Restaurant in Paris, France
Michelin quality at neighbourhood prices. Book it.

Pianovins is a Michelin Plate-recognised modern cuisine address in Paris's 11th arrondissement, earning back-to-back guide recognition in 2024 and 2025 at a €€ price point. The wine-forward concept — built into the name itself — makes it the right call for food and wine explorers who want serious cooking without the cost or ceremony of the city's grand addresses. Book it for a weekday dinner when the room is at its best.
If you're weighing Pianovins against the €€€€ heavy-hitters of the Paris dining scene — think Plénitude or Le Cinq — the calculus is direct: Pianovins delivers Michelin-recognised cooking at a €€ price point in the 11th arrondissement, a neighbourhood that has become one of Paris's most rewarding for serious, unfussy dining. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) confirm this isn't a neighbourhood secret that got lucky , it's a consistent performer. With a Google rating of 4.8 from 370 reviews, the crowd consensus lines up with the guide. Book it if you want quality modern cuisine without the three-hour commitment and three-figure bill that comes with the grand addresses.
Pianovins sits at 46 Rue Trousseau, in a part of the 11th that rewards the kind of explorer who prefers discovering a room through reputation rather than a PR campaign. The address puts it close to Place de la Bastille and the Canal Saint-Martin orbit , areas that have drawn a food-literate crowd for over a decade. The venue's name , a portmanteau of piano and vins , signals the dual character of what you can expect: music and wine folded into a dining room that clearly takes both seriously. Spatial details from the venue are limited in our data, but the intimacy implied by a neighbourhood modern cuisine address at this price tier, combined with a wine-forward identity, suggests a room built for conversation rather than performance. This is not a dining room designed to impress on entry , it's one that earns its place through what happens at the table.
The name Pianovins is the clearest signal of where this restaurant places its emphasis. Wine is not an afterthought or a list assembled to check a box , it is, by the venue's own framing, central to the experience. For the food-and-wine enthusiast, this matters: you are not choosing between a strong kitchen and a strong cellar, as is often the case at this price tier. At €€, a genuinely considered wine program is a significant differentiator. Paris has no shortage of modern cuisine addresses where the food earns the attention and the wine list is an afterthought of bulk-bought Burgundy and Rhône standards. Pianovins positions itself differently. The wine-forward identity, paired with Michelin Plate recognition, suggests a kitchen that thinks about food in relation to what's in the glass , pairing logic rather than parallel menus. For the explorer who travels with a list of bottles to seek out, or who values a sommelier with actual opinions, this is where Pianovins earns its booking over peers in the same price bracket. Compare it to Accents Table Bourse, another Michelin-recognised address in Paris that has built a reputation for an ambitious wine program alongside its modern cuisine , both are worth your time, but Pianovins's neighbourhood positioning in the 11th gives it a less tourist-facing atmosphere.
Pianovins is classified as Modern Cuisine, the designation Michelin applies to kitchens working with contemporary technique and seasonal produce without locking themselves into a single regional tradition. At the €€ tier with a Michelin Plate in consecutive years, the kitchen is producing food at a level that justifies the guide's attention , consistent, technically sound, and worth the journey from elsewhere in the city. Specific dishes are not confirmed in our data, so we won't invent them, but the Michelin Plate designation (awarded for good cooking, one step below a full star) is a reliable baseline: expect a kitchen that is serious about its work without the theatrical plating or orchestrated service beats of the starred tier. For context on what Michelin Plate-level modern cuisine looks like at its peak elsewhere in France, see Flocons de Sel in Megève or the deeply rooted regional cooking at Bras in Laguiole , both illustrate how seriously the guide takes this designation when a kitchen earns it.
For a venue with a wine-forward identity and an intimate modern cuisine format, a weekday dinner gives you the leading version of the experience. Weekend evenings in the 11th bring foot traffic and noise from neighbouring bars and bistros , not a problem inside, but the pre-dinner walk and the general energy of the area shifts. A Tuesday or Wednesday evening, early in the week when the kitchen is fresh and the room is less pressured, is the call. Paris dining in autumn and early spring , September to November, March to May , tends to produce the most interesting seasonal menus at modern cuisine addresses, when producers are at peak output and kitchens have the most to work with. If wine-pairing is part of your plan, booking with enough time to communicate that preference is worth doing.
