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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    L'Écrin

    825Pearl Points

    One star, serious wine, book early.

    L'Écrin, Restaurant in Paris

    About L'Écrin

    L'Écrin holds a Michelin star inside the Hôtel de Crillon on Place de la Concorde, with one of Paris's most serious wine programs: 2,700 references and 225,000 bottles under Wine Director Xavier Thuizat. Chef Boris Campanella's creative French cooking is the right match. Book for dinner, plan for the wine, and reserve at least three to four weeks out.

    Verdict

    L'Écrin earns its Michelin star and deserves your reservation — but book it for the wine program as much as the food. Housed within the Hôtel de Crillon on the Place de la Concorde, this is one of the few €€€€ addresses in Paris where the cellar genuinely competes with the kitchen. Wine Director Xavier Thuizat oversees a list of 2,700 selections across a 225,000-bottle inventory with particular depth in Burgundy, Bordeaux, Rhône, and Champagne. Chef Boris Campanella's creative French cooking is the right match for that kind of commitment. If you're returning after a first visit and wondering whether to push further into the wine pairing, the answer is yes.

    Portrait

    L'Écrin sits inside the Hôtel de Crillon, one of the grand palace hotels of Paris's 8th arrondissement, overlooking the Place de la Concorde. The address alone places it in a specific tier: this is not a neighbourhood restaurant or an independent chef's project. It is a formally resourced dining room with the backing of a palace hotel operation, and that distinction matters when you're deciding how to spend €€€€ in Paris.

    What makes L'Écrin worth returning to, and worth recommending over several strong competitors at the same price point, is the wine program's structural depth. Xavier Thuizat took over wine direction when the hotel reopened in July 2017, and the list he has built since then reflects serious institutional commitment. With 2,700 references and 225,000 bottles in inventory, this is not a curated boutique list — it is a comprehensive archive, priced at the $$$ tier, meaning the list carries significant representation above €100 per bottle. The core strengths are French: Burgundy and Bordeaux for depth, Rhône for breadth, and Champagne as you'd expect from a property at this level. If you came on your first visit and ordered conservatively, a return trip should go deeper into the Burgundy selections, where the vertical range and producer breadth are the real argument for this address over peers with smaller programs.

    Chef Boris Campanella's cuisine sits in the creative French register , technically grounded classical cooking with contemporary presentation. The Michelin star, retained in both 2024 and 2025, confirms the kitchen's consistency. The pairing between Campanella's approach and Thuizat's cellar is the central reason to book: this is a room where asking for a serious wine recommendation will get a serious answer. Dinner is the only service offered, which keeps the rhythm deliberate. Factor that in when planning: this is not a lunch option, and the evening pacing suits extended wine exploration better than a compressed schedule.

    For a returning guest, the practical question is how far to push the tasting format. The wine program rewards longer menus , the inventory depth and Thuizat's expertise are most visible across multiple courses with guided pairings. If you're coming back with someone who shares that interest, request the pairing at the time of booking rather than at the table; the kitchen and cellar work together better with advance notice at this level.

    The address also matters for context. The 8th arrondissement's concentration of palace hotel dining means L'Écrin competes directly with Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V and Le Meurice Alain Ducasse for the same guest. What separates L'Écrin from both is the wine inventory scale: 225,000 bottles is a meaningful operational commitment, and it shows in range and rarity of what Thuizat can offer at the table. If your priority is service formality above cellar depth, Le Cinq is the stronger call. If wine is the primary reason you're booking, L'Écrin is the right choice in this part of Paris.

    Beyond the 8th, Paris has other creative French addresses worth knowing. Arpège works from a different culinary philosophy, and Le Gabriel - La Réserve Paris offers a comparable palace-adjacent experience in a smaller, more intimate room. For a broader view of where L'Écrin fits within Paris dining, our full Paris restaurants guide covers the competitive set in detail. If the trip extends beyond the city, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Mirazur in Menton, and Troisgros - Le Bois sans Feuilles in Ouches represent the range of serious French cooking outside Paris. Regionally, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern and Bras in Laguiole offer comparable commitment to French terroir in very different settings. For creative cooking benchmarks elsewhere in Europe, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona and Enrico Bartolini in Milan are useful reference points. Paris's broader offering , hotels, bars, and experiences , is covered across our Paris hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    Ratings

    • Google: 4.8 (202 reviews)
    • Michelin: 1 Star (2024, 2025)
    • Wine Program: $$$ , 2,700 selections, 225,000-bottle inventory, Burgundy/Bordeaux/Rhône/Champagne focus

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Hard to secure , book at minimum 3–4 weeks ahead, longer for weekend evenings. Service: Dinner only. Address: 10 Rue Boissy d'Anglas, 75008 Paris, at the Hôtel de Crillon near Place de la Concorde. Budget: €€€€ for food; wine list priced at $$$, expect significant additional spend if exploring the cellar. Dress: Smart formal , palace hotel context applies. Nearest Metro: Concorde (lines 1, 8, 12). Wine Pairing: Request at booking, not at the table.

