Restaurant in Paris, France
OAD-ranked wine bar, easy to book.

ALLÉNOTHÈQUE has earned three consecutive Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe rankings, making it one of the most credible wine bar bookings in Paris's 7th arrondissement. Booking is Easy by Paris standards, and the intimate format suits pairs and small groups over large parties. Book here when you want serious wine without the ceremony of a full tasting-menu commitment.
Three consecutive years on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list — ranked #392 in 2024 and climbing to #428 in 2025 — puts ALLÉNOTHÈQUE in a specific tier of Paris wine bars: the kind that serious wine and food travelers plan trips around, not stumble into. At 53-57 Rue de Grenelle in the 7th arrondissement, it operates under chef Aurélien Rivoire, and the OAD recognition signals a consistent kitchen alongside the bottles.
The 7th is not a neighbourhood you end up in by accident. Rue de Grenelle runs through one of Paris's most residential and unhurried stretches , a long way, physically and tonally, from the tourist-dense wine bar circuit around Saint-Germain-des-Prés. If you are the kind of traveler who cross-references OAD rankings before booking, that address will already mean something to you. If you are exploring Paris wine bar culture for the first time, it is a stronger start than most of what you will find closer to the major sights. For context on the wider Paris scene, see our full Paris restaurants guide and our full Paris bars guide.
ALLÉNOTHÈQUE reads as a wine shop and bar in one , a format common to the leading casual addresses in Paris, where the line between retail and hospitality is productively blurred. That spatial logic rewards visitors who arrive with time to browse. The room tends toward intimate rather than cavernous, which shapes how groups should approach a booking. Smaller parties of two or three will get more from the counter or small-table format that this kind of venue is built for. Larger groups , four or more , should contact the venue directly to confirm what the space can accommodate before assuming it will flex around a bigger party.
For groups with a specific private dining intent, the honest answer is that ALLÉNOTHÈQUE's format favors convivial proximity over formal separation. It is not the venue you book when the brief is a private room with a set menu for eight. For that, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen , the three-Michelin-star flagship in the same culinary orbit , is the correct choice. What ALLÉNOTHÈQUE delivers for a group is shared discovery: a knowledgeable room, well-chosen bottles, and food that holds its own under OAD scrutiny. That is a specific and valuable thing, just not a private dining room.
Booking difficulty at ALLÉNOTHÈQUE is rated Easy, which is a meaningful advantage over much of the OAD-tracked Paris casual list. You do not need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for, say, Cave du Septime in the 11th, where demand consistently outpaces supply. A few days' notice should be sufficient for most visits, though weekend evenings in Paris's 7th fill faster than weekday slots.
The leading timing for a visit is a weekday early evening, when the room is not yet at full pace and conversation with staff about the wine list is more practical. If you are building an itinerary around the venue, the 7th's relative calm compared to busier arrondissements means the approach and the aftermath are both easy to plan around. Paris wine bars with comparable casual credibility , Le Verre Volé in the 10th and Le Bon Georges in the 9th , are harder to book and sit in noisier, more compressed neighbourhoods. ALLÉNOTHÈQUE offers the same quality tier with less friction.
Specific menu items are not available in confirmed data, so naming dishes here would be speculation. What the OAD recognition does confirm is that the food program is taken seriously , casual OAD listings are assessed on the same rigorous peer-review basis as the fine dining rankings, which means the kitchen is producing food that well-traveled diners have consistently found worth noting. Chef Aurélien Rivoire's presence gives the food direction and accountability. The wine bar format suggests the smart move is to let the wine list lead and order food that supports it rather than arriving with a specific dish agenda. For a comparable approach to eating and drinking in a wine-forward Paris room, Le Comptoir de Gastronomie in the 1st offers a useful point of comparison in terms of format, though the style and focus differ.
ALLÉNOTHÈQUE sits at the accessible end of the Alléno culinary universe , if you are weighing it against Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen for a Paris splurge, they are not the same decision. The Pavillon Ledoyen experience is a full tasting menu commitment at €€€€; ALLÉNOTHÈQUE is where you go when you want the quality signal without the full ceremony. Against Plénitude, Pierre Gagnaire, Kei, and Le Cinq , all operating at €€€€ with full service formality , ALLÉNOTHÈQUE is a different category: lower price point, lower ceremony, and easier to book, with OAD validation that places it above the generic wine bar field. Book ALLÉNOTHÈQUE when the brief is a relaxed evening with serious wine. Book Plénitude or Le Cinq when the brief is an occasion dinner with full table service.
For wine bar travelers building a broader itinerary, Antica Bottega Del Vino in Verona and Lady of the Grapes in London are useful European reference points in the same casual wine-forward category. Beyond Paris, France's serious restaurant circuit includes destinations like Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Troisgros in Ouches, Bras in Laguiole, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or , all worth planning around if France is a broader itinerary. See also our Paris hotels guide, our Paris wineries guide, and our Paris experiences guide.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| ALLÉNOTHÈQUE | — | |
| Plénitude | €€€€ | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | — |
How ALLÉNOTHÈQUE stacks up against the competition.
Small groups of two to four are the natural fit for a wine-shop-bar format like this. Larger parties should check the venue's official channels before assuming space is available — the hybrid retail-and-bar layout at 53-57 Rue de Grenelle is not designed around banquet-style seating. If you need a table for six or more, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen offers a more formal environment with capacity to match.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which is a genuine advantage on the OAD Casual Europe list — most comparably ranked Paris addresses require more lead time. A few days' notice is typically enough, though weekends in high season warrant booking earlier in the week. Walk-in chances are better here than at most OAD-tracked venues in the 7th.
Confirmed menu data is not available, so specific dish recommendations would be guesswork. What three consecutive OAD Casual Europe rankings do confirm is that the food programme holds up alongside the wine selection rather than treating it as an afterthought. Focus on what the staff recommend from the bottle list — the wine-bar format means the selection is the main event.
ALLÉNOTHÈQUE is primarily known for Wine Bar in Paris.
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