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    Restaurant in Grasse, France

    La Bastide Saint-Antoine

    685pts

    Serious Provençal cooking, book for occasions.

    La Bastide Saint-Antoine, Restaurant in Grasse

    About La Bastide Saint-Antoine

    La Bastide Saint-Antoine is Grasse's leading formal table: a 17th-century Relais & Châteaux country house where Jacques Chibois cooks seasonally rooted Provençal cuisine at a Michelin Plate and Les Grandes Tables du Monde level. At €€€€, it is the clear choice for a special-occasion lunch or dinner on the Côte d'Azur, particularly in late spring when the surrounding terroir is at its best.

    The Verdict

    La Bastide Saint-Antoine is not Grasse's perfume museum with a dining room attached. It is a serious Provençal table set inside a 17th-century country house, recognised by Michelin, ranked in Les Grandes Tables du Monde, and holding a 4.5 Google rating across 742 reviews. If you are visiting the Côte d'Azur and want a full-format special-occasion meal anchored in the produce and seasons of the surrounding hills, this is the clearest choice in the area. At €€€€ it is a spend, but the credential stack — Michelin Plate, Les Grandes Tables du Monde membership, and an Opinionated About Dining rank of #355 in classical European dining — justifies the price for the right diner.

    The Setting and What to Expect

    The visual first impression here does a lot of the work. A 17th-century mas surrounded by olive and citrus trees, with Provençal stone terraces that frame the rolling hills above Grasse , before the food arrives, the setting itself has already answered several questions about why you are paying €€€€. This is not a converted farmhouse dressed up for tourists. The property carries Relais & Châteaux affiliation, which means consistent standards in how the room is maintained, how the service is staffed, and how the whole experience is paced. For a special occasion, that consistency matters: you are not gambling on whether tonight happens to be a good night.

    The dining room itself leans into Provençal decoration without tipping into kitsch , expect warm stone, considered tablescaping, and the kind of light in the afternoon that makes a long lunch feel genuinely luxurious. If you are choosing between an outdoor terrace table and an interior seat, the terrace is the visual argument for booking in the first place.

    Cuisine and Seasonal Rotation

    Jacques Chibois has been cooking Provençal cuisine in this region long enough that the menu reflects genuine seasonal rhythm rather than a marketing gesture toward local sourcing. The cuisine type is Provençal, which in this context means the kitchen follows what the land around Grasse produces across the year , and what that land produces changes meaningfully from month to month.

    Spring and early summer bring the herbs, young vegetables, and olive oil that define the lighter end of Provençal cooking: dishes that lean floral and green, with the kind of freshness that makes sense given Grasse's identity as the world's perfume capital. The aromatic quality of the surrounding countryside is not incidental to what ends up on the plate. Late summer and autumn shift toward richer, more structured dishes as the harvest deepens , stone fruits, late tomatoes, wild mushrooms, game as the season turns. Winter is truffle and preserved flavour territory, when the menu takes on more weight.

    The practical implication: when you visit changes what you eat. A May visit and a November visit at La Bastide Saint-Antoine are materially different meals. Neither is wrong, but they are different, and it is worth thinking about what version of Provençal cooking you want before you book. For the full expression of the herb-forward, sun-lit cooking the region is known for, late spring through early summer is the window.

    Because specific current menu items are not published in the venue record, do not arrive expecting a fixed dish you read about elsewhere. The seasonal rotation is a feature, not a limitation , but it does mean the menu you encounter will depend on when you show up.

    Who Should Book This

    La Bastide Saint-Antoine is well-suited to a specific type of occasion. A long celebratory lunch , anniversary, milestone birthday, a dinner before or after a wedding stay on the Côte d'Azur , plays to every strength the venue has: the setting, the pacing, the Relais & Châteaux service standard, and food that rewards attention rather than demanding it. Business meals work here if the relationship is established enough that a relaxed, unhurried format serves the conversation.

