Restaurant in Paris, France
Michelin-starred vegetables. Book ahead.

Datil holds two consecutive Michelin stars (2024–2025) and a We're Smart Green Guide endorsement for its vegetable-forward, producer-led cooking in the Paris Marais. At €€€€, it delivers technically serious seasonal tasting menus under Chef Manon Fleury. Book four to eight weeks ahead; tables at this independently run 3rd-arrondissement address are consistently hard to secure.
Chef Manon Fleury has built something specific at Datil, 13 Rue des Gravilliers in the 3rd arrondissement: a Michelin-starred restaurant where vegetables are the structural centre of the plate, not the garnish. Two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) and recognition from the We're Smart Green Guide confirm this is not a trend-chasing concept but a kitchen with a clear philosophy and the technical ability to execute it at a high level. If that aligns with what you want from a €€€€ dinner in Paris, book it. If you need meat or fish to anchor a tasting menu, look elsewhere.
Datil sits in the Marais, one of central Paris's more walkable and restaurant-dense neighbourhoods. The address alone tells you something about the restaurant's positioning: this is not a grand boulevard institution or a hotel dining room. It operates independently, which at this price tier in Paris is worth noting. The kitchen works directly with local growers, building menus around what is available seasonally rather than what is conventionally expected at this level. Right now, in the current season, that means the menu reflects what French market gardens are producing, with the team making decisions around both flavour and ecological impact. The We're Smart Green Guide specifically called out the close collaboration with local producers, the seasonal discipline, and the kitchen's approach to avoiding waste as core to what Datil does.
For a returning diner, the practical question is what has changed since your last visit. Given the seasonal structure, the answer is: likely a good portion of the menu. Datil is not a restaurant where you come back for the same dish. The vegetable-led format means the kitchen is working with what is genuinely in season, so a visit in spring reads differently from one in autumn. That is a reason to return, not a caveat.
The assigned editorial angle here is the drinks program, and it is worth addressing directly. Datil's food philosophy, which centres on ecological thinking and producer relationships, tends to extend to how thoughtful restaurants at this level approach their wine lists: expect a list that leans toward natural and biodynamic producers, smaller domaines, and French regions that align with the kitchen's sourcing ethos. This is consistent with how the We're Smart Green Guide frames the broader project. However, specific wine list details, cocktail offerings, or drinks pricing are not confirmed in the available data, so if the drinks program is a deciding factor for your booking, contact the restaurant directly before committing. What can be said with confidence is that at €€€€ in Paris with two Michelin stars, the expectation of a considered, well-structured drinks list is reasonable, and the kitchen's philosophical coherence suggests that the same care applied to produce is likely applied to what goes in the glass.
For context, Datil's approach to the table as a whole sits closer to restaurants like Anona or Accents Table Bourse in terms of producer-led thinking than it does to the grand classical houses. If the wine pairing is central to your evening, ask the team what they are pouring when you book, rather than assuming a conventional French fine dining selection.
Book well ahead. With two Michelin stars and a small, independent format in a neighbourhood that draws significant dining traffic, Datil is not a walk-in proposition. A booking window of four to six weeks minimum is a reasonable working assumption, and for weekend tables or special occasions, push that to eight weeks or more. The restaurant is at 13 Rue des Gravilliers in the 3rd arrondissement, within reach of Arts et Métiers and Rambuteau metro stations. Specific hours and phone contact are not publicly confirmed in the current data, so book through the restaurant's direct reservation system or a trusted booking platform. Given the tasting menu format at this price point, cancellation policies are likely to be firm, so confirm those when you reserve.
For broader Paris planning, our full Paris restaurants guide covers the city's dining options across price tiers. If you're building an itinerary around the stay, our Paris hotels guide and our Paris bars guide are useful starting points. For those interested in the producer side of things, our Paris wineries guide and Paris experiences guide round out the picture.
Datil holds its own against the Michelin-starred field in Paris, but it is a different kind of restaurant from the classical grand maisons. For those tracking the broader French fine dining conversation, the vegetable-forward, producer-linked approach Datil represents connects to a wider movement that includes destinations like Mirazur in Menton and Bras in Laguiole, both of which have built internationally recognised reputations around similar ecological and seasonal commitments. Within Paris, Datil is operating in a more intimate register than those landmark addresses, which is part of its appeal. It is also worth noting the contrast with institutions like Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or or Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern: Datil is not trading on legacy or spectacle, but on a current, active culinary position that Michelin has now recognised in two consecutive years.
Other Paris restaurants in the modern cuisine space worth considering alongside Datil include Amâlia and 114, Faubourg for different profiles at the €€€€ tier. For a longer trip, Flocons de Sel in Megève and Troisgros in Ouches represent how the seasonal and terroir-led approach plays out at the very leading of the French regional scene. Internationally, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai are modern cuisine benchmarks at a similar price tier for comparison. And Auberge de Montfleury offers a different pace entirely if the Marais energy is not what you need that evening.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Datil | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | 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 |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Yes, if vegetable-forward fine dining is a format you actively want. Chef Manon Fleury holds a Michelin star (retained in both 2024 and 2025) and has also earned recognition from the We're Smart Green Guide for the team's commitment to seasonal produce and waste reduction. At €€€€ pricing, you are paying for genuine technique and a clear point of view, not just prestige branding. If you want classical protein-led French fine dining, Datil is the wrong room.
For classical grand maison French dining, L'Ambroisie or Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V are the natural alternatives, though both sit at a higher price point and in a more formal register. Kei offers a Franco-Japanese Michelin-starred middle ground. Pierre Gagnaire and Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen are for those who want multi-star prestige and a broader protein repertoire. Datil is the clearest choice specifically when ecological sourcing and vegetables as the main event are the priority.
Yes, with one condition: both people at the table should be comfortable with a vegetable-led menu. The Michelin credentials (1 star, 2024 and 2025) and the considered philosophy behind Chef Manon Fleury's cooking make it a credible special-occasion choice. The Marais location is also genuinely pleasant for an evening out. If one member of the party is a committed carnivore, manage expectations or look at alternatives.
Book at least three to four weeks ahead, more if you are targeting a Friday or Saturday evening. Datil is a small, independent Michelin-starred restaurant in one of the most restaurant-dense parts of Paris, which means demand consistently outpaces availability. Last-minute bookings are possible in theory but unreliable in practice.
The kitchen's entire philosophy is built around adapting to seasonal produce and working closely with local growers, which suggests a team comfortable with flexibility. That said, specific dietary accommodation policies are not documented in the available venue data. check the venue's official channels before booking if you have strict requirements.
Come knowing that vegetables are the lead, not a supporting act. Chef Manon Fleury's cooking is grounded in ecological sourcing and seasonal produce, with recognition from both Michelin (1 star, 2024 and 2025) and the We're Smart Green Guide. The address is 13 Rue des Gravilliers in the 3rd arrondissement, easily reachable in the Marais. Do not arrive expecting a protein-heavy classical French menu.
At €€€€, Datil sits in Paris's serious fine dining tier, and the two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) confirm the cooking justifies that positioning. The value proposition is strongest if you are specifically interested in vegetable-forward technique and sustainable sourcing. Against comparable Michelin-starred rooms in Paris that do classical protein menus, Datil offers a more differentiated experience rather than better absolute value.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.