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    Restaurant in Knokke, Belgium

    Sel Gris

    450pts

    Sea views, one Michelin star, book ahead.

    Sel Gris, Restaurant in Knokke

    About Sel Gris

    Sel Gris holds a Michelin star (2024) and sits directly on the Zeedijk-Duinbergen dike, giving it an unobstructed North Sea view that no comparable Knokke address can match. Book lunch over dinner: the daylight through those dike-facing windows is part of what you are paying for at €€€€. Chef Frederik Deceuninck's creative French cooking, with its Asian-inflected acidity and vegetable focus, is technically precise and ingredient-led throughout.

    Should You Book Sel Gris?

    If you are weighing Sel Gris against Cuines 33, Knokke's other €€€€ creative kitchen, the deciding factor is the room itself. Sel Gris sits directly on the Zeedijk-Duinbergen dike at number 314, which means the windows frame a direct, unobstructed view of the North Sea and the beach. Cuines 33 delivers comparable technical ambition but cannot offer that spatial dividend. If the combination of Michelin-starred cooking and a North Sea panorama is what you are after, Sel Gris earns the booking. If you are indifferent to the view, the choice is genuinely close.

    The Space

    The interior leans into grey in a deliberate way: twenty shades of it, according to the kitchen's own description, composed through designer fixtures and considered finishings. The result is a room that reads as calm rather than cold, with the restrained palette doing the useful work of pushing your attention toward the windows. Seating arrangements place guests facing that dike-level view of the beach, so the North Sea becomes a constant visual presence throughout the meal. This is not incidental atmosphere; for Frederik Deceuninck, the sea and its coastline are a direct source of creative reference, and you feel that connection between the room and the plate as you eat. Spatially, Sel Gris sits in a register closer to a considered coastal dining room than to the white-tablecloth formality you might expect from a Michelin-starred address elsewhere in Belgium. That is a feature, not a compromise.

    The Cooking

    Deceuninck holds a Michelin star as of 2024, and the food justifies it through precision and restraint rather than theatrical complexity. The approach is rooted in French technique but pulls in Asian influences and an emphasis on acidity and vegetables that gives the menu a lighter register than classic Belgian fine dining. Dishes are often served across multiple plates with deliberate detail at each stage: a salmon and asparagus pairing described in Michelin's own notes as subtle and elegant; pheasant served with a champagne and foie gras sauce as a richer counterpoint. Vegetables, acidic flavour profiles, and Asian-inflected combinations recur across the menu and represent where the kitchen's creative identity is most clearly expressed. The ingredient is the point here, not the technique deployed around it. For the food-focused traveller comparing Sel Gris against other Belgian coastal cooking, a useful reference is Willem Hiele in Oudenburg, which works similar North Sea coastal terroir but with a rawer, more naturalist approach. Sel Gris is the more polished and accessible of the two.

    Lunch vs. Dinner: Which Is Worth More?

    This is the question that most affects value at a €€€€ venue on the Belgian coast. Sel Gris is open for both lunch and dinner on Monday, Tuesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, with lunch service running 12:00 to 1:30 pm and dinner from 7:00 to 8:30 pm. Wednesday and Thursday are closed entirely, so plan accordingly.

    Lunch at Sel Gris has a practical case that dinner cannot match: the light coming off the North Sea through those dike-facing windows is at its most useful in the middle of the day. The spatial experience, which is a core part of what you are paying for, delivers more when the beach and sea are visible rather than dark. If the room is part of the appeal, and it should be, lunch is the better call. Dinner gains nothing on the food side — the kitchen is the same kitchen, the star is the same star — but it concedes the view. For a first visit, book lunch. For a return visit where you know the room and want the evening pace, dinner makes sense.

    Booking difficulty is rated hard. With a four-day operating week and tight service windows of ninety minutes for both lunch and dinner, covers are limited. Book as far ahead as the reservation system allows, particularly for weekend lunch, which is the slot most likely to be taken first. Knokke operates on a seasonal curve with Belgian holidaymakers peaking in summer, so July and August slots at this price point will require the most lead time. For context on the broader Knokke dining scene and alternative venues at lower booking pressure, see our full Knokke restaurants guide.

