Restaurant in Paris, France
Seasonal cooking, honest prices, easy to book.

A Michelin Plate (2025) farm-to-table address on Rue Mouffetard, Flocon delivers seasonal, plant-forward cooking at an honest €€ price point. The Scandinavian-style room is relaxed but the kitchen's ambition is real — burnt leeks, stuffed cabbage, and a shared Normandy tomahawk define the menu arc. Easy to book and worth it for the value-to-quality ratio in Paris's 5th arrondissement.
Yes — if you want seasonal, plant-forward cooking at a price that doesn't punish you for eating well in Paris. Flocon holds a Michelin Plate (2025), sits in one of the 5th arrondissement's most animated streets, and keeps its menu tightly tied to what's in season. For the price tier (€€), the ambition on the plate is serious. If you're after a grand-occasion blowout, look elsewhere. If you want a neighbourhood restaurant that overdelivers on value and cooking craft, Flocon is the booking to make.
Rue Mouffetard is one of Paris's oldest market streets, and Flocon leans into that energy rather than shutting it out. The interior takes a Scandinavian-inflected approach: clean lines, warm materials, a visual calm that reads as considered rather than minimal. The contrast between the buzzy street outside and the pared-back room inside is deliberate — it's a space that works for a focused dinner without feeling hushed or stiff. For solo diners or pairs, the room's intimacy is an asset. For larger groups, the lively neighbourhood backdrop helps absorb the energy of the table. Based on the space's character, it suits two to four diners most naturally , the kind of dinner where you're paying attention to what's on the plate rather than competing with a big communal setup.
Flocon's menu is seasonal and shifts accordingly, which means what you eat in late autumn is a different proposition from a spring visit. The current slate reflects that commitment: burnt leeks with lardo di Colonnata, onion pickles, and a vermouth dressing show the kitchen's interest in building savoury depth from simple, often plant-based foundations. Cabbage stuffed with fish, pistachio beurre blanc, cockles, and Brussels sprouts is a more composed construction , the kind of dish that signals genuine technique without trying to impress through luxury ingredients alone.
The evening menu shifts register with shared cuts of meat. The Normandy beef tomahawk steak is the anchor here, designed for the table rather than the individual plate. This progression , from vegetable-led courses through to a generous shared cut , gives Flocon's dinner experience a recognisable arc. You're not working through a formal tasting menu with a fixed number of courses and a printed narrative, but the seasonal structure and the move from lighter, plant-forward plates toward the tomahawk creates a similar sense of movement through a meal. It rewards diners who let the kitchen direct the order rather than eating a la carte from start to finish without a thread.
The wine list is priced to match the food , no penalty pricing here. For a Michelin-recognised address on a street as well-trafficked as Mouffetard, the value positioning across food and wine together is a genuine differentiator. If you're comparing Flocon to other €€ farm-to-table options in Paris, that combination of Michelin recognition and sensible pricing narrows the field considerably. For a broader look at comparable approaches to seasonal cooking in France, Flocons de Sel in Megève and Mirazur in Menton operate at a different price point and formality, but show what the farm-to-table philosophy looks like at higher ambition levels , useful context if you're planning a wider French itinerary.
Flocon carries a Google rating of 4.4 across 459 reviews , a score that holds up at volume, which matters. A high rating on 50 reviews is easy to maintain; 459 reviews with a 4.4 average reflects consistent execution rather than a lucky run. The Michelin Plate (2025) confirms the kitchen is operating at a level the guide's inspectors find worth flagging, without the price jump that comes with a star. That combination makes Flocon a reliable call rather than a gamble.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. Flocon doesn't require the three-week advance planning of Paris's more in-demand tables, but Rue Mouffetard fills up , particularly at weekends, when the neighbourhood draws both locals and visitors. Midweek evenings are your leading window if you want flexibility. No booking platform or direct phone is listed in the public record, so check current availability through standard Paris reservation channels. Going in season , and trusting that the kitchen is working with what's good right now , is the right approach here.
Quick reference: 75 Rue Mouffetard, 75005 Paris. Price tier: €€. Michelin Plate 2025. Google: 4.4 (459 reviews). Booking: Easy.
See the comparison section below for how Flocon sits against Paris's €€€€ tier.
If Flocon's seasonal approach appeals, the Paris farm-to-table scene has a handful of comparably minded addresses worth knowing. Beurre Noisette, Capitaine, Le Mazenay, and Simone, Le Resto all operate in a similar neighbourhood-bistro register in Paris , useful alternatives if Flocon is fully booked or if you want to compare the style across a longer trip. For the broader context of French seasonal cooking at the highest levels, Troisgros in Ouches, Bras in Laguiole, and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern show what this philosophy looks like with decades of institutional weight behind it. Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or is the historical anchor for the broader French tradition. For farm-to-table elsewhere in Europe, Au Gré du Vent in Seneffe and BOK Restaurant in Münster are worth the comparison. See our full Paris restaurants guide, Paris hotels guide, Paris bars guide, Paris wineries guide, and Paris experiences guide for broader planning.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flocon | €€ | Easy | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| L'Ambroisie | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
How Flocon stacks up against the competition.
Flocon is a neighbourhood restaurant on Rue Mouffetard, not a large-format dining room, so groups of 6 or more should contact them directly and book well ahead. For smaller parties of 2 to 4, booking difficulty is rated Easy, so securing a table is not a problem. The shared-format evening menu — built around cuts like the Normandy beef tomahawk to be split at the table — actually suits groups well. Parties wanting a private dining room should look elsewhere at this price tier.
Flocon's Scandinavian-influenced interior and €€ price point signal a relaxed, unfussy atmosphere — neat casual is the right call. There is no indication of a dress code in the venue data, and the neighbourhood setting on Rue Mouffetard is lively rather than formal. You will not be underdressed in jeans; you will not be overdressed in a blazer. Save the formal wear for a higher-tier table like L'Ambroisie.
Bar seating is not confirmed in Flocon's venue data, so it is worth asking when you book rather than counting on it. The restaurant is described as having a buzzy, convivial atmosphere, which suggests counter or bar options may exist, but this is not something to assume. If bar dining is a priority, confirm directly before you go.
The menu is seasonal and plant-forward, so expect dishes built around vegetables, pickles, and beurre blanc rather than a straightforward steak-and-frites format — though the evening menu does feature shared meat cuts like the Normandy beef tomahawk. Flocon holds a Michelin Plate (2025), which signals cooking quality without the ceremony or price tag of a starred address. Booking is rated Easy, so you do not need weeks of lead time. The wines are sensibly priced, which is worth knowing before you arrive.
The menu changes seasonally, so specific dishes cannot be guaranteed, but Flocon's kitchen is known for plant-forward plates — think burnt leeks with lardo di Colonnata and vermouth dressing, or cabbage stuffed with fish and pistachio beurre blanc. In the evening, the shared meat cuts are the centrepiece, with the Normandy beef tomahawk as the headline option. If you are visiting as a group, the shared format suits that meal best. The wines are flagged as sensibly priced, so do not skip them.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.