Restaurant in Paris, France
Michelin-recognised, €€€, actually bookable.

Mâche holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025 and scores 4.8 from over 700 Google reviews — a strong combination for a creative restaurant at €€€ pricing in Paris's 10th arrondissement. Booking is easy relative to the starred competition, making it a practical choice for a high-conviction weekend lunch without the weeks-out planning that Paris's top tier demands.
That score, sustained across a substantial volume of diners, is harder to dismiss than a single award or a handful of glowing press mentions. Mâche, on Rue de Chabrol in the 10th arrondissement, holds a Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025 — the guide's signal that cooking here is worth your attention, even before it reaches starred territory. At €€€ pricing in a city where the creative restaurant category trends sharply toward €€€€, this is a venue that rewards the explorer willing to look beyond the 1st and 8th arrondissements.
Mâche is a creative cuisine restaurant on a quietly practical stretch of the 10th, a neighbourhood that has accumulated serious dining options over the last decade without the tourist markup that inflates prices in more central Paris. The address — 61 Rue de Chabrol , sits in a part of the city where the dining crowd skews local and the atmosphere follows. If you are arriving from central Paris, the Canal Saint-Martin area is within easy reach, and the 10th's mix of working-class heritage and contemporary restaurants gives the neighbourhood genuine texture without being a destination in itself.
For context on what creative cuisine means in Paris right now: the category spans everything from French-technique-led tasting menus with international ingredient sourcing to more interpretive, boundary-crossing cooking that doesn't sit neatly inside traditional French categories. Mâche's Michelin Plate recognition , awarded consecutively , suggests the kitchen is executing at a consistent level that the guide considers worthy of mention. What the Plate does not tell you is whether the cooking is revelatory or simply competent. The 4.8 Google score across 726 reviews adds meaningful weight to the former reading.
The editorial angle here is worth addressing directly: if you are planning a Paris weekend with food as a priority, Mâche belongs in serious consideration for a daytime or weekend meal. The 10th arrondissement's dining scene is notably strong on weekend services , the neighbourhood attracts a Parisian crowd rather than a tourist one, which tends to mean shorter waits, more relaxed pacing, and less pressure to turn tables quickly.
For the food-focused traveller, a weekend lunch at a Michelin Plate-recognised creative restaurant at €€€ pricing is a strong value proposition in Paris terms. Weekend lunch at starred venues in the city often runs €80–€150 per head before wine; a creative restaurant in the Plate tier at €€€ sits meaningfully below that threshold while still delivering the kind of cooking that justifies a special trip. If you are building a Paris itinerary around serious meals , and want to include at least one high-conviction creative restaurant without allocating a full splurge budget , Mâche fits that slot better than most comparable options in the arrondissement.
The visual experience of dining in the 10th, particularly on streets like Rue de Chabrol, tends toward the unfussy and architectural , haussmannian street-level frontage, interior spaces that prioritise the plate over the room. That restraint is part of what makes the neighbourhood's restaurant scene feel more honest than the heavily designed dining rooms of the 8th.
Booking at Mâche is rated Easy, which is not a reason to be complacent but is meaningfully better than the weeks-out waits required at starred Paris venues. For weekend lunches especially, booking a week ahead should be sufficient. If you are travelling and want certainty, two weeks out is comfortable. This is one of the practical advantages of a Michelin Plate restaurant over a starred one in the same city: the cooking quality is recognised, but the booking pressure is lower.
For the explorer building a Paris trip around food: Mâche pairs well with a wider 10th and 11th arrondissement itinerary. The neighbourhood is walkable to some of the city's more interesting natural wine bars and independent coffee spots, making a weekend lunch here the anchor for a longer afternoon. See our full Paris restaurants guide for broader context, and our full Paris bars guide for what to do afterwards.
Compared to the top tier of Paris creative dining , Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Le Meurice Alain Ducasse, or Le Gabriel at La Réserve Paris , Mâche operates at a different altitude: less architectural ceremony, lower price point, no hotel context. That is not a criticism. For a food traveller who has already done the full-splurge Paris meal and wants to explore the next tier down, or who is on a trip where not every meal can be a €200-per-head commitment, Mâche is a well-credentialled option with a genuine track record. Blanc and Arpège are worth comparing if your Paris schedule has room for multiple serious meals.
Beyond Paris, if creative cuisine at the Michelin-recognised level is your focus, France has compelling options at different price points and settings: Flocons de Sel in Megève, Mirazur in Menton, and Troisgros in Ouches each represent the format at different intensities. For the same creative category in Spain, Quique Dacosta in Dénia and Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona are reference points. The French classics , Paul Bocuse, Bras in Laguiole, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern , are the longer frame of reference for what serious French creative cooking has meant historically.
For hotels if you are staying in the 10th or central Paris, see our full Paris hotels guide. For wine-focused travel in the wider region, our Paris wineries guide and our Paris experiences guide cover the surrounding context.
Mâche is the right call if you want a Michelin-recognised creative meal in Paris at €€€ rather than €€€€, with a booking situation that won't require weeks of forward planning. The 4.8 rating at volume is the most useful single data point here: it suggests the kitchen delivers consistently, not just on good nights. For weekend lunch in particular, this is one of the stronger value-for-credibility options in the 10th arrondissement. Book it when you want a serious meal without the full logistical and financial commitment of Paris's starred tier.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mâche | Creative | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Plénitude | Contemporary French | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
How Mâche stacks up against the competition.
Book at least 1 to 2 weeks ahead for weekday tables; weekend slots and brunch fill faster given the restaurant's strong reputation in the 10th. With a 4.8 rating across 726 reviews, demand is consistent enough that last-minute walk-ins carry real risk. Plan ahead if this is a priority meal.
Mâche is a reasonable solo choice for creative cuisine at €€€ in Paris. The 10th arrondissement setting is low-pressure and neighbourhood-facing rather than grand-hotel formal, which suits a solo diner more than somewhere like Le Cinq. Check whether a counter or bar seat is available when booking.
Specific menu details are not confirmed in available data, so ordering specifics should be checked directly with the restaurant at 61 Rue de Chabrol. What is documented: Mâche runs a creative cuisine format with two consecutive Michelin Plates, so the kitchen's tasting-oriented dishes are the point of the visit.
For similar creative cuisine at a comparable price tier, Kei is worth considering. If you want to spend more for a starred kitchen, Pierre Gagnaire or Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V move into €€€€ territory but represent a different commitment. Mâche sits in a practical middle ground: Michelin-recognised without the booking difficulty or price ceiling of Paris's top tier.
At €€€ pricing and with two consecutive Michelin Plates, the tasting format at Mâche represents fair value relative to Paris's starred options. If you want creative multi-course dining without the €€€€ price of Alléno Paris or Le Cinq, Mâche is a credible alternative. Confirm current menu structure directly with the restaurant before booking.
Yes, with the right expectations. Mâche is Michelin-recognised and holds a 4.8 from over 700 diners, which makes it a defensible choice for a birthday or anniversary meal. It is not a grand palatial setting in the 1st or 8th, so if the occasion calls for a formal hotel-dining room, Le Cinq or Le Meurice would be a better fit. For a serious but grounded occasion dinner in Paris, Mâche works.
At €€€, Mâche sits below the price ceiling of Paris's Michelin-starred rooms and delivers two consecutive Michelin Plates alongside a 4.8 rating from 726 reviews. That combination makes it one of the stronger value cases in Paris creative dining. If you are comparing it to a starred restaurant in the same city, the gap in credential is real, but so is the gap in price and booking difficulty.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.