    How It Fits the Belgian Fine Dining Map

    Within Belgium, Sel Gris sits in a different register from the flagship multi-star addresses. Hof van Cleve in Kruishoutem and Boury in Roeselare both carry greater Michelin weight and operate with a more formal service architecture. Zilte in Antwerp offers a comparable coastal city fine-dining experience with a more urban framing. Sel Gris is the right choice if you want a one-star experience with a specific sense of place: a dike-side room, North Sea light, and a kitchen that translates that geography into the cooking. It is not the place to come for the deepest or most technically complex meal in Belgium. It is the place to come for a Michelin-starred lunch where the room earns its share of the experience alongside the plate.

    For broader coastal and creative fine dining comparisons, Pierre Gagnaire in Paris and AM par Alexandre Mazzia in Marseille represent the French creative tradition Deceuninck draws from, though at a different scale and price point. Closer to home, Bozar Restaurant in Brussels is worth knowing as a benchmark for Belgian creative cooking in a landmark setting.

    Practical Details

    Sel Gris is at Zeedijk-Duinbergen 314, 8301 Knokke-Heist. Open Monday, Tuesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday for lunch (12:00–1:30 pm) and dinner (7:00–8:30 pm). Closed Wednesday and Thursday. Price range: €€€€. Michelin 1 Star (2024). Google rating: 4.7 from 603 reviews. Booking difficulty: hard. Chef: Frederik Deceuninck.

    For more on what to do around a Sel Gris booking: our Knokke hotels guide, Knokke bars, and Knokke experiences.

    More in Knokke

    Compare Sel Gris

    Price vs. Value: Sel Gris
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Sel Gris€€€€Hard
    Boo Raan€€Unknown
    Cuines 33€€€€Unknown
    Esmeralda€€€Unknown
    Il Trionfo€€€Unknown
    La Rigue€€€€Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Sel Gris?

    The interior runs to designer fixtures and deliberate grey-on-grey refinement, which signals a dress code in the smart-to-formal range. This is a €€€€ Michelin-starred address on the Zeedijk, not a casual seaside bistro. Think evening wear for dinner; a step up from resort-casual for lunch.

    How far ahead should I book Sel Gris?

    Book at least two to three weeks out, more for weekend dinner. Sel Gris opens only five days a week — Wednesday and Thursday are closed — which compresses demand into a narrow window. Lunch slots on quieter Fridays are your best shot at shorter lead times.

    Can I eat at the bar at Sel Gris?

    The venue database does not document a bar counter or walk-in bar dining option. At a Michelin-starred restaurant with tight lunch sittings (12:00–1:30 pm) and dinner sittings (7:00–8:30 pm), seating is typically allocated by reservation. Assume you need to book a table.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Sel Gris?

    The Michelin star (2024) is earned through precision and restraint rather than volume, so the value case rests on whether you respond to that register. Chef Deceuninck's cooking draws on vegetables, acidic flavours, and Asian influences in a way that rewards attention across multiple courses. At €€€€, it sits at the upper end of Belgian coastal dining, but it is priced in line with the credential.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Sel Gris?

    Lunch has a practical edge: the North Sea view through the Zeedijk windows reads better in daylight, and the same kitchen is at work. If value per euro is the priority, lunch at a Michelin-starred restaurant almost always delivers the better ratio. Dinner suits those who want the full occasion without the time pressure of a 1:30 pm close.

    Is Sel Gris good for solo dining?

    Nothing in the venue record rules it out, but a Michelin-starred fine dining room at €€€€ in a Belgian coastal resort skews toward couples and small groups. Solo diners who are comfortable at that price point and in that setting will be fine; those hoping for counter seating or bar interaction should call ahead to confirm what the room actually offers.

    What should I order at Sel Gris?

    The Michelin inspectors single out Deceuninck's vegetable cooking, acidic flavour combinations, and Asian-inflected dishes as the most distinctive expressions of his style. Dishes in the salmon and asparagus register, and preparations drawing on champagne and foie gras, appear in the venue's documented output. Beyond that, specific current menu items are not available here — check directly with the restaurant for what is running.

    Hours

    Monday
    12–1:30 pm, 7–8:30 pm
    Tuesday
    12–1:30 pm, 7–8:30 pm
    Wednesday
    Closed
    Thursday
    Closed
    Friday
    12–1:30 pm, 7–8:30 pm
    Saturday
    12–1:30 pm, 7–8:30 pm
    Sunday
    12–1:30 pm, 7–8:30 pm

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