Restaurant in Paris, France
Solid Michelin value just outside Paris.

Cabane in Nanterre holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and a prior Bib Gourmand (2024) at the €€ price point, making it one of the stronger value propositions in the greater Paris area for modern cuisine. With a 4.7 Google score across nearly 1,900 reviews and easy booking conditions, it suits food-focused travellers willing to travel slightly west of the city centre for recognised cooking without the €€€€ outlay.
Book Cabane. A Michelin Bib Gourmand in 2024 followed by a Michelin Plate in 2025 tells you this is a kitchen that has earned consistent recognition at the €€ price point, which in the Paris restaurant ecosystem is a genuinely difficult combination to find. Located in Nanterre rather than within the périphérique, Cabane requires a small act of commitment from visitors staying centrally, but the value-to-quality ratio makes that commitment reasonable for anyone serious about eating well without the €€€€ outlay of the city's trophy addresses.
The 2024 Bib Gourmand is the credential that matters most here. Michelin's Bib designation is awarded specifically for good cooking at a moderate price, and Cabane held it before graduating to the Plate in 2025. That trajectory is a positive signal: it suggests the kitchen has sustained quality and may be on an upward path rather than a plateau. For the food-focused traveller who tracks restaurant momentum rather than just current status, that progression is worth noting.
With 1,827 Google reviews averaging 4.7, the volume and consistency of feedback here is higher than most restaurants at this price range achieve. A 4.7 across nearly two thousand reviews at €€ pricing is a stronger signal than the same score at a venue with 200 reviews, because it reflects a broad cross-section of guests over time rather than a concentrated run of enthusiastic early visitors.
Given the editorial angle here, the question worth asking is not just whether to go once, but how Cabane rewards repeat visits. At the €€ price point with modern cuisine as its format, the kitchen likely rotates its menu seasonally, which means a visit in late autumn or winter and a second in spring or early summer will show you meaningfully different cooking. This is a different proposition from the fixed-format tasting menus at Nanterre's higher-priced peers, where the menu architecture changes slowly and a second visit within the same year offers diminishing returns.
For a first visit, the practical logic is direct: go to understand the kitchen's baseline and its approach to the season you're in. For a second visit, go specifically to track what has changed. Modern cuisine at the Bib Gourmand level tends to have a tight, responsive menu rather than a sprawling one, which means seasonal rotation is often the primary variable between experiences. If the first visit lands well, the second visit is low-risk and genuinely different rather than repetitive.
A third visit, if you're building a real picture of the kitchen, is most usefully timed around a transition point: early spring or the shift into autumn, when seasonal ingredients are at their most interesting and chefs are often at their most inventive. Returning visitors at this kind of restaurant tend to have better experiences than first-timers because staff recognition and a clearer sense of the menu's logic both improve the meal.
Nanterre sits west of Paris proper. For anyone already in that part of the city, or with a reason to be in La Défense, Cabane is an easy add. For visitors staying in the Marais or Saint-Germain, the journey requires intention. The relevant comparison is whether the value differential relative to comparable central Paris addresses justifies the travel. At €€ with Michelin recognition, the answer is yes for the genuinely food-focused traveller. For someone who wants convenience alongside quality, options like Accents Table Bourse or Anona offer Michelin-recognised cooking within the city centre without the additional transit.
Paris has a dense field of recognised restaurants at every price tier. Our full Paris restaurants guide maps the full picture, and if you're planning a wider trip, the Paris hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are worth consulting alongside it.
For food travellers building a France itinerary around Michelin-tracked kitchens, Cabane sits at the accessible end of a spectrum that extends to Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, and Troisgros in Ouches. The value proposition is entirely different at each tier, but understanding where Cabane sits relative to the country's institutional addresses, including Auberge de l'Ill, Bras in Laguiole, and Paul Bocuse, helps calibrate what you are choosing and why. Cabane is not in competition with those addresses; it is a different kind of recommendation for a different budget and a different kind of meal.
See the comparison table below for how Cabane sits against Paris's higher-tier addresses.
Explore related venues worth considering for a Paris trip: 114, Faubourg, Amâlia, and Auberge de Montfleury. For modern cuisine tracked beyond France, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai sit at the upper end of the format globally. The Paris wineries guide is also worth consulting if wine is part of your itinerary.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cabane | €€ | Easy | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| L'Ambroisie | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
How Cabane stacks up against the competition.
Book at least one to two weeks out. Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition reliably fills smaller neighbourhood restaurants, and Cabane's €€ pricing makes it a popular local choice on top of any visitor traffic. Booking further ahead is low-risk given the recognition it carries.
Cabane is in Nanterre, not central Paris — factor in travel time from the city centre, though it is close to La Défense. The Michelin Bib Gourmand credential means you should expect good cooking at a moderate price, not a grand dining production. It is the kind of place that rewards those who prioritise food quality over prestige address.
Specific dietary accommodation details are not in the available venue record. For a kitchen operating at the Bib Gourmand level within France, contacting the restaurant ahead of your visit is the practical approach — and the most reliable way to confirm what is possible on any given menu.
Cabane is primarily known for Modern Cuisine in Paris.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.