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    Restaurant in Nîmes, France

    Jérôme Nutile

    700Pearl Points

    One Michelin star. Book it seriously.

    Jérôme Nutile, Restaurant in Nîmes

    About Jérôme Nutile

    Jérôme Nutile holds a Michelin star (2024) and is run by a Meilleur Ouvrier de France chef from a converted farmhouse outside Nîmes. At the €€€€ price point, it is the strongest fine dining case the city makes — seasonal French cooking with a serious regional wine list. Book four to six weeks ahead; walk-ins are not a realistic option.

    Verdict: A Michelin-starred table in a converted farmhouse outside Nîmes — worth the effort to book, and worth returning to more than once

    At the €€€€ price point, Jérôme Nutile asks you to commit seriously — and it delivers seriously in return. This is a Michelin one-star restaurant (2024) run by a chef who earned the title of Meilleur Ouvrier de France in 2011, one of the most demanding craft distinctions in French cuisine. For a special occasion dinner or a considered lunch in the Gard, this is the strongest case Nîmes makes in that category. If you have been once and are weighing a return, the answer is yes , there is a clear multi-visit logic here, and the seasonal approach to the menu gives you genuine reason to come back across the year.

    The Restaurant

    Jérôme Nutile operates from a converted farmhouse at 351 Chemin Bas du Mas de Boudan, on the edge of Nîmes. The setting is deliberate: this is not a city-centre dining room but a destination property, which means arriving here is a conscious act. Michelin's assessors noted the seasonal cooking and the regional wine list alongside the technical precision in the kitchen. The awards profile here , White Star recognition from Star Wine List, Michelin star, Meilleur Ouvrier de France , represents a coherent picture of a kitchen that operates at a high level across both food and wine service. Google's 4.8 rating across 24 reviews is a small sample, but the consistency it suggests is in line with what the formal credentials indicate.

    Nutile's cooking is rooted in the seasons of the Languedoc and the Camargue, which is the most practical reason to think about a multi-visit strategy. A dish built around Camargue fleur de sel or regional produce will read differently in spring than in autumn. If your first visit was in summer, a return in late autumn brings you to the kitchen at a different point in its cycle. The hare à la royale , prepared in two classical styles, following both Antonin Carême and Senator Couteaux's recipes , is the kind of anchor dish that defines the seasonal calendar at a restaurant of this type. It is autumn and winter cooking, and if you visited during a warmer season, you have not yet seen what this kitchen does at its most technically ambitious.

    The wine list is a genuine asset, not a footnote. Star Wine List recognised it specifically, and the regional focus means you are drinking Languedoc-Roussillon and southern Rhône in context, which is a better use of a wine list than a generic French cellar. If wine matters to you, factor this into your visit planning , ask the sommelier to lead, and give yourself enough time at the table to work through more than one pairing.

    Planning Your Visits

    The restaurant is open for lunch and dinner Tuesday through Saturday (noon to 1:45 PM and 7:30 PM to 9:30 PM), and for lunch only on Monday (noon to 1:45 PM). Sunday is closed. The tight lunch service window , last orders at 1:45 PM , means you need to arrive on time. This is not a restaurant where drifting in at 1:30 PM and expecting a full experience is realistic.

    Booking is hard. A Michelin-starred restaurant in a city with limited competition at this level fills its covers reliably, and the farmhouse setting constrains capacity. Book as far in advance as you can , four to six weeks out is a sensible baseline, and further ahead if you have a fixed date in mind. There is no evidence of a walk-in culture here. For a first visit, lunch is the lower-pressure entry point, both logistically and financially. For a second or third visit, an evening dinner allows more time at the table and more scope to engage with the wine programme.

    For context on where this sits in the broader range of French fine dining, Jérôme Nutile occupies a similar register to single-star destinations in comparable provincial cities , think the kind of cooking you would associate with names like Bras in Laguiole or Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern in terms of regional rootedness, even if the scale and star count differ. It is not reaching for the multi-star register of Mirazur in Menton or Troisgros in Ouches, but it is operating with the same seriousness of intent. For Nîmes, it is the clearest expression of what the city's fine dining offer looks like at its peak.

    The Multi-Visit Case

    If you have already been once, here is how to think about a return. Visit one is about orientation: understanding the room, the pacing, the wine list's strengths, and the kitchen's seasonal register. Visit two is where you go deeper , request the wine pairing in full, ask what is in season that week, and if the calendar puts you in the right window, pursue the hare à la royale. A third visit, if you are based in the region or returning to Nîmes regularly, makes sense once you have a clear sense of what the kitchen does across different seasons. This is not a restaurant you exhaust in a single sitting.

    For other Nîmes options, explore Duende, Skab, and Rouge for the city's broader fine dining range, or step down in price to Le Bistr'AU at Le Mas de Boudan and Aux Plaisirs des Halles when you want a lighter commitment. Our full Nîmes restaurants guide covers the full range, and if you are planning a longer stay, the Nîmes hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are worth consulting alongside this.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Jérôme Nutile?