    It is not the right choice if you want an avant-garde or experimentally creative evening. The OAD #355 classical ranking and the Michelin Plate (rather than a star) position this as serious, accomplished, and traditional Provençal cooking at a high level , not a destination for technique-forward modern cuisine. For that profile on the Riviera, Mirazur in Menton is the clearer answer.

    Couples will find the setting and pacing work strongly in their favour. Groups of four or more should ask specifically about table configuration when booking , the house-style setting may not flow as naturally for larger parties as it does for two.

    How It Compares Locally and Regionally

    Within Grasse specifically, La Bastide Saint-Antoine sits at the leading of the table. See our full Grasse restaurants guide for the broader picture. For Provençal cooking at a comparable level in the wider region, Alain Llorca in La Colle-sur-Loup and La Bastide Bourrelly in Cabriès are the peers worth considering. Further afield in the south, AM par Alexandre Mazzia in Marseille is a different register entirely , more inventive, more demanding, more of a destination meal in itself.

    For context on how La Bastide Saint-Antoine sits within France's broader classical table tradition, the reference points are venues like Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or , long-standing houses where the cooking is rooted, confident, and not trying to be anything other than what it is. La Bastide Saint-Antoine belongs in that company, even if its scale and setting are more intimate.

    Know Before You Go

    • Price tier: €€€€
    • Cuisine: Provençal
    • Chef: Jacques Chibois
    • Awards: Michelin Plate (2025), Les Grandes Tables du Monde (2025), OAD Classical Europe #355 (2024)
    • Google rating: 4.5 from 742 reviews
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , advance booking recommended for weekends and summer
    • Leading time to visit: Late spring to early summer for peak seasonal Provençal produce
    • Reservations: Via email at saintantoine@relaischateaux.com or by phone at +33 (0)4 93 70 94 94
    • Website:
    • Address: 48 Av. Henri Dunant, 06130 Grasse, France
    • Also in Grasse: Hotels · Bars · Wineries · Experiences

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What should I order at La Bastide Saint-Antoine? Order whatever is in season when you visit , the menu rotates with Provençal produce cycles and that is where the kitchen is strongest. Spring through early summer means herb-forward, lighter dishes; autumn and winter shift toward richer, more structured preparations. Do not arrive with a fixed dish in mind. The seasonal menu is the point.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at La Bastide Saint-Antoine? The Michelin Plate and Les Grandes Tables du Monde recognition signal a kitchen operating at a high level of consistency. If you want the full expression of what Jacques Chibois is doing with Provençal ingredients, a multi-course format will give you more of that range than à la carte. For a special occasion at €€€€, the tasting format is the stronger value argument.
    • How far ahead should I book La Bastide Saint-Antoine? Booking is rated Easy, but the summer Riviera season (July and August) fills tables across the region. Book 2–3 weeks out for weekday lunches, 3–4 weeks for weekend dinners in peak summer. Shoulder season visits , May, June, September, October , are more flexible, though advance booking is still advisable for dinner.
    • Is La Bastide Saint-Antoine good for a special occasion? Yes, and it is one of the clearest choices in the area for exactly that purpose. The Relais & Châteaux affiliation means the service standard is consistent, the terrace setting is visually strong, and the Provençal cuisine format suits a long, celebratory meal. Anniversary dinners and milestone lunches are the natural use case here.
    • Can I eat at the bar at La Bastide Saint-Antoine? No bar dining information is published in the venue record. Given the Relais & Châteaux house format, the primary experience is a seated restaurant meal. Contact the venue directly to confirm any alternative seating options before you arrive.
    • What are alternatives to La Bastide Saint-Antoine in Grasse? Within Grasse, La Bastide Saint-Antoine is the leading formal dining option. For Provençal cooking at a comparable level nearby, consider Alain Llorca in La Colle-sur-Loup. For modern creative cooking on the Riviera, Mirazur in Menton is the region's highest-ranked table. See our full Grasse restaurants guide for more options.
    • Is La Bastide Saint-Antoine worth the price? At €€€€ it is, if the format fits you: a special-occasion Provençal meal in a 17th-century country house with Michelin and Les Grandes Tables du Monde recognition. It is not worth it if you want cutting-edge modern French cuisine , for that, spend your €€€€ at Mirazur or AM par Alexandre Mazzia instead. For what it is , rooted, seasonal, classically framed Provençal cooking in a setting that earns its price , the value holds.

