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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    Le Baratin

    375pts

    Natural wine institution. Book early, eat well.

    Le Baratin, Restaurant in Paris

    About Le Baratin

    Le Baratin in the 20th arrondissement is one of Paris's strongest casual dining arguments: OAD-ranked #44 in Europe for casual restaurants in 2024, with a Michelin Plate and a natural wine list that goes well beyond the standard bistro offering. At the €€ price tier, it delivers a quality-to-cost ratio that the city's grander rooms cannot match. Book by phone, go at least twice.

    The Most Underestimated Table in the 20th

    Le Baratin is not a discovery. It has been feeding Paris's most curious eaters and natural wine drinkers for decades, and its reputation in those circles is settled. The misconception worth correcting is that it is somehow a neighbourhood secret, a rough-edged local spot that rewards insider knowledge. It is not. It is a precise, considered restaurant that happens to sit in the 20th arrondissement rather than the 6th, and that distinction costs you nothing but a metro ride. If you have been once and filed it away as a wine bar with food, go back. The food is the point.

    The room at 3 Rue Jouye-Rouve is small and close. Tables are near enough that you are aware of other conversations, and the space has no pretension to grandeur. That spatial honesty is part of what makes Le Baratin work: the physical environment tells you immediately that the money went somewhere other than décor. The room is functional, warm in the way that worn-in spaces become warm, and better suited to two than to a group of six. If you are returning, request a table away from the door when the season turns cold. The intimacy of the room is an asset for dinner; at lunch it runs faster and looser, which suits the neighbourhood well.

    Chef Raquel Carena has been behind this kitchen long enough that Le Baratin has become one of those rare cases where a restaurant and its cook are essentially synonymous. The cooking sits at the intersection of neo-bistro and traditional French, meaning you get the discipline and produce-focus of the former with the directness of the latter. There are no multi-course theatrical progressions here. What arrives is cooked with clarity and served without ceremony, which is exactly the register the room calls for.

    The wine program is the other half of the equation. Le Baratin has been described as an institution of natural wines, and the list reflects a depth of engagement that goes well beyond the standard Paris bistro selection. Philippe Pinoteau has been involved in developing the wine side, and the result is a list that rewards curiosity. If you are returning, push past the bottles you already know. The staff can guide you toward producers that are harder to find elsewhere in the city.

    The recognition trail is consistent rather than spectacular, which is appropriate for what Le Baratin actually is. A Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 signals technical competence without the theatrics of starred dining. The more telling credential is the Opinionated About Dining ranking among Europe's leading casual restaurants: #62 in 2023, climbing to #44 in 2024. OAD rankings are driven by diner votes rather than anonymous inspector visits, which means the upward movement reflects repeat customers returning and recommending. That is the right kind of endorsement for a room like this. Google reviews sit at 4.3 across 699 ratings, a number that holds across a wide sample. For context, that score is harder to sustain than it looks at high volume.

    At the €€ price tier, Le Baratin delivers a quality-to-cost ratio that is difficult to match in Paris for this style of cooking. You are not paying for a room, a brand, or a tasting menu format. You are paying for cooking that takes its produce seriously and a wine list that takes its producers seriously. That combination at this price point is genuinely rare in the city. Compared to the €€€€ tier, where [Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/allno-paris-au-pavillon-ledoyen-paris-restaurant), [Kei](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/kei-paris-restaurant), or [L'Ambroisie](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/lambroisie-paris-restaurant) operate, Le Baratin asks a fraction of the spend and delivers a different but not lesser experience. If you are building a Paris trip around a single serious restaurant meal, those rooms offer something Le Baratin does not. But if you are planning more than one dinner, Le Baratin should be on the list precisely because it does not require you to reserve budget or occasion for it.

    Tuesday evenings are dinner-only, which makes them slightly quieter than the midweek lunch service. Wednesday through Saturday runs both services. Sunday and Monday are closed. For a returning visitor, a Wednesday or Thursday lunch hits the right pace: the kitchen is in its rhythm, the room does not yet have the energy of a Friday crowd, and you can linger without feeling the turnover pressure of a weekend service.

    For those planning wider Paris dining, see our full Paris restaurants guide, and for where to stay, our full Paris hotels guide. If bars and wine are central to your trip, our full Paris bars guide and our full Paris wineries guide are worth consulting alongside. For broader trip planning, our full Paris experiences guide covers the city in more depth.

