Restaurant in Anderlecht, Belgium
Cinq
360Pearl PointsMichelin-flagged, easy to book, worth it.

About Cinq
A Michelin Plate-recognised Modern French kitchen on the green edge of Anderlecht, Cinq delivers seasonal, quality-driven cooking at €€€ without the booking pressure of the area's top-tier rooms. Jean-Michel Verzele's training pedigree shows in the fundamentals. For serious food in a nature setting near Brussels, it is one of the more accessible bets in its category.
Should You Book Cinq?
Getting a table at Cinq is easier than you might expect for a Michelin Plate restaurant, which makes it a smarter bet than it first appears. Booking difficulty is low, meaning you are not competing against months-long waitlists the way you would at La Paix or Belgium's more decorated rooms. That accessibility, combined with two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025), is the clearest signal that Cinq is delivering consistent, credible Modern French cooking at a price point — €€€ — that sits below the top tier. If you are a food-focused traveller looking for seasonal, technique-driven French cuisine without the production overhead of a full Michelin-starred experience, book Cinq. If you need the full tasting menu theatre of a three-star room, look further afield.
The Kitchen and What It Does Well
Cinq's culinary identity is built around a seasonal, quality-first approach to Modern French cooking. The kitchen, led by Jean-Michel Verzele, who trained in serious Belgian establishments including Le Château du Mylord, Le Passage, and Chez Michel, operates with a clear commitment to freshness and product quality. That background is the kind of classical grounding that tends to show in the fundamentals: clean sauces, disciplined seasoning, produce that is treated as the point rather than the backdrop.
The restaurant positions itself around what it calls a "green kitchen", an orientation toward seasonal and locally sourced ingredients that is consistent with its Pajottenland setting. Pajottenland is a rural region southwest of Brussels known for its rolling agricultural land, and the restaurant's location on the outskirts of Anderlecht places it physically within that producing area. That geography matters to how the kitchen works. Seasonal sourcing in this context is not a marketing claim bolted onto a static menu, it is a function of what the surrounding land actually produces across the year.
For the food-focused traveller, the comparison that is worth making is between Cinq and similarly positioned Modern French rooms elsewhere in Belgium. Vrijmoed in Gent operates in a comparable register, and Boury in Roeselare sits at a higher level of technical ambition and price. Cinq occupies the accessible middle ground: more rigour than a neighbourhood bistro, more relaxed than a full fine-dining operation. That positioning is a feature, not a compromise. It means you can eat seriously without the formality burden that comes with Belgium's leading tables.
The team described as "young volunteers" alongside Verzele signals a kitchen with energy and investment in craft, even if it lacks the seasoned brigade depth of older, more established houses. What that typically produces in practice is cooking with genuine enthusiasm and seasonal responsiveness, qualities that often matter more to the actual meal than kitchen size or staffing hierarchy.
Setting and Context
The restaurant sits in a nature setting on the edge of Anderlecht, on the Route de Lennik (Rte de Lennik 361). For visitors coming from central Brussels, this is a destination rather than a drop-in. The surrounding greenery is part of the experience, the setting is genuinely rural for an address that falls within the Brussels metropolitan area. If you are travelling for food specifically, the drive or taxi from central Brussels is the practical price of admission. For a food and wine enthusiast who values environment as part of the meal, the setting at Cinq adds real value compared to an urban room at the same price tier.
There is no verified data on specific aromas, room decor, or sensory atmosphere beyond what the setting implies, a garden-adjacent, nature-surrounded environment in a working green kitchen. Expect an atmosphere that reflects its Pajottenland context rather than a sleek urban dining room.
Ratings and Trust Signals
Cinq holds a Google rating of 4.5 from 374 reviews, which is a meaningful sample at that score. For context, 374 reviews at 4.5 is a credible signal of consistent performance, not a venue coasting on a handful of enthusiast scores. Combined with consecutive Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, the picture is of a kitchen that delivers reliably at its stated level. The Michelin Plate designation, while below a star, represents Michelin's acknowledgment of good cooking, it is not an honorary mention. For a €€€ restaurant outside central Brussels, that combination of public rating and Michelin recognition is a solid foundation for booking confidence.
For comparison, Hof van Cleve in Kruishoutem and Zilte in Antwerp represent Belgium's highest-decorated French and modern kitchens. Willem Hiele in Oudenburg and d'Eugénie à Emilie in Baudour offer comparable regional ambition. Cinq is not competing with those rooms on prestige, but it is a credible choice for a serious dinner in the Brussels area without the commitment those venues require.
Know Before You Go
- Address: Rte de Lennik 361, 1070 Bruxelles (Anderlecht)
- Price range: €€€ (mid-to-upper tier; expect a meaningful spend per head without reaching fine-dining extremes)
- Cuisine: Modern French, seasonal focus
- Booking difficulty: Easy, no extended waitlist; book a week or two ahead to secure your preferred date
- Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025
- Google rating: 4.5 from 374 reviews
- Getting there: Route de Lennik is on the western edge of Anderlecht; plan for a taxi or drive from central Brussels, this is not a walk-from-the-metro location
- Setting: Rural, nature-adjacent; part of the Pajottenland green belt
- Hours/phone/website: Not publicly listed in current data, confirm directly before travelling
How Far Ahead Should I Book?
