Restaurant in Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais, France
Maison Desamy
450ptsOne star, village address, worth booking.

About Maison Desamy
A Michelin one-star in the Vendée village of Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais, Maison Desamy delivers technically precise modern French cooking from a chef trained under Alexandre Couillon at La Marine. At €€€ pricing with a 4.9 Google score from over 820 reviews, it offers some of the best value in France's regional fine dining tier. Book well ahead — tables go quickly.
Verdict
Maison Desamy is worth booking, and worth the detour. A Michelin one-star in the Vendée countryside, sitting in premises that date from 1860 in the wine-producing village of Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais, this is one of the more compelling cases for leaving Paris to eat well. Chef Simon Bessonnet trained under Alexandre Couillon at La Marine — a credential that carries real weight — and has built something that reads as confident and personal rather than derivative. At €€€ pricing, it sits a tier below the grand Parisian rooms, and the value argument is strong. If you're already exploring the Fiefs Vendéens wine region, this is the meal to plan your trip around.
Portrait
The building has absorbed 160 years of Vendée life, but the room Bessonnet has designed inside it signals none of that history. The interior is contemporary and deliberate , the kind of space that tells you the kitchen takes itself seriously without announcing it. If you've been once and wondered whether the setting would wear thin on a second visit, the answer is no. The room works precisely because it doesn't compete with the food.
Bessonnet's cooking is anchored in the regional pantry of the Vendée and the Fiefs Vendéens, and the approach is one of bold combinations rather than safe classical execution. Michelin's assessors noted his talent for bold and original pairings, and for using emulsions, jus, and condiments as structural tools rather than garnish. This is modern French cuisine in the technical sense , ingredient-led, regionally rooted, but plated and conceived with contemporary precision. Think of it as occupying the same intellectual register as Bras in Laguiole or Flocons de Sel in Megève, but with a distinctly Atlantic-coast identity.
The desserts have earned specific praise from Michelin , described as models of craft rather than afterthoughts. If you've been once and skipped a cheese course in favour of moving to dessert quickly, that instinct was right. The pastry work here is part of the argument for the star, not a footnote to it.
The Fiefs Vendéens is a minor but genuine AOC producing light reds from Pinot Noir and Gamay, and whites with real salinity from Chenin Blanc and Chardonnay. The local wine list at a restaurant of this calibre in the appellation's own village is not a novelty , it's a practical advantage. If you're pairing, lean into the regional pours rather than defaulting to Loire valley names you already know. The wines here are harder to find anywhere else, and the kitchen is cooking to them. For a deeper look at what's pouring in the area, see our full Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais wineries guide.
Drinks program more broadly rewards attention. In a village restaurant at this price point, the temptation is to treat the wine list as supporting cast. Resist it. The aperitif moment , whether you're opening with a local pét-nat or something from the broader Loire , sets the register for the meal. Bessonnet's cooking has enough acidity and structure in its saucing that it handles wines with some grip. If the list includes any Fiefs Vendéens blanc on current service, that's where to start.
On logistics: the kitchen runs a tight service window. Lunch is 12 PM to 1:45 PM and dinner from 7:30 PM to 8:45 PM, Tuesday through Saturday. Sunday and Monday are closed. These are short sittings by any standard, and with a 4.9 Google rating across 820 reviews, demand is consistent. Book as far ahead as possible , this is hard to secure on short notice, particularly for dinner on a weekend. The village itself is not a destination with backup options, so if you miss a booking window, there's no obvious fallback nearby. Check our full Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais restaurants guide for any alternatives worth knowing.
For context on how Maison Desamy fits within France's broader regional fine dining tier, it competes in spirit with places like Auberge du Vieux Puits in Fontjoncouse or Maison Lameloise in Chagny , Michelin-starred regional anchors that have built identity around a specific terroir rather than trying to replicate Paris in the provinces. That's the category where Bessonnet is operating, and within it, the value proposition at €€€ is hard to argue with.
If you're planning an overnight, pair the dinner with accommodation and an exploration of the appellation the next morning. See our full Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais hotels guide and our full Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais experiences guide for what to combine it with. The bar scene is limited in a village of this size, but our Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais bars guide covers what exists.
Bottom line: if you are already travelling in the Vendée or making a western Loire circuit, Maison Desamy is the meal that justifies routing through this part of France. If you're coming from Paris specifically for this, that's defensible too , the combination of star quality, regional specificity, and €€€ pricing makes it one of the stronger cases for a dedicated food trip in provincial France. Compare it to the effort required to secure a table at Troisgros in Ouches or Arpège in Paris, and the booking difficulty here , though real , feels proportionate.
At a Glance
- Award: Michelin 1 Star (2024)
- Google Rating: 4.9 from 820 reviews
- Price: €€€
- Cuisine: Modern French, regionally anchored
- Chef background: Formerly sous-chef to Alexandre Couillon at La Marine
- Address: 2 Rue Hervé de Mareuil, 85320 Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais, France
- Hours: Tue–Sat lunch (12–1:45 PM) and dinner (7:30–8:45 PM); closed Sun–Mon
- Booking difficulty: Hard , plan well ahead
FAQ
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Maison Desamy? Yes, based on the evidence available. A Michelin star awarded in 2024, a 4.9 Google score from over 820 reviews, and €€€ pricing that sits a full tier below comparable Parisian one-stars all point in the same direction. Bessonnet's training under Alexandre Couillon at La Marine gives the kitchen a serious technical foundation, and Michelin specifically called out the boldness of his combinations and the quality of the desserts. For comparison, reaching equivalent technical execution at Pierre Gagnaire or Le Cinq in Paris would cost you €€€€ and a much harder booking.
