
  • sophisticated presentation
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner Sun., Reservations essential

Auberge Nicolas Flamel

$$$$ | Marais Quarter Fodor's choice

There's some serious magic happening at this off-the-radar retreat set in one of Paris's oldest buildings (from 1407), once the laboratory of alchemist Nicolas Flamel. The intimate space, mixing ancient beams, stone, and wood with a streamlined contemporary design, is perfect for the chef's bewitching combinations in signature dishes like Breton langoustine with herbs crowned with caviar or roasted monkfish with tender carrots and bottarga. Deliciously subtle and surprising dessert pairings include pear William with Kalamata olives and sage. Prices are steep, but you'll appreciate leisurely savoring your meal accompanied by excellent wines and top-notch service.

51 rue de Montmorency, Paris, Île-de-France, 75003, France
01–42–71–77–78
Known For
  • one Michelin star
  • top-quality seasonal ingredients
  • stunning wines
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed weekends, Reservations essential

Bellefeuille Restaurant

$$$$ | Champs-Élysées Fodor's choice

Set inside the gorgeously refurbished Saint James Hotel, one of the city's stand-out lodgings, the beautiful Bellefeuille has quickly become popular thanks to chef Julien Dumas's refined menu of inspired dishes with an emphasis on the freshest seafood and vegetables from the hotel's own gardens outside Paris (not to mention honey from the hives on-site). The eight-course tasting menu (with excellent desserts by pastry chef Jeanne Lecourt, paired with natural and biodynamic wines handpicked by the restaurant's gifted sommelier) is highly recommended, but you'll be wowed no matter what you choose. Options like briny oysters paired with beets and tangy mustard, the freshest Saint-Malo scallops, melt-in-your-mouth squid in its own velvety ink, and salt-marsh lamb from the Mont St. Michel bay deliver subtlety and sweetness. In warm weather, arrive early for a cocktail in the hotel's lovely garden or a glass of Champagne in the British-style library, among the most beautiful in Paris. 

Comice

$$$$ | Western Paris Fodor's choice

The culinary experience here is a progression of delights, from your first luscious sip of carrot vélouté to a light-as-air chocolate soufflé contrasted with a zesty yuzu macaron. In between, the set menu (€120 for four courses; €150 for five) may include dishes like butter-poached lobster with beets, onions, and horseradish cream or foie gras en terrine with quince, walnuts, and dates—all meticulously sourced from the finest producers around France—which will surprise, comfort, and deeply satisfy. Every detail in this Michelin-starred gem, from the stemware to the service, is poised, elegant, and precise.

31 av. de Versailles, Paris, Île-de-France, 75015, France
01–42–15–55–70
Known For
  • perfect service and presentation
  • beautiful, serene setting
  • excellent selection of mostly natural wines
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed weekends. No lunch, Reservations essential

David Toutain

$$$$ | Eiffel Tower Fodor's choice

Although two-Michelin-star chef David Toutain's approach may be exasperatingly conceptual for some, others find his earthy, surprising, and inspired concoctions utterly thrilling. Each dish is a lesson in contrasts—of temperature, texture, and flavor—as well as a feat of composition: briny oysters, brussels sprouts, and foie gras in a warm potato consommé; creamy raw oysters with tart kiwi and yuzu; crispy pork chips alongside velvety smoked potato puree. Toutain has a particular soft spot for root vegetables and truffles, which he sprinkles liberally throughout dishes like salsify broth with lardo and black truffle. 

29 rue Surcouf, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
01–45–50–11–10
Known For
  • equally wonderful choices for vegetarians and carnivores
  • epitome of "seasonal" cuisine
  • plenty of avant-garde thrills
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed weekends. No lunch Wed., Reservations essential

El Taller

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Run by four entrepreneurial friends just down the road from the famous Abbaye de St-Michel de Cuxa, this hip bistro serves fine locally sourced fare in large portions, like pork tenderloin in corriollette (fairy-ring mushroom) sauce. Like the food, the setting is stylish: its sleek glass-walled building and steel-framed terrace were constructed by the village specifically to house this Bistrot de Pays (a government-subsidized network of village restaurants promoting commerce in rural areas).

Taurinya, Occitania, 6650, France
04–68–05–63–35
Known For
  • reliably great meals
  • location in a picturesque village at the base of Mont Canigou
  • convenient stop after visiting the Abbaye de St-Michel de Cuxa
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed last 2 wks of June, Mon.–Wed. in Sept.–June, and Wed. in July and late Aug. No dinner Sun. in Sept.–June and Tues. in July and Aug.