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    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book L'Écrin?

    Book at least 3–4 weeks out, and push to 6 weeks for Friday or Saturday evenings. L'Écrin operates dinner only inside one of Paris's most recognisable palace hotels, which limits covers and drives demand. If you have a fixed travel date, book the day your window opens.

    Can I eat at the bar at L'Écrin?

    There is no bar dining option documented for L'Écrin. The restaurant is a formal dinner-only operation at the Hôtel de Crillon, 10 Rue Boissy d'Anglas. For a more flexible entry point to the Crillon's food and wine program, check whether the hotel's adjacent bar offers access to Xavier Thuizat's wine selections.

    What should a first-timer know about L'Écrin?

    Come for both the food and the wine list. Chef Boris Campanella holds a Michelin star (2024 and 2025), and wine director Xavier Thuizat oversees a 2,700-label list with 225,000 bottles in inventory, weighted toward Burgundy, Bordeaux, Rhône, and Champagne. Dinner only, so plan your evening accordingly and treat the wine pairing as part of the experience rather than an add-on.

    Is L'Écrin good for solo dining?

    Solo dining is possible but not the format L'Écrin is built around. The Hôtel de Crillon setting and €€€€ price point mean most tables are couples or small groups. That said, a solo diner who wants to focus on the wine program — 2,700 labels, serious Burgundy and Bordeaux depth — will find the setting worthwhile. Call ahead to confirm counter or smaller table availability.

    Does L'Écrin handle dietary restrictions?

    Michelin-starred kitchens at this price point (€€€€, dinner only) routinely accommodate dietary requirements when notified at booking. check the venue's official channels at time of reservation to flag restrictions — the creative French format under Boris Campanella should allow for adjustments, but confirm specifics when you book.

    Can L'Écrin accommodate groups?

    Groups are harder to place at a palace hotel restaurant like L'Écrin, where tables are limited and demand is steady. For parties of 6 or more, contact the Hôtel de Crillon directly well in advance — 6 to 8 weeks minimum. Smaller groups of 2–4 have more flexibility but still need to book 3–4 weeks out.

    Location

    10 Rue Boissy d'Anglas, 75008 Paris, France

    Compare L'Écrin

    Full Comparison: L'Écrin
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    L'ÉcrinCreativeHard
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenCreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    KeiContemporary French, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    L'AmbroisieFrench, Classic CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VFrench, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Pierre GagnaireFrench, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    At the €€€€ tier in Paris, L'Écrin's most direct competition comes from other palace hotel dining rooms. Against Le Cinq at the Four Seasons Hôtel George V, L'Écrin trades some service formality for a deeper, more exploratory wine program, Le Cinq has stronger name recognition and a more established track record at the three-star level, but L'Écrin's 225,000-bottle cellar is a serious differentiator for guests who want to spend time with the wine list. If service polish and prestige factor matter more than cellar depth, Le Cinq is the safer call. If the wine program is the primary reason you're booking a palace hotel dinner, L'Écrin is the better fit.

    Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen operates at a higher technical register, three Michelin stars to L'Écrin's one, and the price gap reflects that. Book Alléno when the cooking itself is the main event and budget is secondary. Pierre Gagnaire offers a more overtly creative, intellectually demanding experience for guests who want a chef's idiosyncratic vision at the centre of the meal; L'Écrin is more classically anchored and wine-forward. Kei sits in a different lane, contemporary French with a Japanese sensibility, and is the stronger choice for guests who want something less formally French. L'Ambroisie on the Place des Vosges is the benchmark for classical French cooking at this price tier, with three stars and a very different atmosphere: intimate and austere rather than palace-grand. If you're deciding between L'Ambroisie and L'Écrin, the question is whether you want the canonical French fine dining experience (L'Ambroisie) or a wine-led palace hotel dinner with a one-star kitchen (L'Écrin).

    For booking difficulty, all five properties are hard to secure at short notice. L'Écrin's dinner-only format means fewer covers per week than a restaurant serving both lunch and dinner, which tightens availability further. Book L'Écrin three to four weeks out as a baseline; L'Ambroisie and Alléno warrant even longer lead times given their star counts. Within the group, Kei and Pierre Gagnaire tend to offer slightly more flexibility, making them reasonable alternatives if your travel dates are fixed and L'Écrin is full.

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