Yes, clearly. A Michelin Plate in back-to-back years at a €€ price point is one of the better value propositions in Paris. You are paying neighbourhood bistro prices for a kitchen the Michelin Guide has formally recognised twice. If your budget allows for one meal in Paris at this tier, Pianovins competes well against anything in its price range in the city.
The venue's wine-forward identity strongly suggests that a tasting menu format, if offered, is the right way to experience what the kitchen is doing , it gives the wine program room to work alongside the food course by course. That said, we don't have confirmed menu format details in our data. Ask when booking whether a tasting menu or a pairing option is available. If yes, take it.
Yes, particularly for a food- and wine-focused couple or small group. The Michelin recognition and the wine-forward concept give the evening a sense of occasion without requiring the full ceremony of a starred room. It's a better choice for a wine-literate anniversary dinner than a corporate celebration that needs to impress on spectacle alone. For full grand occasion dining, Le Cinq or Plénitude will deliver more theatre, at considerably higher cost.
Seat count is not confirmed in our data. For groups larger than four, contact the venue directly before booking , intimate modern cuisine addresses in Paris often have limited large-table capacity and may require advance arrangement. The 11th arrondissement has good alternatives for larger parties if capacity is an issue, including several strong modern bistros within walking distance. See our full Paris restaurants guide for options.
We don't have confirmed dish data, so we won't invent recommendations. The most reliable approach: trust the kitchen's seasonal choices and, given the wine-forward identity, ask for guidance on pairing. A venue that names itself after wine is signalling that the staff understand what's in the glass and how it connects to the plate , use that.
No dress code is confirmed in our data, but a €€ modern cuisine address in the 11th arrondissement with Michelin recognition typically calls for smart casual. The neighbourhood skews creative and professional rather than formal. Overdressing is unnecessary; arriving in gym wear is a misjudgement. Think of it the same way you would a good neighbourhood restaurant in the Marais.
For similar Michelin-recognised modern cuisine at a comparable price point, Anona and Amâlia are worth looking at. Accents Table Bourse is a reliable comparison for wine-program depth alongside Michelin-level cooking. If you're willing to step up to €€€€, Kei and Pierre Gagnaire represent the higher tier of Paris modern cuisine. For broader context on where Pianovins fits across the full Paris dining map, see our full Paris restaurants guide. If you're planning more of your trip, our Paris hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Pianovins | €€ | — |
| Plénitude | €€€€ | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | — |
How Pianovins stacks up against the competition.
Confirmed seat count isn't in our data. For groups larger than four, contact the venue at 46 Rue Trousseau before booking — modern cuisine addresses at this scale often have limited flexibility for larger parties, and a call ahead avoids arriving to a room that can't seat you comfortably.
Yes, particularly for a food- and wine-focused pair or small group. Back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition gives the evening a grounded sense of occasion without the formality of a €€€€ address. It's a better fit for a relaxed but considered dinner than for a high-ceremony celebration.
For Michelin-recognised modern cuisine at a comparable price point, Anona and Amâlia are worth considering in Paris. If you want to stay in the 11th with a wine-forward angle, ask locally — the neighbourhood has a concentration of serious natural and biodynamic wine bars with food programs that rival dedicated restaurants. Pianovins holds an edge for those who want the Michelin credential alongside the wine focus.
Confirmed dish data isn't available, so no specific recommendations here. Given the wine-led identity the name signals, pairing the kitchen's seasonal choices with guidance from whoever is running the wine program is the approach most likely to reflect what Pianovins does at its best. Ask the room what's driving the menu that week.
No dress code is confirmed in our data. A Michelin Plate modern cuisine address in the 11th arrondissement typically sits in relaxed-but-considered territory — presentable without requiring formal dress. Trainers and very casual wear would likely feel out of place; everything above that should be fine.
Yes. Two consecutive Michelin Plates at a €€ price point makes Pianovins one of the clearer value cases in Paris right now. You're getting Michelin-recognised modern cuisine without the €€€€ cover charge that comes with addresses like Le Cinq or Plénitude. If your budget is €€ and you want credentialed cooking, this is a strong booking.
Given the wine-forward concept the name signals, a tasting menu format — if offered — is likely the right way to experience both the kitchen and the wine program together. We don't have confirmed menu structure in our data, so check the venue's official channels before booking to clarify format options. At a €€ price point, the risk of over-spending is low.
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