Restaurant in Dijon, France
L'Aspérule
600ptsOne Michelin star, two menus, hard to book.

About L'Aspérule
L'Aspérule holds a Michelin star for the second consecutive year in 2025 and offers one of Dijon's most interesting tasting menu formats: a disciplined afternoon market menu and an evening service driven by chef Keigo Kimura's garden-to-plate instincts and French fine-dining technique. At €€€, it costs less than the city's €€€€ peers and delivers a more personal, risk-taking experience. Book 4–8 weeks out minimum.
Should You Return to L'Aspérule? Here's What Changes on a Second Visit
If you've already eaten at L'Aspérule, you already know the answer to the basic question. Yes, it's worth booking. The Michelin star it has held through both 2024 and 2025 is confirmation that this isn't a one-season story. The more useful question for a returning diner is what to expect when you come back — and the honest answer is: something different. Chef Keigo Kimura's evening menu moves with his imagination and with the season, which means a second visit rarely retraces the same ground as the first.
That's the clearest argument for returning. The afternoon market menu is deliberately anchored to the leading produce of the moment at a price that makes it one of the most accessible Michelin-starred options in Burgundy. The evening format is where Kimura takes risks — dishes that draw from local Burgundian products but push in directions that can feel startlingly unorthodox. If your first visit was a lunch, dinner is a genuinely different restaurant. If you went at dinner in spring, an autumn return will read almost as a new menu. That variability is a feature, not a flaw.
The Tasting Menu Architecture
What makes L'Aspérule worth analysing as a tasting experience is the dual track it runs. The afternoon market menu is disciplined and product-led: it exists to showcase whatever the kitchen garden and local suppliers are providing at their peak, framed at a price that makes it the most sensible entry point for solo diners or those unsure whether to commit to a full evening. Think of it as Kimura editing ruthlessly , fewer courses, tighter focus, less theatrical risk.
The evening menu inverts that logic. Kimura's background , time under Marc Veyrat, whose alpine botanical obsessions are well documented, and Joël Robuchon, whose technical rigour shaped a generation of French kitchens , gives him a wide toolkit. What distinguishes his evening progression at L'Aspérule is the willingness to introduce elements that might feel incongruous on paper but are resolved by local Burgundian produce threading through the arc. The kitchen garden is not decorative detail here; it is the structural spine of the menu. Courses build on each other through that lens, and dishes described by those who have tracked the restaurant as «particularly crazed» are usually the ones where that botanical instinct tips into something unexpected.
For a returning diner, the practical takeaway is this: book the evening if you did lunch last time, and give the menu room to run. Trying to steer toward safety on a menu that is designed to surprise defeats the point.
Booking L'Aspérule
This is the part that requires attention. L'Aspérule is rated as hard to book, and that difficulty is not manufactured scarcity , it reflects a small room in a city where Michelin-starred tables are fewer than in Lyon or Paris. The 4.7 Google rating across 462 reviews suggests consistent execution and a diner base that returns, both of which compress availability further. Book as far in advance as your plans allow. For dinner especially, a booking window of four to six weeks is a reasonable minimum during peak seasons in Burgundy, which roughly track with wine tourism in autumn and summer holiday travel. If you are planning around a specific occasion, eight weeks is safer.
There is no listed booking method in the public record, which means checking the restaurant's current reservation channel directly is the right move before assuming online booking applies. L'Aspérule is at 43 Rue Jean Jacques Rousseau, 21000 Dijon.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 43 Rue Jean Jacques Rousseau, 21000 Dijon, France
- Price range: €€€ (evening); afternoon market menu is more accessible
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024 and 2025); rated Remarkable
- Google rating: 4.7 / 5 (462 reviews)
- Booking difficulty: Hard , book 4–8 weeks out minimum
- Chef: Keigo Kimura (formerly Sofitel Le Faubourg, Marc Veyrat, Joël Robuchon)
- Menu format: Afternoon market menu (accessible price); evening imagination-led tasting menu
- Kitchen garden: Core to the ingredient sourcing and menu direction
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for L'Aspérule's position relative to William Frachot, Loiseau des Ducs, and Dijon's broader dining options.
Where L'Aspérule Sits in Dijon's Dining Scene
Dijon's Michelin-starred restaurants are not interchangeable. Loiseau des Ducs and DZ'envies represent different points on the value and formality spectrum, and L'Aspérule's Japanese-trained chef leading a Burgundian kitchen garden menu is a distinct proposition within that set. For those who want to build a fuller picture of the city's food scene, our full Dijon restaurants guide maps the options across price tiers. You can also find hotels in Dijon, bars, wineries, and experiences through Pearl's Dijon guides.
