Restaurant in Paris, France
Solid Italian in Paris without the circus.

A Michelin Plate Italian (2024 and 2025) in the 7th arrondissement, Penati al Baretto delivers consistent, seasonally-driven cooking at €€€ without the ceremony or price overhead of Paris's starred rooms. At 4.5 across 525 Google reviews, it earns a return visit as reliably as a first. Book a few days out — this is one of the easier Michelin-recognised reservations in the city.
If you've already been to Penati al Baretto once, the question on a return visit is whether it has moved. The short answer: it holds. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) confirm a level of consistency that matters in a city where Italian restaurants either coast on location or overreach on concept. At €€€ in the 7th arrondissement, this is Parisian Italian done with discipline, and it earns a second booking more reliably than most of its peers at the same price point.
Penati al Baretto sits on Boulevard de la Tour-Maubourg in the 7th, a quieter stretch of Paris where the dining crowd skews residential and the pace is unhurried. For the food-focused visitor, that address matters: you are not eating here because of foot traffic or tourist proximity, you are eating here because you chose to. That self-selection tends to produce a better room.
The kitchen's Italian focus is not a broad sweep across the peninsula. Italian cooking in Paris at this tier tends to fall into two camps: the kind that leans heavily on imported ingredients and nostalgia, and the kind that takes seasonal produce seriously as its own argument. Penati al Baretto sits closer to the latter. What that means practically is that what you find on the menu in late spring will differ from what was there in February, and a return visit in autumn makes sense on its own terms.
Right now, with summer moving into early autumn, the kitchen should be working with produce at its most expressive: late tomatoes, wild mushrooms beginning to appear, the first chestnuts in Île-de-France markets. For the explorer who plans visits around what a kitchen can do with the season rather than around a fixed signature dish, this timing is worth noting. If you are booking in the next few weeks, you are arriving at a useful point in the culinary calendar for Italian-influenced cooking. Kitchens that rotate with the season tend to show better in September and October than at almost any other time of year.
The Michelin Plate designation, held in both 2024 and 2025, is a marker of cooking quality rather than ceremony or spectacle. It does not imply the formality of a starred room, which is relevant here: a Plate venue at €€€ in Paris typically offers more comfortable value than a one-star at €€€€, with less of the pressure that can accompany destination dining. For a two or three-course dinner rather than a full tasting progression, the format tends to suit the food.
Google reviewers rate the restaurant at 4.5 across 525 reviews, which is a meaningful sample for a 7th-arrondissement Italian. High volume ratings at this score in Paris usually indicate reliability over time rather than a single sharp moment; the kitchen is not just performing for critics. For the returning visitor, that consistency is the real argument: Penati al Baretto does not appear to have off seasons in the sense of a dramatic dip in execution, which makes the seasonal angle about opportunity rather than risk mitigation.
For context on where Italian cooking of this calibre sits in Paris more broadly, it is worth looking at what the city's Italian restaurants are doing at different price points. Il Carpaccio operates at a higher register with more ceremony. Armani Ristorante brings a fashion-house context that shapes the experience differently. Le George at the Four Seasons George V sits at the leading of the price range with hotel infrastructure behind it. Penati al Baretto is the option for someone who wants Italian cooking taken seriously without the overhead of a luxury hotel or the weight of a tasting menu format.
For Italian excellence benchmarked globally, it is useful to know what the Michelin standard looks like at higher tiers: 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto represent what Italian-influenced cooking can achieve in non-Italian cities when a kitchen is fully committed to the format. Penati al Baretto is operating in a different register, but the comparison is useful for calibrating expectations: this is a well-executed neighbourhood-scale Italian in a serious dining city, not a destination statement.
Other Italian options in Paris worth considering alongside this booking: Adami and Baffo offer different price-point entry points to the city's Italian offer. For French dining at the leading end in the same city, the range runs from Flocons de Sel in Megève to Mirazur in Menton to the Paris institutions: Troisgros, Paul Bocuse, Bras, and Auberge de l'Ill. For broader Paris planning, see our full Paris restaurants guide, our full Paris hotels guide, our full Paris bars guide, our full Paris wineries guide, and our full Paris experiences guide.
| Detail | Penati al Baretto | Il Carpaccio | Armani Ristorante |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Italian | Italian | Italian |
| Price range | €€€ | €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Michelin recognition | Plate (2024, 2025) | 1 Star | Not listed |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Easy–Moderate |
| Setting | Neighbourhood restaurant, 7th arr. | Hotel (Royal Monceau), 8th arr. | Fashion flagship, 1st arr. |
| Leading for | Seasonal Italian, relaxed dinner | Special occasion, full experience | Design-led dining, brand occasion |
Booking at Penati al Baretto is direct by Paris standards. The Michelin Plate recognition brings some demand, but this is not a venue where you need to plan weeks out. A few days' notice should be sufficient on most nights; weekends may need slightly more lead time. Walk-in availability is plausible mid-week. For a specific date, booking ahead removes any uncertainty.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Penati al Baretto | Italian | 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 Penati al Baretto stacks up against the competition.
Bar seating is part of the venue's setup — the name references it directly. It's a reasonable option for solo diners or a shorter meal, particularly if the main dining room is full. Given the €€€ price range, it's worth calling ahead to confirm bar availability before you arrive rather than assuming walk-in access.
Specific dishes aren't documented here, but the kitchen holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, which signals consistent cooking rather than a single standout dish. At €€€, this is a full-meal venue — go with the tasting format or a multi-course approach rather than treating it as a quick pasta stop. Ask the floor team what's current when you arrive.
No specific policy is documented, but at €€€ with Michelin Plate recognition, kitchens at this level typically accommodate common restrictions with advance notice. Flag anything significant when booking, not on the night.
Group capacity isn't listed, but the 7th arrondissement residential format suggests an intimate room — this isn't a venue built for large parties. For groups of six or more, contact them directly to check private dining options before assuming the main room can flex.
This is a neighbourhood-paced Italian in the 7th, not a showpiece restaurant. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) confirm the cooking is reliable, and the €€€ price puts it in serious-dinner territory without hitting the top tier. Come for the food, not the spectacle.
A week to ten days out is a reasonable baseline for most nights. The Michelin Plate recognition draws demand, but this is not the kind of Paris address where you need to plan a month ahead. For Friday or Saturday evenings, book earlier to avoid the main-room squeeze.
No dress code is listed, but at €€€ in the 7th, the crowd trends toward polished casual — think what you'd wear to a considered dinner, not a special-occasion black tie. Overly casual dress would feel out of place given the price point and Michelin recognition.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.