Restaurant in Driebergen-Rijsenburg, Netherlands
La Provence
450ptsMichelin star, €€€ pricing, book early.

About La Provence
La Provence holds a Michelin star (2024) at the €€€ price tier — unusual value for classical French cooking of this technical depth in the Netherlands. Chef André van Alten's roasted duck and turbot are the anchors; lunch Thursday to Saturday is the easiest way in. Book 4–6 weeks ahead for weekend sittings.
La Provence, Driebergen-Rijsenburg: Should You Book?
The most common misconception about La Provence is that it is a heritage restaurant coasting on reputation. Fifty-plus years of operation in the same Driebergen-Rijsenburg address sounds, to some ears, like a warning sign — tradition mistaken for stagnation. It is not. Michelin awarded La Provence a star in 2024, and the inspector notes make clear this is a kitchen that keeps reinventing rather than resting. If you have visited once and filed it away as a safe, predictable French dinner, this is the moment to reconsider.
The Space
The dining room is intimate by design. The open kitchen means the room is organised around watching chef André van Alten work, and the space reflects that priority: a small, controlled number of covers, an interior where the cooking is the focal point rather than the décor competing with it. The terrace — described in Michelin's own assessment as tranquil and verdant , operates as a genuine extension of the experience in warmer months, not an overflow afterthought. If you have been before and sat indoors, requesting the terrace for a return visit changes the feel of the meal considerably. The scale here is closer to a private dining room than a restaurant in the conventional sense, and that intimacy is the point.
Lunch vs Dinner: Where the Value Sits
La Provence opens for lunch on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday from 12 PM, and for dinner Wednesday through Saturday from 6 PM. Sunday and Monday are closed entirely, and Tuesday is also closed. This schedule matters more than it appears to on first read.
Lunch at a one-Michelin-star restaurant in the Netherlands at the €€€ price tier is a structurally different proposition from dinner. Midday sittings at restaurants of this calibre typically run shorter menus at accessible prices, and they are almost always easier to book. If your goal is to experience Van Alten's classical technique , specifically the roasted wild duck and the turbot with its depth-driven jus that Michelin singles out , without the full dinner commitment in terms of time, price, and reservation lead time, a Thursday or Friday lunch is the smarter entry point for a return visit. The food will be the same kitchen, the same sourcing, the same open-flame roasting technique. The wine pairing offered by the hostess is equally available at lunch, though whether you want to follow a long wine pairing into a working afternoon is a personal calculation.
Dinner is the fuller format and the better choice if you want the complete arc: multiple courses, the wine list explored at length, the terrace in the evening light if weather allows. Saturday dinner is the hardest sitting to secure. For a first return visit, Thursday or Friday dinner offers a meaningful step up in booking availability without sacrificing the experience. Wednesday dinner is the least competitive sitting of the week and worth targeting if your schedule permits.
What Van Alten Is Actually Doing
The Michelin citation is specific enough to be useful. Classical training is the foundation: the duck is roasted on the bone, the turbot jus is built with the kind of patience that comes from decades of repetition. But the innovation shows in the garnishes, not the protein. Van Alten's creativity works through texture contrast, temperature interplay, and a restrained use of acidity that sharpens rather than overwhelms. The lamb loin in a sea salt crust is the house classic most likely to persist across menus and seasons, and on a return visit it is a reasonable anchor around which to build your order , if à la carte remains an option , while leaving room to follow his current direction through the garnish-side experiments. The kitchen also functions as a training environment, with Van Alten working openly in front of the room and mentoring younger cooks. What this means practically: the kitchen's output is consistent because it is being observed by its own team as much as by the dining room.
Booking
Booking difficulty is rated Hard. Saturday dinner and the terrace on warm evenings are the tightest holds. A minimum of three to four weeks lead time is advisable for any sitting; six weeks is safer for a Saturday. Midweek lunch is the most accessible option if you are flexible on days. No phone number or booking URL is listed in our current data, so check the restaurant directly for reservation methods.
Know Before You Go
- Cuisine: Creative French
- Price tier: €€€
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024)
- Google rating: 4.6 from 220 reviews
- Address: Hoofdstraat 109, 3971 KG Driebergen-Rijsenburg, Netherlands
- Hours: Wednesday 6 PM–10 PM; Thursday–Saturday 12 PM–10 PM; Sunday–Tuesday closed
- Booking difficulty: Hard , aim for 4–6 weeks in advance for weekend sittings
- Leading for: Returning diners testing Van Alten's current direction; lunch for value access; terrace in season
- Solo dining: The open kitchen format and intimate scale make solo dining workable and observed rather than isolated
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for how La Provence sits against its peers.
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Similar Restaurants Worth Considering
- Maeve , €€€ · Creative French in Utrecht
- LIZZ , €€€ · Creative French in Gouda
- Ciel Bleu in Amsterdam
- Inter Scaldes in Kruiningen
- FG , François Geurds in Rotterdam
- Tribeca in Heeze
- Brut172 in Reijmerstok
- De Groene Lantaarn in Staphorst
- De Lindehof in Nuenen
- De Lindenhof in Giethoorn
FAQ
Is La Provence good for solo dining?
Yes, with caveats. The open kitchen and small cover count mean solo diners are integrated into the room rather than sidelined. Sitting at or near the kitchen-facing positions , if available , makes solo dining here genuinely engaging rather than awkward. At the €€€ price tier, it is a considered solo spend, but the format rewards individual attention to the cooking.