Flaveurs

$$$$ Fodor's choice

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed weekends and mid-Dec.–Jan. No lunch Mon., Reservations essential

Flocons de Sel

$$$$ Fodor's choice

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues., Wed., May, and Nov. No lunch Mon., Thurs., and Fri., Reservations essential

Frenchie

$$$$ | Grands Boulevards Fodor's choice

Set in a brick-and-stone-walled building on a pedestrian street near Rue Montorgueil, Frenchie has quickly become one of the most hard-to-book bistros in town, with tables booked months in advance, despite two seatings each evening. This success is due to the good-value, €140 five-course dinner menu (prix fixe only); boldly flavored dishes such as calamari gazpacho with squash blossoms or melt-in-the-mouth braised lamb with roasted eggplant and spinach are excellent options. Service can be, shall we say, a tad brusque, but for some that's a small price to pay for food this good.

5 rue du Nil, Paris, Île-de-France, 75002, France
01–40–39–96–19
Known For
  • casual laid-back atmosphere that belies the ultrasophisticated dishes
  • extensive and original wine list
  • graciously accommodating to vegetarians
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed weekends, 2 wks in Aug., and 10 days at Christmas. No lunch, Reservations essential

Garriane

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Foodies appreciate Garriane's direct approach to eating and drinking well. Here a plain-Jane decor and a dim neighborhood spectacularly contrast with immaculate plates presented by the Aussie-bred chef (who incidentally shook up Perpignan's sleepy food scene with a strictly seasonal menu emphasizing local produce boldly prepared for an exotic outcome). Wine is the only choice you'll need make; after that the nine-course degustation begins, with dishes like citrusy wild partridge and butternut squash mousse promptly appearing one after the other, ending with three separate desserts (picture chocolate gazpacho garnished with ultrafresh, peppery olive oil).

18 carrer Frédéric Valette, Perpignan, Occitania, 66000, France
04–68–67–07–44
Known For
  • nine-course degustation menu that's the best meal in Perpignan
  • affordable lunch menu
  • booking ahead a must
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun.–Wed. No lunch Sat. No dinner Thurs.

Gaya

$$$$ | St-Germain-des-Prés Fodor's choice

If you can't fathom paying hundreds of euros per person to taste the cooking of Pierre Gagnaire, one of France's foremost chefs, at his eponymous restaurant, but would still like to encounter one of his outstanding culinary experiences, book a table at his Left Bank fish restaurant. At Gaya, Gagnaire uses seafood as a palette for his creative impulses. Expect small portions of artfully presented food. Vegan options are offered upon advance request. 

Georges Blanc

$$$$ Fodor's choice

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.–Wed. and Jan. No lunch Thurs., Reservations essential

Gordon Ramsay au Trianon

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Worldwide chef sensation Gordon Ramsay brings his conversation-worthy cuisine to this Versailles berth. Picture exemplary entrées like ravioli of langoustines and lobster cooked in a Riesling bisque with Petrossian caviar and lime consommé, or Périgord foie gras done "2 ways," roasted with a beetroot tart and pressed with green apple and Sauternes, all available on an expensive five-course tasting menu at dinner. The Trianon's more casual, 60-seat Véranda restaurant (open for lunch and dinner) is also under Ramsay's sway, and in its black-and-white contemporary setting you can opt for his "light, modern take" on bistro novelties like radicchio and Parmesan risotto with chorizo oil. Teatime provides a delightful (and more reasonable) restorative for weary château-goers, with a French twist on high tea: scones, madeleines, and heavenly macarons.

Guy Savoy

$$$$ | St-Germain-des-Prés Fodor's choice

Within the beautifully restored Monnaie de Paris, you'll find star chef Guy Savoy's hallowed dining room. The market-fresh menu features à la carte classics such as artichoke truffle soup or red mullet fish, but if you want the ultimate gourmet dining experience, splurge on the 13-course, €630 tasting menu. The more modest eight-course lunch menu will only set you back €260, and these prices do not include wine. Whatever you order, every dish is a work of art. 

11 quai de Conti, Paris, Île-de-France, 75006, France
01–43–80–40–61
Known For
  • gorgeous setting overlooking the Seine
  • intimate, art-filled dining rooms
  • one of Paris's most highly rated dining experiences
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., and 1 wk at Christmas. No lunch Sat., Reservations essential, Jacket required

Ima

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Five years in a top Tokyo kitchen transformed Chef Julien Lemarié's scintillating, pared-down cuisine, for which he quickly won a Michelin star. Using only local products—as sustainably sourced as possible—the chef crafts stunning plates, featuring line-caught fish and high-quality meats with glorious vegetable accompaniments served in an elegant, streamlined restaurant that features natural materials: wood, waxed concrete, and ceramic. The chef's romance with Japanese cuisine is front-and-center at his new restaurant next door, Imayoko, specializing in donburi and izakaya-style dishes to share paired with artisanal sake.