    Elsewhere in France, the serious cooking conversation includes Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Troisgros in Ouches, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Bras in Laguiole, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or. For Paris-trained context, Arpège and Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V represent the other end of the price and formality spectrum. Internationally, Le Bernardin in New York and Atomix in New York offer useful reference points for what serious cooking at contrasting price points and formats looks like.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Book by phone or in person; no online booking confirmed in current data. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, but the small room means you should call ahead for dinner. Hours: Tuesday dinner only (19:30–23:00); Wednesday–Saturday lunch (12:00–14:30) and dinner (19:00–23:00); closed Sunday and Monday. Budget: €€ tier — expect a manageable spend relative to the quality on offer. Dress: No formal dress code; the room is relaxed. Group size: Better for two or three than for larger groups given the room scale. Address: 3 Rue Jouye-Rouve, 75020 Paris.

    FAQ

    • How far ahead should I book Le Baratin? A few days ahead is typically enough given the Easy booking difficulty rating. Friday and Saturday dinner will fill faster, so aim for three to five days' notice for weekend evenings. Midweek lunch is the most accessible slot — same-day or next-day calls are more likely to land a table then.
    • Does Le Baratin handle dietary restrictions? No confirmed booking or dietary policy data is available. The kitchen works in a traditional French and neo-bistro register, which tends to be meat and fish-forward. If you have specific restrictions, call ahead rather than assuming the kitchen can accommodate on the night. A phone call before you arrive is the right approach here.
    • Is Le Baratin good for solo dining? Yes, and the €€ price tier makes a solo meal here practical without a large outlay. The compact room and wine-focused culture make it a comfortable solo experience, particularly at the bar or a small table at lunch. Paris's natural wine crowd skews toward the kind of relaxed engagement that does not make solo diners feel out of place.
    • What are alternatives to Le Baratin in Paris? For casual, produce-driven cooking at a similar price point, Le Baratin does not have many direct equivalents in the city. If you want to move up in spend and formality, Arpège offers serious cooking with a vegetable-forward focus at a much higher price. For grand-occasion dining, L'Ambroisie and Le Cinq are the €€€€ tier benchmarks. Le Baratin's combination of natural wine depth and cooking at its price tier is hard to replicate directly.
    • Is Le Baratin worth the price? At €€, yes, with little qualification. The OAD ranking of #44 in 2024 among Europe's casual restaurants and consecutive Michelin Plates confirm that what you are getting is not bistro-average cooking. For the price tier, the quality-to-cost ratio is among the stronger ones available in Paris. It is worth it for the cooking alone; the wine list makes it worth returning for.

    Compare Le Baratin

    The Complete Picture: Le Baratin and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Le BaratinNeo-bistro, Traditional CuisineA veritable institution of natural wines, the restaurant Le Baratin (Paris 20th arrondissement) is an indispensable place for the natural and curious wine drinker. Philippe Pinoteau has introduced new...; Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #44 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #62 (2023)Easy
    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

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

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Le Baratin?

    Book at least one to two weeks in advance. The room is small and Le Baratin's reputation as a natural wine institution means it fills consistently, especially for Friday and Saturday lunch. No online booking is confirmed, so call ahead or visit in person. Monday and Sunday are closed, which tightens the available windows further.

    Does Le Baratin handle dietary restrictions?

    No dietary policy is documented for Le Baratin, and the kitchen's traditional bistro format means the menu is likely tight and market-driven. Call ahead before visiting if you have specific requirements — the small operation at 3 Rue Jouye-Rouve is not structured like a larger restaurant with flexible substitution menus.

    Is Le Baratin good for solo dining?

    Yes — a neighbourhood bistro at the €€ price point with counter or small-table seating is a natural fit for solo diners. Le Baratin's wine-focused culture means you can order a glass and take your time without pressure. Tuesday dinner is the quietest slot if you want the least crowded experience.

    What are alternatives to Le Baratin in Paris?

    For natural wine with similar neighbourhood energy at comparable prices, Le Baratin is hard to match directly in the 20th. If you want a step up in formality without leaving the bistro format, look at options in the 11th or 10th arrondissements. For a completely different register — Michelin-starred, formal, higher spend — Kei or Le Cinq are in a separate category and serve a different purpose.

    Is Le Baratin worth the price?

    At €€, yes — straightforwardly. A Michelin Plate recognition and an OAD Casual Europe ranking of #44 in 2024 confirm it punches above its price tier. Chef Raquel Carena's kitchen has maintained enough consistency to earn a decades-long following among Paris's serious eaters. For natural wine in particular, few rooms at this price point carry the same depth of list or credibility.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    19:30-23:00
    Wednesday
    12:00-14:30 19:00-23:00
    Thursday
    12:00-14:30 19:00-23:00
    Friday
    12:00-14:30 19:00-23:00
    Saturday
    12:00-14:30 19:00-23:00
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

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