Restaurant in Paris, France
One Michelin star, suburbs price, serious kitchen.

L'Escarbille holds a Michelin star and a 4.7 Google rating from over 1,100 reviews — strong signals for a first-timer deciding whether the Meudon trip is worth it. The answer is yes, if you book three to four weeks ahead and time your visit to the season. Classic French cuisine, ingredient-led and precisely cooked, with a wine list from small-scale producers. Closed Sunday and Monday.
L'Escarbille holds a Michelin star and a Google rating of 4.7 across more than 1,100 reviews. That combination — consistent critical recognition and sustained popular approval , is rare enough to tell you something meaningful before you even look at the menu. If you are planning your first visit and wondering whether the journey to Meudon from central Paris is justified, the answer is yes, with one condition: book well ahead and go with a clear understanding of what this room is and is not.
This is classic cuisine done with precision and generosity, not an avant-garde tasting menu or a theatrical production. Chef Régis Douysset leads a kitchen that works with ingredient quality as its foundation, and the food is cooked and seasoned with the kind of confidence that comes from a settled, experienced team. The room itself occupies a converted townhouse , the former station café , giving it a distinct character that the interior treatment amplifies with a chic, modern overlay and walls covered in photographs and paintings. It does not feel like a generic fine-dining box.
First-timers should know that L'Escarbille operates on a tight schedule with no Sunday or Monday service and only two sittings on the days it is open: a lunch window from noon to 2 PM and a dinner window from 8 PM (7:45 PM on Saturdays). That restricted service pattern is common among Michelin-starred kitchens that prioritise quality over volume, but it means your booking window is genuinely narrow. Come without a reservation and you will almost certainly be turned away.
The price tier is €€€€, which in the Paris and Île-de-France context means you should plan for a full fine-dining spend per head. That is the appropriate expectation. Do not arrive hoping to keep it light , this is a room designed for a deliberate, multi-course experience, and the wines from small-scale producers that the team has selected are part of the point. The wine programme is curated with the same care as the food, so budget accordingly.
If the weather is with you, the terrace is available for sunny days and changes the feel of the meal considerably. For a first visit in spring or early summer, a terrace lunch is the version of this restaurant most worth experiencing. The room has a different energy under natural light with outdoor air than it does at an evening dinner sitting, and the classic cuisine format benefits from that relaxed afternoon pace.
Classic cuisine at this level is ingredient-led and therefore season-sensitive in a way that matters to your booking decision. The kitchen's approach , precise cooking, generous seasoning, produce as the starting point , means that what appears on your plate will shift meaningfully across the year. The documented example from the venue's own description, frogs' legs sautéed in garlic with a watercress velouté sauce, is a spring dish by nature: watercress peaks between March and May, and frogs' legs as a seasonal French ingredient follow a similar window. If that style of cooking is what draws you, late spring is the moment to target.
Autumn brings its own logic for a kitchen working this way: root vegetables, game, mushrooms, and richer preparations suit the format and the room. A dinner booking in October or November, when the terrace is no longer the draw but the interior feels more appropriate to the season, is a strong alternative. What you want to avoid is treating this as a venue where timing is irrelevant , ingredient-led classic cuisine rewards visitors who align their visit with what the season actually provides.
For context beyond Paris, Michelin-starred classic cuisine restaurants in similar registers across France , including Flocons de Sel in Megève, Bras in Laguiole, and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern , share this seasonal sensitivity. L'Escarbille sits in that tradition, and the booking decision should be made with season in mind.
Booking difficulty here is rated hard. A Michelin-starred room with limited service days, a small number of covers per sitting, and a growing reputation in a city where competition for this tier of table is intense means you should not leave this to the week before. Aim for a minimum of three to four weeks in advance for a weekday lunch sitting; weekend dinners may require more lead time. If you are planning around a specific date , a birthday, a trip itinerary, a seasonal window , book the moment you commit to the trip.
For more fine dining options across the city, see our full Paris restaurants guide. If you are building a wider trip itinerary, our Paris hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the surrounding decisions.
| Detail | L'Escarbille | Kei (Paris) | Le Cinq , Four Seasons George V |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Classic French | Contemporary French / Japanese | French Modern |
| Price tier | €€€€ | €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Michelin stars | 1 Star (2024) | 1 Star | 3 Stars |
| Location | Meudon (suburb, ~12km from Paris) | 1st arr., central Paris | 8th arr., central Paris |
| Lunch service | Tue–Sat 12 PM–2 PM | Limited | Yes |
| Dinner service | Tue–Sat from 8 PM | Yes | Yes |
| Closed | Sunday & Monday | Varies | Varies |
| Terrace | Yes (seasonal) | No | Courtyard garden |
| Booking difficulty | Hard | Hard | Very Hard |
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| L'Escarbille | Classic Cuisine | €€€€ | Hard |
| Plénitude | Contemporary French | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between L'Escarbille and alternatives.
The venue data does not confirm bar seating as a dining option at L'Escarbille. The restaurant operates a structured service format across two sittings per day, which points to a table-based setup rather than informal counter dining. If bar access matters to your visit, check the venue's official channels before booking — the €€€€ price range and Michelin-starred format suggest this is a full sit-down experience.
Come prepared for a tightly structured visit: L'Escarbille is closed Sunday and Monday, runs only two sittings on open days, and holds a Michelin star — meaning covers are limited and the pace is deliberate. The room is a converted station café townhouse with a modern feel, not a grand Parisian dining room, so expect something more intimate than the large-format palace restaurants in the city centre. At €€€€ pricing, this is a considered meal, not a casual drop-in.
Book at least three to four weeks ahead, and longer if you're targeting a specific Saturday evening sitting. With only Tuesday through Saturday service, two sittings per day, and a Michelin star driving demand, availability shrinks fast — especially at weekends. This is not a walk-in venue at this price tier.
Lunch is the practical choice if you're making the trip from central Paris — you get the full Michelin-starred kitchen at €€€€ pricing without the additional pressure of a weekend evening booking window. Saturday evening sits slightly earlier at 7:45 PM versus the standard 8 PM start on weekday evenings, which is a minor but useful detail for planning. Neither sitting changes the kitchen's output, so the decision is mostly logistical: lunch leaves the rest of your day free, dinner suits a dedicated occasion.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.