Restaurant in Paris, France
Paris seafood done seriously. Book ahead.

Le Duc is Paris's most consistent classical French seafood address, ranked #54 in OAD's Classical in Europe list for 2025 and holding a Michelin Plate. Under chef Pascal Hélard, the kitchen prioritises technique over trend in a quiet, residential 14th-arrondissement room. Book for a long lunch if you want serious fish cookery without the ceremony of a starred tasting-menu format.
Le Duc is one of the few places in Paris where classical French seafood is treated as a serious, technically demanding tradition rather than a backdrop for modernist experimentation. Ranked #54 in Opinionated About Dining's Classical in Europe list for 2025 (up from #77 in 2023), it has been moving in the right direction for three consecutive years. If pristine fish cookery in a focused, old-school room is what you're after, this is a strong booking. If you want creative tasting menus or a hotel dining experience, look elsewhere.
Le Duc operates on a register that fewer Paris restaurants are willing to commit to: classical French seafood, executed with discipline, in a setting that hasn't chased trends. That consistency is exactly why OAD's Classical in Europe ranking has rewarded it, and why regulars return. Under chef Pascal Hélard, the kitchen holds to technique-first principles, the kind that prioritise the integrity of the fish over theatrical presentation. For a food-focused traveller who has already ticked the modernist tasting-menu circuit, Le Duc offers a different kind of satisfaction.
The room itself sets a clear tone from the moment you sit down. The atmosphere at Le Duc is composed and unhurried, closer to a serious neighbourhood institution than a destination-dining stage set. There is no ambient noise engineered to signal energy, no DJ-adjacent hum. Conversation is audible, which matters at a table where the food rewards discussion. This is the kind of room where lunch stretches naturally, where the pace is determined by the kitchen and the guests rather than the turn. If you are booking for a working lunch or a social dinner where the room's energy is part of the experience, Le Duc is not the right fit. If you want to eat well and talk without raising your voice, it is.
The OAD Classical ranking is a useful guide here: the list specifically tracks restaurants that preserve and advance classical European cooking traditions rather than reinterpret them beyond recognition. Le Duc's climb from #77 in 2023 to #54 in 2025 signals a kitchen that is tightening, not resting. The Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 confirms baseline quality without implying the kind of ceremony that comes with starred rooms. You are paying €€€€ pricing, but the experience is less formal than that bracket often implies.
Paris has a handful of serious seafood-focused addresses. Divellec is the closest peer in terms of classical seafood focus, and the comparison is worth making before you book. Le Petit Nice in Marseille operates in the same tradition but at a higher technical register and with a Mediterranean identity that is distinct from Le Duc's Paris character. Internationally, anyone who has eaten at Le Bernardin in New York City will recognise the philosophical alignment, though Le Bernardin operates at a different scale and formality level. Le Duc is smaller, more personal, and arguably more French in the specific sense that it does not perform for tourists.
The address on Boulevard Raspail in the 14th arrondissement places Le Duc in a residential quarter of Paris rather than in the high-traffic dining corridors of the 8th or 1st. That location is part of the character. The clientele skews local and repeat, which is a reasonable signal that the kitchen is cooking for people who know what good fish should taste like rather than for visitors ticking a list. For an explorer-type diner, this is a feature rather than a drawback.
Le Duc opens six days a week for both lunch and dinner, closing on Sundays. Lunch service runs 12:00 to 14:00, dinner from 19:30 to 22:30. These are tight service windows, particularly at lunch, so punctuality matters. For comparisons of what else Paris's top-tier scene offers at this price point, see Arpège for produce-led creativity, L'Ambroisie for classical French at its most austere and formal, or the full Paris restaurants guide for broader context. If your trip extends beyond Paris, France's classical tradition runs deep: Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Troisgros in Ouches, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or all sit within the same tradition. For the contemporary end, Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, and Bras in Laguiole represent a different but equally considered approach to French regional cooking.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Le Duc | French Seafood, Seafood | €€€€ | Easy |
| 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 |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Book at least two to three weeks out for dinner, a little less for weekday lunch. Le Duc is open six days a week (closed Sunday) with a tight service window — lunch runs 12:00–14:00 and dinner 19:30–22:30 — so there is no casual drop-in window. At €€€€ pricing with consistent OAD Classical Europe recognition (ranked #54 in 2025), demand is steady and last-minute availability is unreliable.
Yes, Le Duc is a reasonable solo choice. Classical French seafood restaurants in Paris tend to run counter or tightly spaced table formats that suit solo guests, and the focused, technically serious menu rewards attentive eating rather than group-table theatre. Mention you are dining alone when booking to request the most comfortable placement.
Lunch is the stronger practical case. The kitchen runs the same classical seafood format at both services, but lunch at a €€€€ Paris restaurant almost always means better value through a set menu option and a quieter room. Dinner suits those who want a longer evening without a time constraint; the dinner service closes at 22:30 so there is no rush pressure.
Small groups of two to four are fine. Larger parties should call ahead, as classical Paris seafood restaurants at this price point typically have limited capacity and the booking structure may not flex easily for six or more covers. Le Duc is better suited to an intimate dinner than a celebratory group booking — for larger parties, L'Ambroisie or Le Cinq offer more formal private dining infrastructure.
The database does not include the current menu, so specific dish recommendations are not available here. What is clear from the venue's positioning is that the kitchen focuses on classical French seafood technique under chef Pascal Hélard — that means fish and shellfish prepared with discipline rather than contemporary reinterpretation. Ask the front-of-house for the day's market fish when you arrive; at this price point and format, that is always the anchor of the meal.
Le Duc is a commitment to a specific register: classical French seafood, no concessions to trend. It holds a Michelin Plate and has appeared in the OAD Classical Europe rankings three consecutive years, reaching #54 in 2025. The address is 243 Boulevard Raspail in the 14th arrondissement — not a tourist-circuit location, which is part of the point. Come with appetite for technique over spectacle; if you want contemporary French seafood with more modernist touches, Kei or Pierre Gagnaire serve different formats.
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