Restaurant in Paris, France
Casual Lebanese with Michelin recognition. Book it.

Qasti Green is a Michelin Plate Lebanese restaurant in Paris's 2nd arrondissement, delivering consistent kitchen quality at a €€ price point that is hard to argue with. Two consecutive Plates and a 4.4 Google rating from over 900 reviews confirm it earns its reputation. Book for a weekday lunch or an easy dinner when you want reliable Lebanese food without the occasion-dining overhead.
If your benchmark for Lebanese in Paris is Liza, Qasti Green is the more casual, more accessible alternative in the 2nd arrondissement. It holds a Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025, which signals consistent kitchen quality without the ceremony or price tag of a starred room. At the €€ price point, it is one of the more direct value propositions for Lebanese food in central Paris. Book it when you want something reliably good and easy on the wallet — not when you are looking to impress with a grand dining occasion.
Qasti Green sits at 41 Rue des Jeuneurs, a quiet street in the 2nd arrondissement that sees more office workers than tourists. The neighbourhood context matters for timing: midweek lunch is when the room fills with the local crowd, which is generally a positive signal for a restaurant of this type. If you have been once and found it comfortable, a return visit on a weekday lunch is the move — the pace tends to be more relaxed than an evening service when demand is higher. For a quieter, more unhurried experience, earlier in the week is the better bet over Friday evening.
The physical setting is compact and functional rather than atmospheric. Do not arrive expecting a Lebanese-themed dining room with elaborate design. The Rue des Jeuneurs address puts it within easy walking distance of the Grands Boulevards, which makes it a practical choice before or after an evening in that part of the city. If you are planning around that kind of itinerary, early dinner , rather than a late sitting , gives you the most flexibility.
Qasti Green's editorial angle in Paris is partly built around its suitability off-premise. Lebanese food, as a category, travels better than most: mezze, grilled proteins, and flatbreads hold their texture and flavour for the 20-30 minutes that a delivery or takeout window typically involves. Compared to, say, a tasting menu restaurant where timing is everything, a well-run Lebanese kitchen loses relatively little in translation when the food leaves the room. The two consecutive Michelin Plates suggest the kitchen is operating at a level where that quality should carry through.
That said, if you are a returning guest deciding between eating in and ordering out, the in-room experience is still the better choice if your schedule allows. Mezze is leading shared at a table where dishes arrive in sequence. For a solo weekday lunch when you are working nearby, takeout from Qasti Green is a practical and well-priced option in a part of Paris where that kind of grab-and-go quality is not always easy to find at this standard.
For Lebanese dining at a higher register , more elaborate presentation, wine pairing, and a room designed for occasion , Liza is the comparison point. Qasti Green is not trying to compete on that level. Its position is value-first, consistency-led, and accessible by design. Two Michelin Plates running back-to-back is meaningful evidence that the kitchen is not coasting.
A 4.4 on Google across 903 reviews is a reliable signal at this price tier. It suggests consistent delivery rather than occasional brilliance , which, for a neighbourhood Lebanese restaurant, is exactly what you want to know before booking.
It is a Lebanese restaurant in the 2nd arrondissement holding consecutive Michelin Plates at a €€ price point. Expect a compact, no-frills room with food that punches above its price tier. Arrive hungry and order widely across the menu , Lebanese cuisine rewards sharing. Weekday lunch is the easiest time to walk in without stress.
Yes, at €€ with two Michelin Plates and a 4.4 Google rating from over 900 reviews, it clears the bar for value easily. You are getting kitchen-quality Lebanese food in central Paris at a price that would be hard to beat elsewhere in the 2nd arrondissement.
Not really, unless your special occasion is informal by nature. The €€ price range and casual format work well for a birthday lunch among friends or a relaxed weekday celebration, but if you need a grand room with theatre and a full wine program, look at Liza instead.
There is no confirmed tasting menu in the venue data. Lebanese cuisine at this level is typically ordered à la carte or as a set mezze spread. The value proposition here is breadth of ordering rather than a curated chef's sequence.
The venue data does not confirm a private room or specific group capacity. Given the compact format typical of a €€ Lebanese restaurant in this arrondissement, groups larger than six should call ahead to confirm seating availability before booking.
Yes. The 2nd arrondissement location makes it a practical solo lunch stop, especially on weekdays. Lebanese mezze is well-suited to solo ordering , you can build a satisfying meal from two or three dishes without needing a full table to share across.
Bar seating is not confirmed in the venue data. The restaurant's format and price tier suggest a table-service setup rather than a bar-dining option. Check directly with the venue if counter seating is a preference.
Liza is the clearest step up for Lebanese in Paris , more polished room, higher price. For French fine dining at a different register entirely, Kei and Arpège are strong options in the city. See our full Paris restaurants guide for a broader shortlist.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Qasti Green | Lebanese | 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 | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Qasti Green and alternatives.
Qasti Green is at €€ pricing on a quiet office-worker street in the 2nd arrondissement, which suggests a mid-sized room rather than a large event space. Lebanese mezze format is naturally group-friendly — sharing plates means fewer ordering headaches. For large parties of 6+, call ahead; no booking infrastructure is listed publicly for this venue.
No tasting menu format is confirmed in the available data for Qasti Green. At €€ pricing, this is a casual Lebanese spot, not an omakase-style experience. Order mezze-style across the menu rather than waiting for a set format — that's how Lebanese food works at this price point.
Yes. The €€ price range and casual format on Rue des Jeuneurs make this a low-pressure solo lunch option. Lebanese mezze can be ordered in single portions without the awkwardness of a tasting-menu-for-one situation. The neighbourhood draws office workers rather than tourists, so solo diners fit the room naturally.
No bar seating is confirmed in the available data. Qasti Green holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025 — that recognition is typically associated with sit-down dining rooms rather than bar-counter formats. Treat it as a table-service restaurant until confirmed otherwise.
Only if your occasion suits a casual, €€ setting. Qasti Green has back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, which confirms food quality, but the format and price point put it in everyday-dining territory rather than anniversary-dinner territory. For a celebratory Lebanese meal with more formality, Liza Paris is the closer comparison.
Liza Paris is the primary comparison: more polished, higher price point, better suited to occasion dining. For casual Lebanese at similar €€ pricing, Miznon in the Marais offers a different format (street-food-adjacent) but comparable accessibility. Qasti Green's Michelin Plate two years running gives it a credibility edge over unnamed neighbourhood spots.
At €€, yes. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) at a casual price point in the 2nd arrondissement is a solid value proposition. You're not paying for a room in a grand hotel or a celebrity chef's name — you're paying for food that cleared a Michelin quality bar without the fine-dining surcharge.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.