Restaurant in Marseille, France
Serious cooking at a price that makes sense.

Belle de Mars delivers technically precise modern Mediterranean cooking in the Marseille 2nd arrondissement at a €€ price that undercuts most rooms of comparable quality. With a Michelin Plate (2024), a 5-star Google rating, and a kitchen team trained under Ledeuil and Passedat, it is the strongest value option for food-focused diners not ready to commit to the city's €€€€ tier.
Belle de Mars earns a confident recommendation for food-focused visitors to Marseille who want modern Mediterranean cooking at a price that won't require justification. At €€, it sits well below the city's three- and four-euro-sign heavyweights, yet the kitchen — led by Michel Marini and Kim-Mai Bui, both trained at houses including William Ledeuil and Gérald Passedat — delivers a level of technical care that outpaces its price bracket. A Michelin Plate (2024) and a 5-star Google rating from 226 reviews confirm this is not a neighbourhood secret that happens to have good press: it is a genuinely well-executed room that repeats well on a second visit, precisely because the cooking is disciplined rather than showy.
The address on Rue de Forbin puts you in the 2nd arrondissement, and the entrance , wrought-iron railings, a handsome facade , sets a tone that the interior quietly delivers on. White walls, parquet floors, wooden chairs and tables: the room is understated to a degree that some visitors may read as minimal, but the effect is considered rather than austere. The open-plan kitchen is the visual anchor. It pulls the eye without dominating the conversation, which makes Belle de Mars a better choice for a focused dinner with one or two people than for a loud group celebration. The spatial logic is intimate without being cramped, and the layout rewards those who want to watch the kitchen work without being seated in a theatre-style row.
If your priority is a room with Mediterranean views or the drama of the Vieux-Port waterfront, Les Trois Forts or Les Bords de Mer will deliver that. Belle de Mars trades the view for kitchen proximity, and that is a worthwhile exchange for the right diner.
Marini and Bui bring pedigree from kitchens that include the kind of rigour associated with Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen and the precision-herb work you find further south at operations like Mirazur in Menton. At Belle de Mars, that training surfaces as a Mediterranean-focused menu that avoids the common trap of regional cooking , it does not substitute sentiment for technique. The Michelin description notes lightly seared squid with salmorejo sauce and wild seabass cooked in fig leaves as representative dishes, both of which point to a kitchen that uses herbs and aromatics as structural elements rather than garnish. The duo pick herbs themselves, which at this price point is a meaningful operational commitment rather than a marketing note.
Desserts are described as low-sugar but highly satisfying , which, for food-focused guests weary of the over-sweetened end to otherwise precise meals, is worth flagging as a genuine differentiator. The register throughout is flavoursome and legible: this is cooking you can follow and discuss, not cooking designed to confuse or impress through obscurity.
The venue database does not include wine list specifics for Belle de Mars, so any claim about particular bottles or producers would go beyond what is confirmed. What can be reasoned from the available data: a kitchen with Passedat and Ledeuil lineage, operating in Provence, is unlikely to treat wine as an afterthought. Marseille sits within reach of Bandol, Cassis, and the broader Provence appellation, and a restaurant at this positioning in the 2nd arrondissement has natural access to those producers. For guests whose visit is partly wine-driven, the sensible move is to ask at booking whether the wine list skews regional, and to treat the pairing menu (if offered) as the more informative path. If wine program depth is the deciding factor in your booking, Une Table, au Sud operates at a higher price point with a more extensively documented list. Belle de Mars is a better choice when the food-to-price ratio is your primary criterion and the wine is a supporting consideration rather than the headline.
For context on how Mediterranean kitchens at this level typically approach wine pairing, comparable operations further afield , Bras in Laguiole and Flocons de Sel in Megève , both demonstrate that kitchens with strong herb and regional produce identities tend to build wine lists around texture and aromatic alignment rather than prestige labels. That is likely the framework here, though confirmation requires a direct conversation with the room.
Belle de Mars is the right call for couples or pairs who want a technically focused modern Mediterranean meal without the price commitment of a €€€€ room. It works for food-and-travel enthusiasts who follow cooking rather than just consume it , the open kitchen and the kitchen team's identifiable culinary heritage give you something to engage with. It is a weaker fit for large groups wanting a lively, festive atmosphere, or for diners whose main priority is a dramatic waterfront setting. For Marseille visitors comparing options across the city's full range, see our full Marseille restaurants guide. For where to stay nearby, our full Marseille hotels guide covers the relevant options by neighbourhood.
| Detail | Belle de Mars | Une Table, au Sud | La Mercerie |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price range | €€ | €€€€ | €€ |
| Cuisine | Modern Mediterranean | Modern Cuisine | Modern Bistro |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate–Hard | Easy–Moderate |
| Michelin recognition | Plate (2024) | Star | Not listed |
| Google rating | 5.0 (226 reviews) | Not specified | Not specified |
| Leading for | Couples, food enthusiasts | Special occasions, splurge | Casual modern dining |
For bars and further exploration after dinner, our full Marseille bars guide has current recommendations. If you are extending your trip into wine country, our full Marseille wineries guide covers Bandol and Cassis producers worth the detour. For non-dining activities, our full Marseille experiences guide is the practical starting point.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Belle de Mars | Modern Cuisine | €€ | Easy |
| AM par Alexandre Mazzia | French, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Une Table, au Sud | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Chez Fonfon | French Bistro, Seafood | €€€ | Unknown |
| Le Petit Nice | French Seafood, Seafood | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Chez Etienne | Provencal | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Marseille for this tier.
Book at least 1 to 2 weeks ahead for weekday dinners; aim for 2 to 3 weeks for Friday or Saturday evenings. At €€ pricing with Michelin Plate recognition, the room fills with local regulars as much as visitors, so last-minute availability is unreliable. The restaurant's phone and website are not listed publicly, so your best route is a direct walk-in inquiry or a reservation platform like TheFork.
The interior description — parquet floors, wooden chairs and tables, open-plan kitchen — suggests a modestly sized dining room better suited to pairs and tables of 4 than large parties. Groups of 6 or more should check the venue's official channels well in advance to confirm capacity. For a large group in Marseille at a similar price point, Chez Etienne is a more practical option.
The space is described as tastefully understated — white walls, wooden furniture, wrought-iron railings — which reads as relaxed but considered. Think neat casual: no need for a jacket, but beachwear and athletic wear would feel out of place. The tone matches the €€ price range: confident and unfussy rather than formal.
For a step up in ambition and price, Une Table, au Sud offers polished Mediterranean tasting menus with more ceremony. AM par Alexandre Mazzia is the right call if you want a full avant-garde tasting format and have the budget for it. Chez Fonfon delivers the Marseille bouillabaisse experience if you want tradition over technique. Le Petit Nice is the city's prestige splurge with a coastal setting to match.
At €€ pricing, Belle de Mars delivers a technically grounded modern Mediterranean menu from chefs who trained under Ledeuil, Moret, and Passedat — that's meaningful pedigree for the price point. The Michelin Plate (2024) confirms the kitchen is cooking at a level worth the trip. If you want full creative latitude without a €€€€ bill, this is one of the more credible options in Marseille for exactly that.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.