Given the low booking difficulty, one to two weeks ahead is generally sufficient for Cinq. Unlike La Paix, where competition for tables is considerably higher, Cinq does not require the kind of advance planning you would apply to Belgium's starred rooms. That said, Friday and Saturday evenings will fill faster than midweek slots, so if your dates are fixed, book as soon as they are confirmed. There is no online booking data available in the current record, so confirm the reservation method, phone or email, directly with the restaurant before planning your trip.
Explore More in Anderlecht and Brussels
If Cinq is on your list, it is worth building a broader itinerary around the area. See our full Anderlecht restaurants guide for the complete picture, and check our Anderlecht hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide for a complete visit. For Modern French reference points further afield, Sketch in London and Schanz in Piesport show how the tradition scales at higher price and prestige levels. Bozar Restaurant in Brussels is the closest urban peer worth considering for the same city trip.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Cinq?
One to two weeks ahead is usually enough. Cinq holds a Michelin Plate and a strong Google score (4.5 from 374 reviews), but booking difficulty is lower here than at comparable Brussels spots like La Paix, where you should plan further out. If you have a fixed date, book sooner rather than later to lock in your preferred time.
What should I order at Cinq?
The kitchen is built around seasonal and fresh produce in a Modern French format, so lean into whatever is current on the menu rather than looking for signature year-round dishes. Jean-Michel Verzele's background in quality-focused kitchens shapes a cooking style where the seasonal produce is the point, not a garnish. Check the menu at time of booking to see what's in season.
Can I eat at the bar at Cinq?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in the available venue information. Given Cinq's nature-setting location on Rte de Lennik and its restaurant format, it reads as a sit-down dining room rather than a bar-first venue. check the venue's official channels to confirm seating options before visiting.
Is Cinq good for a special occasion?
Yes, with a caveat on setting expectations. The Michelin Plate recognition, the green Pajottenland setting, and the €€€ price range make it a credible choice for a birthday dinner or anniversary meal that feels considered without being intimidating. It works better as a relaxed, nature-framed special occasion than as a formal celebration venue.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Cinq?
Cinq's specific menu formats are not confirmed in the venue data, so it is not possible to verify whether a tasting menu is currently offered. What is clear is that the kitchen operates at €€€ pricing with a seasonal, quality-first approach backed by two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025). If a tasting menu is on offer, that context makes it a reasonable bet.
What are alternatives to Cinq in Anderlecht?
La Paix is the area reference point if you want something with deeper local prestige and higher booking competition. La Brouette is worth considering if you prefer a more casual register at a lower price point. For something different in format, Appel Thaï covers the Thai end of the spectrum in Anderlecht. René rounds out the local options for a more traditional bistro feel.
Is Cinq worth the price?
At €€€ with a Michelin Plate and a 4.5 Google rating from 374 reviews, Cinq delivers solid value for a seasonal Modern French meal in a distinctive out-of-centre setting. It is not competing with the highest-end Brussels tasting menus on ambition, but for what it is — quality-focused, fresh, and approachable — the price-to-quality ratio is fair.
Location
Rte de Lennik 361, 1070 Bruxelles, Belgium
Anderlecht, Belgium
Compare Cinq
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Cinq | €€€ | Easy |
| La Paix | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Appel Thaï | € | Unknown |
| René | €€ | Unknown |
| La Brouette | €€ | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Cinq and alternatives.
Also Consider
- La Paix, French, French - Japanese, Asian Influences, €€€€
- Appel Thaï, Thai, €
- René, Belgian, €€
- La Brouette, French, €€
At €€€€, La Paix is the obvious step up from Cinq if prestige and a more elaborate experience are what you are after. La Paix sits at a higher level of both ambition and price, combining French and Japanese influences in a way that attracts serious food travellers to Anderlecht. If budget is not the constraint and you want the most decorated room in the area, La Paix is the booking. But if you want Michelin-recognised cooking without the top-tier spend, Cinq holds its own.
For something more casual and significantly cheaper, La Brouette (French, €€) is the practical alternative, solid French cooking at a lower price point without the seasonal fine-dining orientation of Cinq. René (Belgian, €€) is worth considering if you want to eat Belgian rather than French, and it sits in the same accessible price tier. Neither La Brouette nor René carry Michelin recognition, which matters if credential-backed quality is part of your decision.
Appel Thaï at € is a different category entirely, budget Thai, not a peer comparison for a Modern French dinner. The decision tree for most food-focused visitors to Anderlecht comes down to this: if you want the area's most serious cooking at any price, book La Paix; if you want Michelin-quality Modern French at a price that does not require justification, book Cinq; if you want to keep spend low, La Brouette or René are the practical fallbacks.
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