- What should a first-timer know about Maison Desamy? The setting is a village in the Vendée , Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais is a small wine-producing commune, not a city. Plan transport in advance. The service windows are tight (lunch ends at 1:45 PM, dinner at 8:45 PM), so don't arrive late. The cooking is modern French with a strong regional identity, not classical French in the grand brasserie sense. Expect creative plating, bold pairings, and technical precision rather than butter-rich tradition. Pricing is €€€, which is accessible relative to the star level.
- Can Maison Desamy accommodate groups? Seat count is not confirmed in available data, so contact the restaurant directly before attempting a large group booking. Given the village location and tight service windows, it's prudent to assume capacity is limited and to enquire early. Groups of 2–4 are likely the format the kitchen is built around at this level.
- Is lunch or dinner better at Maison Desamy? Dinner. The 7:30 PM sitting allows more time to settle into the meal without the time pressure of a 1:45 PM close. Lunch is a good option if you're passing through on a road trip and want a single sitting, but if this is a destination meal, dinner gives it the right frame. Both services run Tuesday through Saturday.
- What should I wear to Maison Desamy? No dress code is confirmed in available data, but a Michelin-starred restaurant in France at €€€ pricing calls for smart casual at minimum. The interior is contemporary rather than formal, so you don't need a jacket, but this is not a jeans-and-trainers room. Dress as you would for a serious meal, not a celebration dinner at a grand Parisian palace.
- Is Maison Desamy worth the price? Yes, for the category. At €€€, it is priced below the €€€€ tier that defines most comparable Michelin-starred rooms in France. The combination of a 2024 star, a 4.9 Google rating across 820 reviews, and a kitchen with a documented lineage from La Marine makes the value case direct. It will cost more than a village bistro, but it delivers significantly more than one.
- Is Maison Desamy good for a special occasion? Yes , with the caveat that logistics matter. The village setting means you need to plan travel and accommodation in advance. Secure the booking first, then build the trip around it. The quality of the food, the intimacy of the setting, and the €€€ pricing make it a better special-occasion choice than many larger, more crowded starred rooms. If you want grandeur and a hotel concierge, look at Le Cinq. If you want a meal that feels personal and regionally specific, Maison Desamy is the stronger pick.
- What should I order at Maison Desamy? Specific dishes are not confirmed in available data, so treat this as directional. Michelin's assessors specifically praised the desserts as models of craft , don't skip them. The regional focus on the Vendée pantry means local ingredients will be central to whatever is on the current menu. On drinks, lean toward the Fiefs Vendéens wines if available: the appellation produces whites with real character and the kitchen is cooking to local produce, so the pairing logic is built in.
Compare Maison Desamy
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Maison Desamy | €€€ | — |
| Plénitude | €€€€ | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | — |
A quick look at how Maison Desamy measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at Maison Desamy?
Yes, for the cooking style Bessonnet delivers. His background as Alexandre Couillon's sous-chef at La Marine — one of France's most technically serious coastal kitchens — shows in how precisely he constructs dishes using the regional Vendée pantry. At €€€ pricing in a village setting, this is high-value Michelin one-star territory. If tasting menus built around bold, regional combinations appeal to you, book it.
What should a first-timer know about Maison Desamy?
This is a destination restaurant, not a passing stop. Mareuil-sur-Lay-Dissais is a wine-producing village in the Fiefs Vendéens — you will need to plan around it. The restaurant is closed Monday and Sunday, and the dinner service ends by 8:45 PM, so arrival timing matters. The premises date from 1860 but the interior is deliberately contemporary, so expect a modern dining room rather than rustic farmhouse.
Can Maison Desamy accommodate groups?
There is no group booking information in the available venue data, so check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity and arrangements. Given the format — a village Michelin one-star with tightly controlled service windows — large groups should enquire well in advance and be prepared for limited flexibility.
Is lunch or dinner better at Maison Desamy?
Lunch is the more practical choice if you are combining Maison Desamy with travel through the Vendée. Service runs 12 PM to 1:45 PM Tuesday through Saturday, while dinner is available Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday only. For a longer, more relaxed experience without a mid-afternoon drive, a Thursday or Friday dinner makes sense.
What should I wear to Maison Desamy?
The venue has no documented dress code, but the contemporary interior and Michelin one-star context point toward smart casual as a safe read — neat, considered clothing without the need for formal attire. A French village setting means no one expects a suit, but this is not a casual bistro either.
Is Maison Desamy worth the price?
At €€€ pricing with a 2024 Michelin star, Maison Desamy sits in the value-positive tier of French fine dining. For comparison, €€€ at a Paris Michelin one-star buys less geographical exclusivity and rarely comes with this level of regional identity. If you are already in the Vendée or willing to make the detour, the price-to-cooking ratio holds up well.
Is Maison Desamy good for a special occasion?
Yes. A Michelin one-star in a historic 1860 building in the Vendée countryside reads well for anniversaries or milestone dinners where the setting matters as much as the food. It works best for parties of two who want a quieter, destination-style experience rather than a high-energy celebratory room.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 12 PM-1:45 PM 7:30 PM-8:45 PM
- Wednesday
- 12 PM-1:45 PM
- Thursday
- 12 PM-1:45 PM 7:30 PM-8:45 PM
- Friday
- 12 PM-1:45 PM 7:30 PM-8:45 PM
- Saturday
- 12 PM-1:45 PM 7:30 PM-8:45 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
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