    Dress formally. A Michelin one-star in a converted farmhouse setting at the €€€€ price point draws guests who dress accordingly — jacket for men is a safe call, and anything you'd wear to a business dinner translates well. This is not the place to test how casual you can get away with.

    What should a first-timer know about Jérôme Nutile?

    Come prepared for a structured, chef-driven meal. Jérôme Nutile holds a Michelin star (2024) and earned the Meilleur Ouvrier de France title in 2011, so the kitchen operates with serious intent. The converted farmhouse setting is deliberate and calm — this is a meal to focus on, not a backdrop for a loud group celebration. The regional wine list is a genuine asset, so factor that into your budget.

    How far ahead should I book Jérôme Nutile?

    Book at least 2 to 3 weeks out for dinner, and further in advance for weekend services or special occasions. A Michelin-starred room with tight service windows (noon to 1:45 PM for lunch, 7:30 PM to 9:30 PM for dinner) and no Sunday service fills faster than its farmhouse location might suggest. Don't leave it to the week before.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Jérôme Nutile?

    Lunch is worth considering if you want the full experience with a lower-pressure pace — the service window runs noon to 1:45 PM, giving you the afternoon to recover. Dinner (7:30 PM to 9:30 PM) suits occasions where you want the full arc of an evening. Note that Monday is lunch-only, so your dinner options run Tuesday through Saturday.

    Is Jérôme Nutile good for a special occasion?

    Yes, directly: this is one of the stronger special-occasion cases in Nîmes. A Michelin one-star kitchen run by a Meilleur Ouvrier de France, a regional wine list noted for its quality, and a converted farmhouse setting all point toward the kind of meal that justifies marking a date. The €€€€ price point means it signals the occasion without needing explanation.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Jérôme Nutile?

    At €€€€, the commitment is real, but the credentials back it up: Michelin one-star recognition in 2024 and a chef who earned Meilleur Ouvrier de France in 2011 suggest the kitchen has the range to justify a multi-course format. The seasonal approach and regional wine list add practical value to the price. If you are going once, take the full menu — ordering à la carte at this level rarely shows the kitchen at its best.

    What are alternatives to Jérôme Nutile in Nîmes?

    For a more accessible price point with regional cooking, Aux Plaisirs des Halles is the most direct alternative in central Nîmes. Le Bistr'AU at Le Mas de Boudan offers a more relaxed format close to the same farmhouse address. If you want Mediterranean-focused cooking rather than modern French, Gigi, Table Méditerranéenne is worth comparing. None of these carry Michelin recognition, so the step down in formality is real.

    Location

    351 Chem. Bas du Mas de Boudan, 30000 Nîmes, France

    Compare Jérôme Nutile

    Comparing Jérôme Nutile to Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Jérôme NutileModern Cuisine€€€€Hard
    DuendeModern Cuisine€€€€Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    RougeCreative€€€€Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Le Bistr'AU - Le Mas de BoudanModern Cuisine€€Unknown
    Aux Plaisirs des HallesTraditional Cuisine€€Unknown
    Gigi, Table MéditerranéenneMediterranean Cuisine€€Unknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Jérôme Nutile and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    • Duende, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
    • Rouge, Creative, €€€€
    • Le Bistr'AU - Le Mas de Boudan, Modern Cuisine, €€
    • Aux Plaisirs des Halles, Traditional Cuisine, €€
    • Gigi, Table Méditerranéenne, Mediterranean Cuisine, €€

    At the €€€€ tier in Nîmes, Jérôme Nutile is the only Michelin-starred option, which immediately separates it from Duende and Rouge on credentials alone. If a formal award benchmark matters for a special occasion or a business dinner, Jérôme Nutile is the clear choice. Duende and Rouge operate at the same price point and offer creative cooking worth knowing about, but neither carries the same verified external validation. If Jérôme Nutile is unavailable, Rouge's creative approach is the most interesting alternative in the same spend bracket.

    For diners who want fine dining quality without the full €€€€ commitment, Le Bistr'AU at Le Mas de Boudan is the most practical lower-price option, notably, it shares a connection to the same farmhouse site as Jérôme Nutile, which makes it a sensible lunch alternative on days when the main restaurant is closed or outside your budget. Aux Plaisirs des Halles at €€ covers traditional French cuisine and is a reliable mid-range choice for a less formal meal in the city centre.

    The booking difficulty gap is also real. Jérôme Nutile is the hardest table in Nîmes to secure, which means if your travel dates are fixed and close, it is worth having a backup plan. Duende or Rouge at €€€€ are the logical fallbacks at the same spend level. For a group looking for flexibility and lower booking pressure, the €€ options give you more room to move. The decision comes down to occasion: for a serious dinner where the Michelin credential matters, Jérôme Nutile is worth the advance planning. For a more spontaneous evening, look elsewhere in the city's fine dining tier.

    Hours

    Monday
    12 PM-1:45 PM 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Tuesday
    12 PM-1:45 PM 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Wednesday
    12 PM-1:45 PM 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Thursday
    12 PM-1:45 PM 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Friday
    12 PM-1:45 PM 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Saturday
    12 PM-1:45 PM 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Sunday
    closed

    Recognized By

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