Does La Provence handle dietary restrictions?
No phone number or website is available in our current data, so we cannot confirm specific policies. For a kitchen operating at Michelin-star level with a small cover count, dietary requirements are generally accommodated with advance notice , but contact the restaurant directly before booking to confirm, particularly for anything that would affect the core proteins (duck, turbot, lamb) that define the menu.
Is La Provence worth the price?
At €€€ , one tier below the €€€€ pricing of most Dutch Michelin-starred peers , La Provence offers better price access than De Librije, Aan de Poel, or De Nieuwe Winkel for comparable technical cooking. The 4.6 Google score across 220 reviews supports consistency. If you are spending at this level, the lunch format on a Thursday or Friday gives you the strongest value-per-euro ratio in the building.
Can La Provence accommodate groups?
The intimate scale of the dining room is a limiting factor for large groups. No seat count is confirmed in our data, but restaurants of this type and size typically work leading for parties of two to four. Larger groups should contact the restaurant directly and ask about private arrangements , the format of the space does not lend itself to a party of eight or more without prior coordination.
What are alternatives to La Provence in Driebergen-Rijsenburg?
Driebergen-Rijsenburg does not have a deep bench of starred alternatives at the same address. For Creative French at the €€€ tier in the wider region, Maeve in Utrecht and LIZZ in Gouda are the closest comparable options. For a step up in ambition and price, Ciel Bleu in Amsterdam or Inter Scaldes in Kruiningen are the natural next tier.
Is the tasting menu worth it at La Provence?
The Michelin citation points to a kitchen where the tasting format is the leading vehicle for Van Alten's work , the interplay of textures, temperatures, and acidity that define his style only fully reads across multiple courses. If you are choosing between an à la carte selection and a full tasting menu, the tasting menu is the stronger argument here, particularly at the €€€ price tier where the premium over à la carte is likely to be modest by starred-restaurant standards. The wine pairing from the hostess is specifically noted in the Michelin write-up as a complement worth taking seriously.
Compare La Provence
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| La Provence | €€€ · Creative French | André van Alten is a fine example of a chef who continually reinvents himself while remaining grounded in his core principles. The unwavering quality of the ingredients, the expertise with which wild duck is roasted on the bone and the depth of the turbot jus complementing an ultra-fresh cut of the fish all showcase his impressive classical training. We also applaud the chef's eagerness to share his experience with younger generations. His ability to keep a cool head as he leads his team in the open kitchen is remarkable. But the chef does not stop there and keeps innovating. He showcases his creativity in the preparation of his garnishes. The diversity of textures, the interplay of hot and cold, the vibrancy of subtle acidity... With such finesse, he creates depth of flavour. He has a preference for fish, although the lamb loin in a sea salt crust is one of the house classics. The delightful hostess's exquisite wine pairings perfectly complement the food. In this intimate setting with its tranquil verdant terrace, diners are assured an exceptional experience. This tradition of excellence has endured for over 50 years!; Michelin 1 Star (2024) | Hard | — |
| De Librije | €€€€ · Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Aan de Poel | €€€€ · Creative | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| De Nieuwe Winkel | €€€€ · Organic | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Fred | €€€€ · Creative French | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| De Lindehof | Contemporary Dutch, Creative | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is La Provence good for solo dining?
Yes, with conditions. The open kitchen and intimate cover count mean solo diners are visible in the room rather than parked at a side table. Sitting near the kitchen gives you a direct view of Van Alten's team at work, which makes the format engaging rather than isolating. For solo fine dining in the €€€ tier in the Netherlands, La Provence is a more comfortable option than larger, noisier rooms.
Does La Provence handle dietary restrictions?
No phone number or website is listed in our current data, so contact must be made in person or through a reservation platform. At Michelin-star level, kitchens of this type routinely accommodate restrictions with advance notice — but confirm at the time of booking given the small team and tasting-menu format.
Is La Provence worth the price?
At €€€, La Provence sits one tier below the €€€€ pricing of most Dutch Michelin-starred peers, which makes it one of the more accessible entry points into starred dining in the Netherlands. The 2024 Michelin citation specifically calls out the quality of ingredients, classical technique, and wine pairing — that combination at this price tier is a strong case for booking.
Can La Provence accommodate groups?
The intimate dining room limits group size. No confirmed seat count is in our data, but kitchens of this scale typically cap comfortable group bookings at six to eight covers. For larger parties, check the venue's official channels before assuming availability — the format and room size are not built for big tables.
What are alternatives to La Provence in Driebergen-Rijsenburg?
Driebergen-Rijsenburg does not have a deep bench of starred alternatives at the same address. For Creative French at the €€€ tier in the wider Utrecht and Netherlands region, Fred and De Lindehof are the closest comparisons worth considering. De Nieuwe Winkel offers a contrasting plant-based approach if the Creative French format is not your priority.
Is the tasting menu worth it at La Provence?
Based on the Michelin citation, yes. The tasting format is the best vehicle for Van Alten's cooking: the interplay of textures, temperatures, and acidities that Michelin specifically highlights is designed to land across multiple courses, not a single plate. The lamb loin in sea salt crust is cited as a house classic — reason enough to let the kitchen set the pace.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- closed
- Wednesday
- 6 PM-10 PM
- Thursday
- 12 PM-10 PM
- Friday
- 12 PM-10 PM
- Saturday
- 12 PM-10 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
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