    Compare La Bastide Saint-Antoine

    Award Winners Like La Bastide Saint-Antoine
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    La Bastide Saint-AntoineCategory: Remarkable; Michelin Plate (2025); HIGHLIGHTS: • A PEACFUL OASIS IN GRASSE • 17TH-CENTURY COUNTRY HOUSE • WORLD PERFUME CAPITAL • PROVENÇAL DECOR DIRECTIONS & ACCESS: Website and contact information E-mail: saintantoine@relaischateaux.com Tel. : +33 (0)4 93 70 94 94 MEMBER SINCE: 4.4/5; Les Grandes Tables Du Monde Award (2025); Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe Ranked #355 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe Recommended (2023)€€€€
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    KeiMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    L'AmbroisieMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    MirazurMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at La Bastide Saint-Antoine?

    Specific dishes are not confirmed in available venue data, so take any menu descriptions you find elsewhere with caution as menus rotate seasonally. What is documented is that Jacques Chibois works within a Provençal framework, so expect produce-led cooking anchored in the regional larder. Ask the team on booking what is currently in season — the restaurant's own contact at saintantoine@relaischateaux.com or +33 (0)4 93 70 94 94 is the reliable source.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at La Bastide Saint-Antoine?

    At €€€€ pricing and with a Michelin Plate plus Les Grandes Tables du Monde recognition for 2025, this is a venue where the tasting menu format makes sense if you want the full picture of Chibois's Provençal cooking. If you prefer flexibility or are watching spend, check whether a shorter set or à la carte option is available when you book — the restaurant can confirm formats directly. For pure tasting-menu ambition in the region, Mirazur in Menton is the higher benchmark, but La Bastide is a more accessible and grounded alternative.

    How far ahead should I book La Bastide Saint-Antoine?

    Book at least three to four weeks ahead for weekday visits, and six to eight weeks for weekends or peak summer months when the Côte d'Azur is at capacity. As a Relais & Châteaux property, reservations can be made via saintantoine@relaischateaux.com or by phone at +33 (0)4 93 70 94 94. If you are pairing dinner with a hotel stay on the property, coordinate both at the same time.

    Is La Bastide Saint-Antoine good for a special occasion?

    Yes — the 17th-century country house setting and Provençal stone terraces make this a strong choice for anniversaries, milestone lunches, or pre-trip celebratory dinners. Les Grandes Tables du Monde membership signals a level of service consistency that matters for occasions where the room and the meal both need to deliver. A long lunch on the terrace in summer is the format this venue is built for.

    Can I eat at the bar at La Bastide Saint-Antoine?

    Bar or counter seating details are not confirmed in available venue data. check the venue's official channels at saintantoine@relaischateaux.com or +33 (0)4 93 70 94 94 to ask about informal seating options. Given its Relais & Châteaux positioning and country house format, this is primarily a sit-down table-service venue rather than a drop-in bar.

    What are alternatives to La Bastide Saint-Antoine in Grasse?

    Within Grasse itself, La Bastide Saint-Antoine sits at the top end of the dining options, so there is no direct local substitute at the same level. If you are willing to travel on the Côte d'Azur, Mirazur in Menton is the region's most decorated table and a step up in ambition and price. For something closer in format and spend, look at the broader Alpes-Maritimes options covered in our Grasse restaurants guide.

    Is La Bastide Saint-Antoine worth the price?

    At €€€€, this is a considered spend rather than a casual one. The case for it: Michelin Plate recognition in 2025, Les Grandes Tables du Monde membership, an Opinionated About Dining Classical Europe ranking at #355, and a 17th-century property that gives the meal a setting most restaurants cannot match. The case against: if you are primarily chasing the highest technical cooking in the region, Mirazur in Menton at comparable or higher spend offers more accolades. La Bastide is the right call if occasion, setting, and Provençal character matter as much as the cooking itself.

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