Restaurant in Paris, France
Market-driven neo-bistro, strong value for €€€.

Chef Simon Horwitz's market-driven neo-bistro in the 3rd arrondissement holds a Michelin Plate and an OAD Casual Europe ranking, delivering produce-first cooking at €€€ that outperforms its casual format. Booking is easy by Paris standards, making it a practical choice for food-focused visitors who want serious cooking without the occasion overhead of a palace restaurant. Closed Mondays and Sundays.
At the €€€ price tier, Elmer delivers a quality-to-cost ratio that most Paris neo-bistros struggle to match. Chef Simon Horwitz runs a market-driven kitchen in the 3rd arrondissement where the cooking punches well above what the relaxed room and casual format suggest. If you are weighing a smart mid-range dinner in the Marais against a splurge at a €€€€ address, Elmer makes a compelling case for staying in its lane. The Paris restaurant scene has no shortage of ambitious bistros, but OAD's 2025 ranking of Elmer at #223 in Casual Europe and a Michelin Plate — held across 2024 and 2025 , confirm this is not a neighbourhood filler option. Book it.
Elmer sits at 30 Rue Notre Dame de Nazareth in the 3rd, a few blocks from the Place de la République, in a part of Paris that has become one of the more interesting stretches for serious casual eating. The format is neo-bistro: no tablecloth formality, no tasting-menu ceremony, just precise, ingredient-led cooking in a room that lets the food do the talking. For food and travel enthusiasts who find the grand palace restaurants of Paris increasingly theatrical, Elmer offers something more direct.
The kitchen's philosophy is anchored in market availability rather than a fixed repertoire. Horwitz works with what arrives each day and constructs dishes around maximising flavour from the ingredient rather than showcasing technique for its own sake. The Lebey Guide 2019 awarded Elmer its prize for Leading Vegetarian Dish , a beetroot millefeuille with green apple, elderberry vinegar, and sour sauce , which tells you something useful about the kitchen's approach: vegetables are treated as primary ingredients, not supporting cast. That orientation toward produce-first cooking means the menu shifts with the seasons, and visiting in any given season means you are eating what is actually good right now, not a dish designed to photograph well year-round.
The current season is worth considering when planning your visit. Elmer's hours structure the week tightly: lunch runs Tuesday through Friday from 12:15 to 14:15, dinner runs Tuesday through Thursday until 22:00, Friday until 22:30, and Saturday dinner only from 19:00 to 22:45. Monday and Sunday are closed. That Saturday dinner-only service is worth noting , it makes Elmer a strong candidate for a focused weekend evening in the Marais without the pressure of a long prix-fixe commitment.
4.6 Google rating across 617 reviews is a useful consistency signal at this price tier. Venues in the OAD Casual Europe list that also hold a Michelin Plate tend to attract a self-selecting crowd of food-aware diners, which keeps the room calibrated. You are unlikely to find yourself next to a table who wandered in off the street without a reservation. The atmosphere reads as convivial rather than hushed , the kind of room where a conversation about what you are eating makes sense.
For context on where Elmer sits within the broader Paris neo-bistro tier: Septime is harder to book and carries more critical momentum, Le Chateaubriand skews more avant-garde, and Le Servan has a comparable casual-precise register with a different geographic pull. Elmer's OAD climb from Highly Recommended in 2023 to #162 in 2024 and #223 in 2025 suggests the ranking adjusted rather than the kitchen slipping , the list itself is competitive and fluid. What matters more is that two consecutive Michelin Plates and consistent Google scores across 600-plus reviews point to a kitchen that performs reliably over time, not just on the nights critics visit.
If you are building a Paris eating itinerary and want to understand the neo-bistro tier more broadly, Gare au Gorille, Le Pantruche, and Le Servan are worth comparing. For neo-bistro cooking in a European context beyond Paris, Bruut in Bruges operates in a similar register. And if Elmer whets your appetite for the upper end of French cooking during a longer France trip, the country's landmark addresses , Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Troisgros in Ouches, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Bras in Laguiole, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or , sit at a different level of ambition and price. Elmer is the right call when you want serious cooking without the occasion overhead those addresses require.
Booking difficulty is assessed as easy. That is a relative advantage over the top-tier neo-bistros in Paris, where demand routinely outpaces cover counts. Use it: book a few days out rather than weeks, and treat the accessibility as a feature rather than a signal about quality.
Address: 30 Rue Notre Dame de Nazareth, 75003 Paris. Hours: Lunch Tue–Fri 12:15–14:15; Dinner Tue–Thu 19:30–22:00, Fri 19:30–22:30, Sat 19:00–22:45; closed Mon and Sun. Price tier: €€€. Reservations: Recommended; booking difficulty is easy by Paris neo-bistro standards, but advance booking is still advisable, particularly for Friday and Saturday. Dress: No stated dress code; smart casual is appropriate and consistent with the room's register. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024–2025; OAD Casual Europe #162 (2024), #223 (2025); Lebey Guide 2019 Best Vegetarian Dish. Google rating: 4.6 across 617 reviews.
For more dining options, see our full Paris restaurants guide. Planning a longer stay? Browse our full Paris hotels guide, our full Paris bars guide, our full Paris wineries guide, and our full Paris experiences guide. For a reference point on how Elmer's register translates to a different city, Le Bernardin in New York shows what serious cooking at a higher price point looks like in a different context entirely.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elmer | €€€ | Easy | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| L'Ambroisie | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Bar seating availability at Elmer is not confirmed in available venue data. Given the restaurant's compact neo-bistro format at 30 Rue Notre Dame de Nazareth, counter or bar spots are not a documented option — check the venue's official channels before counting on it. If solo bar dining in the 3rd is the priority, have a backup in mind.
Yes, Elmer's neo-bistro format and tighter room make it a reasonable solo choice — the pacing is chef-led and the menu is market-driven, so there's no pressure to fill a table. The €€€ price tier is reasonable for a solo lunch, where the Tue–Fri 12:15–14:15 slot keeps the spend controlled. OAD's Casual in Europe ranking for three consecutive years (2023–2025) signals consistency, which matters when you're dining alone and can't spread risk across multiple dishes.
Elmer's OAD classification as 'Casual' and its neo-bistro positioning in the 3rd suggest relaxed but considered dress — think clean, unfussy clothes rather than formal wear. There is no documented dress code in the venue data, so a jacket is not required, but the €€€ price tier means very casual attire may feel out of place. When in doubt, dress as you would for a serious neighbourhood restaurant.
Lunch is the sharper value play: the Tue–Fri slot (12:15–14:15) typically means a more concise menu at a lower price point than dinner, which is standard for Paris neo-bistros at this tier. Dinner runs later on Fridays (until 22:30) and Saturdays (19:00–22:45), giving more time if you want a slower pace. If cost-per-dish ratio matters, book lunch; if atmosphere and extended time at the table are the priority, Friday or Saturday dinner is the call.
There is documented evidence that Elmer takes vegetable-forward cooking seriously: the Lebey Guide 2019 awarded a beetroot millefeuille dish its prize for best vegetarian dish, and Chef Simon Horwitz's market-driven approach means vegetables are not an afterthought. That said, the menu changes daily based on market availability, so specific dietary needs should be communicated at the time of booking rather than assumed. Strict allergen requirements are worth raising directly with the restaurant.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.