20 bd. de la Tour d’Auvergne, Rennes, Brittany, 35000, France
02–23–47–82–74
Known For
  • imaginative dishes
  • curated wine list
  • one of the city's best dining experiences
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun.–Tues., Reservations essential

Jean Imbert au Plaza Athénée

$$$$ | Champs-Élysées Fodor's choice

In one of the most anticipated announcements in the Parisian food world, the Plaza Athénée named talented young chef Jean Imbert, a protégé of his predecessor Alain Ducasse, as head of their new temple to gastronomy. A long marble table is the centerpiece of this opulently refurbished dining room (which seems to take Versailles as its model), and the menu is no less splendid, with options like Casparian imperial caviar, Bellevue lobster in a foie gras broth flecked with black truffle, and whole turbot masterfully boned table-side. Each dish goes the extra mile, and that goes for the desserts by pastry chefs Angelo Musa and Elisabeth Hot too. Even among the gilding, marble, Aubusson carpets, and towering chandeliers, a feeling of intimacy prevails, with splashes of candlelight for romance.

L'Arcane

$$$$ | Montmartre Fodor's choice

Once a well-guarded foodie secret, a Michelin star brought this singular restaurant, tucked behind the Sacré-Coeur, richly deserved acclaim. Now the dining room is packed with diners enjoying impeccable contemporary French cuisine that's gorgeously presented and full of flavor. With no à la carte ordering, you are truly in the hands of chef Laurent Magnin, whose menus include the seven-course "temptation" menu (€135) and the eleven-course tasting menu (€180). Expect delights like lacquered suckling pig or roasted mullet in a sublimely creamy mushroom duxelle. It's the perfect end, or midday pause, to a day spent wandering the village-y streets of Montmartre.  There is also a five-course "menu dejeuner" for lunch that costs €65.

52 rue Lamarck, Paris, Île-de-France, 75018, France
01–46–06–86–00
Known For
  • vividly imagined cuisine on multicourse tasting menus
  • location near the Sacré-Coeur
  • very friendly service
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Mon., Aug., 1 wk in mid-Apr., and last wk of Dec., Reservations essential

L'Astrance

$$$$ | Eiffel Tower Fodor's choice

Pascal Barbot rose to fame thanks to his restaurant's reasonable prices and casual atmosphere, but after the passage of several years, L'Astrance has become resolutely haute. His dishes often draw on Asian ingredients, as in grilled lamb with miso-lacquered eggplant and a palate-cleansing white sorbet spiked with chili pepper and lemongrass. They offer à la carte, as well as a lunch menu for €125 and the full tasting menu for €285 (this is what most people come for). Each menu also comes at a (significantly) higher price with wines to match each course. Barbot's cooking has such an ethereal quality that it's worth the considerable effort of booking a table—you should start trying at least two months in advance.

L'Atlantide 1874 - Maison Guého

$$$$ Fodor's choice

At this beautiful 150-year-old house, a minute's walk from the Jules Verne museum, you'll enjoy panoramic views of the Loire River along with exceptional local cuisine. Michelin-star chef Jean-Yves Guého studied his craft in such far-flung places as Hong Kong, New Orleans, and Paris, but his real love is for the culinary riches of his native Brittany. Seafood takes front and center in dishes like langoustine marinated in bourbon vanilla and lime with fava beans and blood orange, or white asparagus with Petrossian caviar and wild garlic. For dessert, try the house specialty: homegrown lemon verbena soufflé with raspberries and a chocolate tuile. The beautiful dining room is a place to linger, and on nice days you can dine outdoors on a spacious terrace overlooking the river.

L'Auberge de L'Ill

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Marlene Dietrich and Spanish opera star Montserrat Caballé are just two of the famous guests who have feasted at this culinary temple, where the current chef, Marc Haeberlin, marries traditional Alsatian cuisine with contemporary nuances. The kitchen's touch is incredibly light, so you'll have room left for the masterful desserts.

L'Auberge de Layotte

$$$$ Fodor's choice

A scenic 10-minute drive from the Grotte du Grand-Roc, this proudly authentic restaurant deep in the Périgord countryside is the perfect finale to a day of exploring. Guests are whisked to a long table to feast on seasonal dishes, many hunted or foraged from the chef's property. Prepare yourself for nettle soup; heaping platters of house-cured ham; wild boar terrine with homemade cornichons; confit de canard with forest cèpes; beef cheeks stewed in local red wine; and a hearty walnut cake topped with elderberry, rose, or pine confiture—all for €41, including all the wine you can drink, coffee, and a digestif. It's truly an experience not to be missed, for a price that can't be beat.

L'Auberge du Pont de Collonges

$$$$ Fodor's choice

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential, Closed Mon. and Tues.

L'Odas

$$$$ | Hôtel de Ville Fodor's choice

Rouen's Michelin-starred sensation, l'Odas is the brainchild of chef Olivier da Silva, whose selection of four- and six-course tasting menus has earned accolades for their seasonality, inventiveness, and deep connection to the surrounding countryside. Add a sensational view of Rouen's cathedral from the sleek yet warm dining room, and this makes for a singular way to experience Rouen's top-flight cuisine. 

4 passage Maurice Lenfant, Rouen, Normandy, 76000, France
02–35–73–83–24
Known For
  • exquisite seasonal selections
  • great three-course €50 lunch deal
  • best view in town
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential

La Cachette

$$$$ Fodor's choice

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
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential