Restaurant in Paris, France
Intimate tasting format, book four weeks out.

AT earns its Michelin star and OAD Top 100 Europe ranking (2025) with technically precise creative cooking from chef Atsushi Tanaka, whose training under Gagnaire, Dacosta, and Holmboe Bang shows in every plate. At €€€€ in Paris's 5th arrondissement, it is the right call for a special occasion dinner where you want focused, fish-forward cuisine over grand ceremony. Book four to six weeks out minimum.
If you are comparing AT to Pierre Gagnaire for a special occasion dinner in Paris, AT wins on intimacy and focus — Gagnaire's room is grander, his legacy is longer, but AT's tighter creative vision and Latin Quarter address make it the sharper choice for a date or a celebration where the food should carry the evening. AT holds a Michelin star (2024 and 2025), ranks #79 in Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in Europe for 2025, and earns a 4.7 from 564 Google reviews. The case for booking is clear if you want technically ambitious cooking in a setting that feels personal rather than institutional.
AT sits at 4bis Rue du Cardinal Lemoine in the 5th arrondissement, a street that earns its keep among serious Paris dining addresses. Chef Atsushi Tanaka trained under Pierre Gagnaire, Quique Dacosta, and Esben Holmboe Bang — a lineage that spans French classicism, avant-garde Spanish technique, and Nordic restraint. That combination shapes a kitchen that moves between France, Spain, and Scandinavia without landing definitively in any one tradition, which is either the appeal or the caveat depending on what you want from a €€€€ meal in Paris.
The cooking centres on fish and vegetables, with preparations that reflect that multi-continental training: arctic char with parsley and broccoli purée, leeks finished with hazelnut butter or marinated in beetroot juice and balsamic before going on the BBQ. These are not generic tasting-menu moves. The flavour logic here tends toward clean acidity and green vegetable brightness set against richer fat elements , precise, restrained, and deliberate. If you want assertive, heavily sauced French classical cooking, this is not your room. If you want technically careful food that rewards attention, it is.
For a special occasion, the key question is whether the service matches the price. AT sits at €€€€ , the same tier as Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, L'Ambroisie, and Le Cinq , and at this level the room dynamic matters as much as what arrives on the plate. AT's Google score of 4.7 across a meaningful volume of reviews suggests consistent satisfaction, and the OAD ranking puts it ahead of a significant portion of Paris's starred dining. The service here earns its price in attentiveness and pacing rather than in grand ceremony , appropriate for the format, and the right register for a dinner that is meant to feel special without feeling stiff.
Booking is hard. Hours run Tuesday through Saturday, lunch seating at 12:30 (last entry 1:00 or 1:30 depending on the day) and dinner seating at 7:30 (last entry 8:30). Sunday and Monday are closed. With a single nightly seating and a small room, availability is limited and lead time is essential , see the booking section below. For comparison, NESO and Quinsou offer creative cooking in Paris at a lower price point with meaningfully easier booking. AT makes sense when you want the full Michelin-level occasion, not just a good meal.
Among the wider France creative dining field, AT's profile sits comfortably alongside destinations like La Grenouillère and Substance in Paris, and further afield shares a sensibility with Mirazur in Menton and Flocons de Sel in Megève , kitchens that operate at the boundary of French and international technique. If you are building a France itinerary and want to benchmark AT against classic French institutions, Troisgros in Ouches, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Bras in Laguiole, Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or, La Villa Madie in Cassis, and Flaveur in Nice offer useful contrast. See our full Paris restaurants guide, Paris hotels guide, Paris bars guide, Paris wineries guide, and Paris experiences guide for fuller planning context.
Book at minimum four to six weeks ahead for dinner; lunch is marginally more accessible but still fills well in advance. AT operates a single dinner seating nightly (last entry 8:30 PM) and two lunch seatings compressed into a narrow window starting at 12:30 PM. This format means the total number of covers per service is low, and availability disappears quickly once a date becomes bookable. If you have a specific date in mind , anniversary, birthday, business dinner , secure the reservation before you confirm travel plans.
Practical reference: 4bis Rue du Cardinal Lemoine, 75005 Paris. Closed Sunday and Monday. Lunch: 12:30–1:00 PM (Tuesday) or 12:30–1:30 PM (Wednesday through Saturday). Dinner: 7:30–8:30 PM (Tuesday through Saturday).
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| AT | Modern French, Creative | €€€€ | Hard |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| L'Ambroisie | French, Classic Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
A quick look at how AT measures up.
Four to six weeks minimum for dinner; lunch slots open up a little sooner but still fill well in advance. AT runs a single dinner seating per service, which means the room turns over once and availability goes fast. If your dates are fixed, book the day reservations open rather than waiting to confirm travel plans.
No bar-seat dining is documented for AT. The room at 4bis Rue du Cardinal Lemoine is an intimate space built around a focused tasting format, so walk-in or counter options are not part of the setup. Book a table or don't go — there is no casual fallback here.
Lunch is the practical choice if availability is a concern — it is marginally easier to book and the kitchen runs the same Atsushi Tanaka creative format either way. Dinner carries the longer service window and the fuller tasting experience typical of a Michelin-starred room. For a special occasion, dinner is the call; for flexibility, lunch delivers the same food with less friction.
AT holds a Michelin star and sits in €€€€ territory, so dress accordingly: smart, considered, and not casual. There is no published dress code in the venue record, but a room at this price point and recognition level will read a jacket or equivalent as the baseline expectation for dinner. Lunch allows slightly more latitude without dropping the standard entirely.
AT is an intimate room by design — the tasting format and focused kitchen output at 4bis Rue du Cardinal Lemoine are not configured for large parties. Groups of more than four should enquire directly at the time of booking; larger groups are likely to find the format and room size a poor fit. For a group celebration needing more space, Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V is better equipped to handle the logistics.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.