Restaurant in Paris, France
Michelin-recognised farm-to-table, easy to book.

A Michelin Plate farm-to-table address in the 15th arrondissement, Beurre Noisette earns guide recognition two years running at a €€ price point that is rare in Paris. Easy to book, producer-driven, and best suited to food-focused diners who will cross the river for cooking that punches above its tier.
Getting a table here is easy, which makes Beurre Noisette one of the more accessible Michelin Plate restaurants in Paris. At the €€ price tier, it delivers farm-to-table cooking with two consecutive years of Michelin recognition (2024 and 2025) and a Google rating of 4.5 across 877 reviews. The question is not whether you can get in — you can — it is whether the cooking justifies the trip to the 15th arrondissement. For most food-focused visitors willing to leave the tourist circuit, it does.
The Michelin Plate is not a star, but it is a meaningful signal: the inspectors consider the food good enough to flag in the guide without awarding a full star. Two consecutive Plates (2024 and 2025) suggest consistency rather than a one-season flourish. At the €€ price point, that combination is genuinely rare in Paris, where farm-to-table cooking at Michelin-recognised addresses tends to sit at the €€€ tier or above. Beurre Noisette prices itself below that threshold, which positions it clearly as the better-value option for diners who want guide-level cooking without the full tasting-menu commitment.
The farm-to-table format means the kitchen is working with seasonal, producer-driven ingredients. In the current season, that approach typically translates to produce-led plates where the sourcing does the heavy lifting. What that means in practice , specific dishes, flavour profiles, portion size , is something you should verify directly with the restaurant before booking, since the menu will shift with the market and the season.
15th arrondissement is not where most visitors eat. That is partly why a restaurant of this quality at this price exists here rather than in the 6th or the 11th. Address 68 Rue Vasco de Gama puts you in a residential pocket of the arrondissement. There is no scenery to subsidise, no address premium to absorb. You are paying for the food.
Beurre Noisette sits in a category Pearl calls casual excellence: a relaxed room delivering quality that punches above its price tier. That framing sets the right expectations. Do not arrive expecting the formality of a starred address. Do arrive expecting cooking that takes its ingredients seriously.
For solo diners, the €€ price point and neighbourhood setting make this a low-commitment dinner that could easily become a highlight of a Paris trip. The 4.5 Google rating across a high volume of reviews (877) suggests the experience is consistently solid across a range of diner types, not just specialists.
For groups, the absence of published capacity data means you should contact the restaurant directly about larger bookings. This applies equally to dietary requirements: farm-to-table kitchens typically build menus around seasonal availability, which can limit how much they can adapt for specific restrictions. Confirm in advance rather than assuming flexibility.
On special occasions: the €€ pricing and relaxed format make Beurre Noisette a more natural fit for a low-key celebratory dinner than for a milestone event where the room and the service ritual matter as much as the food. If the occasion calls for grand surroundings, the €€€€ alternatives below will serve you better. If the occasion calls for a genuinely good meal in a neighbourhood restaurant that the inspectors have noticed, this is a sound choice.
Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated Easy , walk-in attempts are plausible, but a reservation is always the safer call at a Michelin-recognised address, even at this tier. Budget: €€, meaning you are broadly in the €30–€60 per head range for food; verify the current menu pricing directly. Dress: No published dress code; the neighbourhood and price tier suggest smart casual is appropriate. Getting there: 68 Rue Vasco de Gama, 75015 Paris , the 15th arrondissement is well served by Paris Métro. Contact: No website or phone number currently listed; check Google Maps or a reservation platform for current booking options.
Paris has a growing number of addresses working in the farm-to-table register, and the 15th is not the first neighbourhood most diners investigate. Nearby in spirit if not in location, Capitaine, Flocon, Le Mazenay, and Simone, Le Resto all operate in the same casual-but-serious register across different arrondissements. If Beurre Noisette's location does not work for your itinerary, those four are worth comparing before you default to a better-known address.
For a broader view of where farm-to-table cooking sits within French fine dining, the ambition on display at addresses like Mirazur in Menton, Bras in Laguiole, and Troisgros in Ouches shows the ceiling of what produce-led cooking can achieve at the starred level. Beurre Noisette is not in that conversation in terms of scale or ambition, but it shares the underlying philosophy. For a weekend outside Paris, Flocons de Sel in Megève and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern represent the starred end of French regional cooking. For the classic Lyonnais reference point, Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or remains the historical benchmark. Internationally, the farm-to-table category has strong practitioners at Au Gré du Vent in Seneffe and BOK Restaurant in Münster.
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Book Beurre Noisette if you want Michelin-recognised farm-to-table cooking at a price point that does not require a special-occasion budget. The easy booking situation, the 15th arrondissement location, and the €€ pricing all point to the same profile: a neighbourhood restaurant that earns more recognition than its address and price would suggest. That is precisely the kind of find worth making the trip for. The Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen end of the Paris dining spectrum is always there when you need ceremony. Beurre Noisette is there when you need the food to do the talking.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beurre Noisette | Farm to table | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| L'Ambroisie | French, Classic Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Paris for this tier.
It works for a low-key celebration rather than a landmark anniversary dinner. The Michelin Plate recognition gives the meal credibility, and the €€ price point means you are not paying fine-dining rates for the occasion. If you want more ceremony, Paris has starred options that will feel more event-like.
Farm-to-table kitchens typically build menus around what suppliers provide each day, which can limit flexibility for strict dietary requirements. Contacting the restaurant directly before booking is the safest approach. There is no publicly confirmed dietary policy in the venue record.
Yes. A Michelin Plate restaurant at the €€ tier with easy booking is one of the more practical solo dining options in Paris. You are not committing to a long tasting format or a high per-head cost, which lowers the stakes for dining alone.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so a few days' notice is usually sufficient. That said, Michelin Plate recognition draws consistent traffic, and a reservation is always the safer call over relying on a walk-in, particularly on weekend evenings.
At €€, yes. Michelin Plate status two years running means inspectors have consistently considered the cooking worth flagging, and the price tier keeps it accessible for a weeknight dinner rather than a special-occasion budget. For the 15th arrondissement, that combination is hard to argue with.
No tasting menu format is confirmed in the venue record, so this cannot be assessed. Farm-to-table restaurants at the €€ level in Paris more commonly run a short à la carte or set-menu format. Confirm the current menu structure with the restaurant before booking around a specific format.
If you want to stay in the farm-to-table register at a similar price, Paris has several Michelin Plate addresses worth comparing in the inner arrondissements. For a step up in ambition and price, Kei offers Franco-Japanese precision with Michelin star backing. Beurre Noisette is the stronger call when easy booking and value matter more than prestige.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.