Restaurant in Paris, France
Michelin value off the tourist circuit.

Ploc holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025 and scores 4.7 on Google across nearly 150 reviews — consistent signals for a €€ modern cuisine address in Paris's residential 20th arrondissement. It's the right call if you want Michelin-recognised cooking without the formality or the bill of a starred room, and booking is straightforward.
Yes — if you want a Michelin-recognised modern cuisine dinner at €€ prices in a neighbourhood most visitors skip entirely, Ploc is one of the more practical choices in east Paris. It holds a Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025, which signals consistent kitchen quality without the three-figure-per-head commitment of the city's starred rooms. For a food-focused traveller who wants to eat well without the formality of the 1st or 8th arrondissements, this address on Rue Saint-Blaise is worth the detour.
Rue Saint-Blaise sits in the 20th arrondissement, a corner of Paris that doesn't appear on most dining itineraries. That's part of the case for Ploc: the room operates at a remove from the tourist circuit, which tends to mean a more local crowd, less theatre, and a kitchen focused on the plate rather than the spectacle. The ambient feel here reads as relaxed rather than hushed — this is not the kind of place where conversation drops to a murmur because the room demands it. For a solo diner or a pair who want to eat and talk without competing with a DJ set or a hundred covers of ambient noise, the energy is well-pitched.
The cuisine is listed as modern, and the Michelin Plate recognition across two consecutive years gives you a reasonable read on the kitchen's reliability. A Plate designation means Michelin's inspectors consider the cooking good , it is a positive signal, not a consolation prize , but it sits below Bib Gourmand and star level, so calibrate accordingly. At the €€ price point, you are not paying for an elaborate tasting menu or a wine list curated to match a three-star ambition. What you are paying for is honest, technically competent cooking at a price that lets you eat twice in Paris for what one starred lunch would cost.
The Google rating sits at 4.7 from 147 reviews, which is a meaningful signal at this review volume. A 4.7 average across nearly 150 responses is harder to sustain than a 4.9 from 30, and it puts Ploc comfortably above the median for neighbourhood restaurants in Paris. For an explorer looking for places that hold up to scrutiny rather than just generating Instagram traffic, that consistency matters.
Address , 17 Rue Saint-Blaise , puts you in a part of the 20th that has its own distinct character. The street itself is one of the older pedestrian lanes in the arrondissement, lined with small storefronts and a residential cadence that feels nothing like the boulevards of central Paris. If you're building an evening around the area, the neighbourhood rewards a walk before dinner. The 20th sits far enough from the Seine that you won't be competing for pavement space with tour groups, and the rhythm of the quartier after dark is quieter than Oberkampf or Belleville, two stops away in spirit if not in distance.
On the question of late-night utility: Ploc is a dinner venue rather than a late-night destination in the strict sense. Paris's modern neighbourhood restaurants in this tier typically run service until the kitchen closes, with no late bar or extended hours operation. If your evening plan requires eating after 10 PM, confirm availability before you commit , hours are not published in the available data. What Ploc does offer is a reliable option for an unhurried dinner in a city where the better rooms fill fast and the tourist-adjacent addresses can feel relentless. For a traveller who wants to wind down rather than ramp up, the 20th arrondissement pace suits that intention.
For wider context on where Ploc sits in France's modern cuisine tier, the country's reference points are well-documented: Mirazur in Menton, Bras in Laguiole, and Flocons de Sel in Megève represent the high end of the regional spectrum. In Paris itself, the gap between a Michelin Plate room and a three-star address like Paul Bocuse's Auberge du Pont de Collonges or Troisgros in Ouches is significant in price and formality. Ploc doesn't compete with those rooms , it occupies a different and more accessible register, one that suits a different kind of evening entirely. For Paris neighbourhood dining at a similar level of recognition, Accents Table Bourse and Anona are worth comparing, as are Amâlia and Auberge de Montfleury if you're building a shortlist for the trip. See our full Paris restaurants guide for the broader picture, and our Paris hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide if you're planning the full visit.
| Detail | Ploc | Accents Table Bourse | Anona |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price tier | €€ | €€€ | €€€ |
| Michelin recognition | Plate (2024, 2025) | Check Pearl page | Check Pearl page |
| Arrondissement | 20th | 2nd | 17th |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Moderate |
| Google rating | 4.7 (147 reviews) | , | , |
| Neighbourhood feel | Local, residential | Central, commercial | Residential |
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ploc | €€ | Easy | — |
| Plénitude | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Paris for this tier.
Book at least 1–2 weeks ahead for weekend dinners. Ploc holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, which draws attention even in the low-profile 20th arrondissement, so don't assume a quiet neighbourhood means easy walk-in availability. Midweek slots are generally more accessible. Without a website or phone number publicly listed, check third-party reservation platforms to confirm availability.
Ploc sits on Rue Saint-Blaise in the 20th arrondissement — a residential corner of Paris that most visitors never reach. That distance from the tourist circuit is a feature, not a flaw: you get Michelin Plate-recognised modern cuisine at €€ pricing, which is harder to find centrally. Come expecting a neighbourhood restaurant with serious cooking, not a grand-room production.
No group-specific capacity information is available in Ploc's public record. For parties larger than four, check the venue's official channels before assuming the format works — smaller Parisian neighbourhood restaurants at this price point often have limited space. A table for two or four is the safer assumption.
No specific menu details are available to confirm here. What the Michelin Plate recognition for both 2024 and 2025 does signal is consistent kitchen quality within a modern cuisine format at €€ prices. Check current menus directly with the restaurant or via reservation platforms before visiting.
No bar or counter seating details are documented for Ploc. Given its €€ neighbourhood restaurant format in the 20th arrondissement, a dedicated bar dining option is not a reliable assumption — confirm directly when booking.
Ploc is a reasonable solo option if you're comfortable in a neighbourhood restaurant setting. The €€ price range keeps the financial commitment low, and Michelin Plate recognition means the kitchen is consistent — you're not gambling on an unknown. Whether counter or solo-table seating is available isn't documented, so flag it when reserving.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.