Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Paris, France

    Qui Plume la Lune

    650Pearl Points

    Starred cooking without grand-hotel formality.

    Qui Plume la Lune, Restaurant in Paris

    About Qui Plume la Lune

    Qui Plume la Lune holds a Michelin star for the second consecutive year (2024 and 2025) under Chef Mike Schiller, making it one of the most reliable starred tables in Paris's 11th arrondissement. At €€€€, it delivers Modern Cuisine with technical precision in a neighbourhood setting — no grand-room theatre, just serious cooking. Book four to six weeks ahead; this one fills fast.

    Who Should Book Qui Plume la Lune — and When

    If you are planning a serious dinner in Paris's 11th arrondissement and want Michelin-level cooking without the grand hotel formality of the 8th, Qui Plume la Lune is the right call. Chef Mike Schiller's restaurant holds a Michelin star for the second consecutive year (2024 and 2025), which tells you this is not a flash-in-the-pan recognition. It is the kind of table that suits a food-focused traveller who wants technical precision and a neighbourhood setting — not ceremony. Couples marking an anniversary, solo diners who take restaurants seriously, small groups who want to eat well without a dress rehearsal will all find this fits. If you are looking for a grand room and a celeb-chef name to drop, look elsewhere. If you want to eat well in the 11th, book here.

    The Kitchen and What It Does Well

    Qui Plume la Lune sits at 50 Rue Amelot, in the part of Paris that has quietly accumulated some of the city's most interesting cooking over the past decade. The restaurant's cuisine is classified as Modern Cuisine, which in practice means a kitchen that draws on classical French technique and applies it with contemporary restraint rather than showmanship. Under Chef Schiller, the approach appears to prioritise clarity on the plate: dishes that read visually clean, where the composition justifies itself rather than performing complexity for its own sake.

    Retaining a Michelin star across two consecutive guide cycles is a meaningful signal. The Michelin inspectors return, eat again, decide whether the standard holds. At Qui Plume la Lune it has. For a restaurant at the €€€€ price point in a city as competitive as Paris, where you are surrounded by multi-starred institutions and well-funded bistros with serious ambitions, holding a star in the 11th rather than the 1st or 8th says something about the kitchen's consistency independent of setting or reputation capital.

    The editorial angle here is cuisine mastery: what does this kitchen do technically better than its peers at the same level? Without fabricating dish descriptions, the honest answer based on what the record shows is that Schiller's restaurant earns its star in a competitive arrondissement by maintaining standards that would be notable anywhere in the city. That is harder than it sounds. The 11th has a culture of good cooking and demanding regulars, this is not a tourist-facing address, which means the restaurant is earning its reputation with people who eat out frequently and have high reference points. For the food-focused traveller, that context matters.

    If you are building a Paris itinerary around serious eating, Qui Plume la Lune belongs in the same conversation as other starred addresses around France that have made their mark outside the traditional luxury postcodes. Venues like Flocons de Sel in Megève, Mirazur in Menton, and Bras in Laguiole have all demonstrated that French fine dining is not geographically confined to Paris's golden triangle, within Paris, Qui Plume la Lune makes the same argument for the 11th. Internationally, the modern cuisine category runs deep: Frantzén in Stockholm and Maison Lameloise in Chagny are useful reference points for understanding what sustained Michelin recognition in this register looks like across borders.

    Booking and Practical Details

    Booking difficulty at Qui Plume la Lune is rated hard. The restaurant does not operate with the global name recognition of a three-star palace, but it also does not have the seat volume to absorb demand easily. Book as far in advance as possible, four to six weeks ahead is a sensible minimum for weekend evenings, mid-week tables may open closer in. If you are visiting Paris for a fixed set of dates, secure this reservation before you book flights. Turning up without a reservation is not a realistic option.

    The address is 50 Rue Amelot, 75011 Paris. The 11th is well-connected by Metro (Saint-Sébastien-Froissart on line 8 or Richard-Lenoir on line 5 are both within walking distance), and the neighbourhood is animated in the evenings, which means arriving early or staying late for a drink nearby is direct. For wider 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.

    Other Paris Restaurants Worth Knowing

    If Qui Plume la Lune is fully booked or you want to build out a longer Paris dining list, the city's starred and near-starred scene gives you strong options across different neighbourhoods and price registers. In the modern and contemporary French category, Accents Table Bourse and Anona are worth investigating. For something with a different register entirely, 114, Faubourg and Amâlia broaden the picture. Auberge de Montfleury is another option if your itinerary extends to the wider region. France's deep bench of serious restaurants also includes Troisgros in Ouches, Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or, and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern for those whose trip extends beyond Paris.