Within France's broader tasting menu conversation, Kimura's lineage connects him to a tradition that runs through restaurants like Arpège in Paris (Passard's garden-to-plate philosophy) and Flocons de Sel in Megève (Veyrat's former world, which Kimura inhabited directly). That places L'Aspérule in serious company conceptually, even if its price point and city profile are quieter than either. For context on what a more maximalist version of this format looks like at the leading of the French system, Troisgros in Ouches, Mirazur in Menton, and Bras in Laguiole are the relevant reference points. Closer to Dijon, Maison Lameloise in Chagny is the obvious regional comparison for those considering a Burgundy dining trip across multiple stops. Other Pearl-listed Dijon options worth knowing include L'Arôme, L'Essentiel, and L'Un des Sens. For those building a wider European tasting menu itinerary, Frantzén in Stockholm and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or sit at the far end of the prestige spectrum for comparison.
FAQ
- Is L'Aspérule worth the price? At €€€, it is fairly priced for a Michelin-starred tasting experience in a provincial French city. The afternoon market menu is the better value proposition if you want to test the kitchen without full commitment. Compared to €€€€ peers like Loiseau des Ducs, L'Aspérule costs less and offers a more idiosyncratic cooking style. If you want classical Burgundian precision, Loiseau is the better match. If you want a kitchen that takes risks with local produce, L'Aspérule earns its price.
- Is L'Aspérule good for a special occasion? Yes, specifically for occasions where the meal itself is the event. The evening tasting menu's progressive, imagination-led format suits anniversary dinners or celebratory meals where you want course-by-course momentum rather than à la carte freedom. It is less suited to large groups or occasions where the table dynamic matters more than the food. For two people, it works well. For four or more, check availability and format before booking.
- What should a first-timer know about L'Aspérule? The kitchen runs two distinct registers: a focused afternoon market menu and a more experimental evening format. First-timers should decide which format they want before arriving, as the experience is substantially different. Chef Kimura's Japanese training within French fine dining means the flavour approach can be precise and sometimes unexpected. The Michelin 1 Star across two consecutive years (2024 and 2025) gives confidence on consistency. Book well in advance.
- What should I wear to L'Aspérule? No dress code is listed, but the €€€ price point and Michelin-starred context in a French provincial city suggest smart casual is the floor. Business casual or smart dress is unlikely to be wrong. Avoid overly casual clothing for the evening tasting menu. The afternoon market menu may carry slightly less formality pressure, but erring toward neat is sensible.
- Does L'Aspérule handle dietary restrictions? No specific dietary policy is listed in the available data. Given the kitchen garden-led, produce-driven format, the menu is unlikely to accommodate heavily restricted diets without advance notice. Contact the restaurant directly before booking if dietary requirements are a factor , this is especially important for tasting menus, where the kitchen builds courses as a sequence rather than offering substitutions mid-service.
Compare L'Aspérule
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| L'Aspérule | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Hard |
| William Frachot | Modern French, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Sublime | Innovative, Modern Cuisine | €€ | Unknown |
| Loiseau des Ducs | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Origine | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Cave | Traditional Cuisine | €€ | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between L'Aspérule and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does L'Aspérule handle dietary restrictions?
check the venue's official channels in advance — a kitchen running a product-led market menu and an imaginative evening format will typically need notice to accommodate restrictions properly. The dual-menu structure (afternoon market menu versus evening carte blanche) means flexibility exists, but neither format lends itself to last-minute substitutions. Given the small size of the restaurant and its Michelin-starred precision, early communication is the practical move.
Is L'Aspérule worth the price?
At €€€ with a Michelin star held in both 2024 and 2025, L'Aspérule sits in the justified range for Dijon. The afternoon market menu offers the stronger value case — product-led cooking at a more accessible price point. The evening format is where the price climbs and the imagination follows, which makes it worth it for diners who want the full creative experience, less so for those who prefer a predictable menu. Compared to William Frachot, which operates at a similar tier, L'Aspérule's dual-track structure gives you more entry points.
What should I wear to L'Aspérule?
The venue data does not specify a dress code, but a Michelin-starred modern cuisine restaurant in Dijon at the €€€ price point generally calls for smart dress rather than formal attire. Avoid overly casual clothing in the evening; the afternoon market menu sitting is more relaxed in tone. If in doubt, err toward business casual for dinner.
What should a first-timer know about L'Aspérule?
Book well ahead — L'Aspérule is rated as hard to book, and that reflects a genuinely small room, not artificial scarcity. For a first visit, the afternoon market menu is the lower-risk entry point: it shows the kitchen's product discipline at a more accessible price. The evening menu is where the cooking gets more experimental, which is rewarding if you trust the kitchen but can be polarising if you prefer to know what you're ordering. The address is 43 Rue Jean Jacques Rousseau, 21000 Dijon.
Is L'Aspérule good for a special occasion?
Yes, particularly for a dinner occasion — the evening format, with its imaginative, locally rooted dishes, is built for that kind of meal. A Michelin star held across 2024 and 2025 gives it the credibility a special occasion requires without the corporate formality of a multi-star room. For celebrations where you want a more guaranteed experience, the afternoon market menu is less of a creative gamble. L'Aspérule works better for two than for large groups given the small room.
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