    The Verdict

    Qui Plume la Lune earns a booking recommendation for any food-focused traveller who wants starred cooking in Paris without the theatre of the grand dining rooms. Book well ahead, go with the tasting menu if it is available, treat this as a serious dinner rather than a casual night out. It delivers at that level.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Qui Plume la Lune?

    Book at least four to six weeks in advance. Qui Plume la Lune holds a Michelin star and a loyal local following in the 11th arrondissement, which makes availability tight — especially on weekends. If your dates are fixed, book the moment your trip is confirmed.

    Is Qui Plume la Lune good for a special occasion?

    Yes, provided you want a genuinely food-focused evening rather than grand-hotel ceremony. The Michelin star (held in both 2024 and 2025) gives the meal credibility, the 11th arrondissement setting keeps it grounded. If your group expects chandeliers and a sommelier-led performance, somewhere like Le Cinq will suit better.

    Does Qui Plume la Lune handle dietary restrictions?

    No specific dietary policy is documented. At Michelin-starred restaurants operating tasting menus, most kitchens accommodate restrictions when notified at booking — contact them directly in advance to confirm. Do not assume flexibility on the night.

    Can I eat at the bar at Qui Plume la Lune?

    No bar-seating policy is confirmed in available data. At this price point (€€€€) and format, walk-in counter dining is uncommon at Paris starred restaurants. check the venue's official channels to ask about any shorter or counter options before assuming they exist.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Qui Plume la Lune?

    If modern cuisine tasting menus are your format, yes. Qui Plume la Lune has retained its Michelin star across 2024 and 2025 under chef Mike Schiller, which means the kitchen is consistent. At €€€€, you are paying Paris starred-restaurant prices, but in the 11th rather than the 8th — that positioning tends to attract serious cooking without the premium that grand-address venues charge for postcode.

    Is Qui Plume la Lune worth the price?

    For food-focused diners, yes. Two consecutive Michelin stars (2024, 2025) confirm the kitchen is not coasting, the 11th arrondissement address keeps the atmosphere less performative than comparable rooms in the 8th or 16th. At €€€€, you are paying starred-Paris prices — but you are not also paying for marble lobbies.

    What are alternatives to Qui Plume la Lune in Paris?

    Kei is the closest in spirit — starred, chef-driven, less formal than the palace restaurants. Pierre Gagnaire suits diners who want three-star ambition with a strong creative signature. Plénitude, Alléno Paris, Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V all operate at a higher price point with more ceremony; book those if occasion theatre matters as much as the food.

    Location

    50 Rue Amelot, 75011 Paris, France

    Compare Qui Plume la Lune

    Booking Options Near Qui Plume la Lune
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Qui Plume la LuneModern Cuisine€€€€Hard
    PlénitudeContemporary French€€€€Unknown
    Pierre GagnaireFrench, Creative€€€€Unknown
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenCreative€€€€Unknown
    KeiContemporary French, Modern Cuisine€€€€Unknown
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VFrench, Modern Cuisine€€€€Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    At the €€€€ tier in Paris, Qui Plume la Lune occupies a specific position: a one-star restaurant with two consecutive years of Michelin recognition, operating in the 11th rather than the traditional luxury dining postcodes. If ceremony and setting are as important to you as the cooking, Plénitude and Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V both offer the grand-room experience with hotel-grade service depth, but you will pay more and deal with a higher-profile booking competition. Qui Plume la Lune is the call if you want the food to carry the evening without the production surrounding it.

    Pierre Gagnaire and Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen operate at a higher star count and with stronger international name recognition, these are for diners who want maximum prestige and are prepared to spend accordingly. Kei is a useful alternative if you want a French-Japanese approach at a similar price point with a different creative sensibility. For diners who are primarily motivated by value relative to quality, Qui Plume la Lune makes a strong case: two Michelin stars in two years, a neighbourhood address that keeps the atmosphere grounded rather than performative.

    On booking difficulty, Qui Plume la Lune is hard to get into, but it is not in the same stratosphere as Alléno or the palace dining rooms, where lead times can run to months. Four to six weeks of advance planning should be sufficient for most dates. If your Paris trip is short-notice, Kei or Accents Table Bourse may be easier to access. The bottom line: for a food-focused diner who wants starred Modern Cuisine in a neighbourhood setting without paying palace prices or navigating palace booking systems, Qui Plume la Lune is the strongest single-star option to prioritise in the 11th.

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Qui Plume la Lune on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.