Restaurant in Leiden, Netherlands
The Bishop
210Pearl PointsLeiden's most serious kitchen, minus the fuss.

About The Bishop
The Bishop holds Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 and a 4.7 rating across 540 reviews, making it the most credentialled table in Leiden at the €€€ price point. Book for a special occasion or any night when a capable world-cuisine kitchen matters. Counter seating, if available, is the seat to request.
The Verdict: A Michelin-Recognised Table Worth Returning To
If you visited The Bishop once and left satisfied, a second visit is worth planning. The Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 signals consistent kitchen quality, and a 4.7 rating across 540 Google reviews points to a dining room that holds its standard rather than coasting on a good opening run. For Leiden, that kind of sustained performance at the €€€ price point is not common. Book it for a special occasion, a long dinner with someone who takes food seriously, or any night when you want more than a reliable neighbourhood bistro.
The Space: Counter Seating and the Case for It
The Bishop sits on Middelweg 7-9 in Leiden, and the address matters less than the format once you are inside. The physical space is set up to reward guests who engage with the experience rather than those looking to rush through three courses. For the food-oriented guest, the counter or bar seating, where available, is the seat to request. In a €€€ world-cuisine kitchen, proximity to the pass gives you sight lines into preparation, a sharper read on pacing, and the kind of informal exchange with the kitchen team that a tucked-away table does not offer. Counter dining at this level is not just about novelty; it reframes the meal as a process you are watching rather than a product delivered to you. If The Bishop operates a counter format, ask for it when you book.
The spatial character of a room in this price tier tends toward intention: the layout, the distance between tables, the proportion of intimate versus communal seating. These details are not decorative. For a two-person dinner, intimacy is the primary spatial ask. For a group, you need to know whether the room can absorb four or six without breaking the atmosphere. Both questions are worth settling before you arrive.
What the Michelin Plate Tells You
Two consecutive Michelin Plates, 2024 and 2025, is the guide's way of saying the kitchen is cooking at a level that merits attention, without yet awarding a star. In practical terms, that positions The Bishop above the noise of casual dining and below the formal demands of a starred room. You get real culinary intent without the ceremonial weight that can make a starred dinner feel like a performance rather than a meal. For a food-oriented traveller or a Leiden resident looking for the leading the city has without flying to Amsterdam, that gap between Plate and Star is actually useful territory. Compared to starred Dutch restaurants like Ciel Bleu in Amsterdam or De Librije in Zwolle, The Bishop asks less of you in terms of occasion formality and booking lead time, while still delivering food that the Michelin inspectors found worth noting two years running.
World cuisine as a category means the kitchen is not locked into a single national tradition. At the €€€ level, that should translate to technical range and ingredient ambition rather than generic fusion. Two Michelin Plates across consecutive years suggest the kitchen is executing that ambition with consistency.
Booking and Timing
At a Michelin Plate restaurant with a 4.7 average across more than 500 reviews, booking ahead is advisable, but The Bishop at this tier is generally accessible without the weeks-out sprint required by starred rooms. For weekday dinners, a few days' notice is typically enough. Weekends and public holiday periods around Leiden's university calendar fill faster. If you are planning around a birthday, anniversary, or any occasion that requires a specific date, book at least a week out to be safe.
The €€€ price tier means this is a considered spend, not a casual drop-in. Plan your evening accordingly: allow time before and after, particularly if you want to explore Leiden's bar scene. See our full Leiden bars guide for options before or after dinner.
Who Should Book
The Bishop is leading matched to guests who want Leiden's most serious food offering without the formality of a full tasting-menu destination. It suits couples marking an occasion, food-oriented travellers passing through the Netherlands who want more than Amsterdam's obvious circuit, and local guests who have already worked through Leiden's mid-range options. If you are comparing the Dutch world-cuisine tier more broadly, Wils in Amsterdam and Scherp in Middelburg operate in the same cuisine category and price range and are worth considering if your itinerary is flexible.
If budget is the primary constraint, Leiden has capable options at the €€ level. But if the occasion warrants spending properly and you want a kitchen with verified credentials, The Bishop is the clearest answer in the city right now.
The Leiden Context
Leiden is a university city with a dining scene that punches higher than its size suggests. The Bishop sits at the leading of that local range. For a broader picture of what the city offers across restaurants, hotels, and experiences, see our full Leiden restaurants guide, Leiden hotels guide, and Leiden experiences guide. If you are building a longer Dutch itinerary, Aan de Poel in Amstelveen, Inter Scaldes in Kruiningen, De Nieuwe Winkel in Nijmegen, and De Lindenhof in Giethoorn offer comparable or higher-tier experiences across the country.
Quick reference: Michelin Plate 2024 & 2025 · 4.7/5 (540 reviews) · €€€ · World Cuisine · Middelweg 7-9, Leiden · Booking: advisable, 1–7 days ahead for most dates.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at The Bishop?
Counter or bar seating at The Bishop is part of the format rather than an afterthought, and it is worth requesting if available. The room is set up to reward guests who want proximity to the kitchen action. Book ahead regardless — with a 4.7 average across more than 500 reviews and two consecutive Michelin Plates, walk-in availability is not reliable.
Does The Bishop handle dietary restrictions?
check the venue's official channels before your visit to flag dietary requirements — the kitchen operates at Michelin Plate level, which typically means the team can work around restrictions when given advance notice. The €€€ price range and world cuisine format suggest a menu built around flexibility rather than rigid set pieces, but confirm specifics when booking.
Is the tasting menu worth it at The Bishop?
At €€€ pricing with two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025), the tasting format at The Bishop represents Leiden's most serious kitchen output and is the right choice if you want to experience the full range of what the chef is doing. If you prefer ordering freely rather than committing to a set progression, check whether à la carte options are available when you book.
Can The Bishop accommodate groups?
Groups work best when booked well in advance — the restaurant's Michelin Plate recognition and consistently high review volume mean space fills on its own. Parties of four or more should check the venue's official channels to confirm seating configuration and whether a private or semi-private arrangement is possible at Middelweg 7-9.
Is The Bishop worth the price?
At €€€ in a university city like Leiden, The Bishop sits at the top of the local range and delivers Michelin Plate-level cooking across two consecutive years — that is a meaningful benchmark for consistency. Compared to travelling to Amsterdam for a comparable experience, the value case is clear. It is worth it for guests who want the most serious food on offer in Leiden without the price floor of a full Michelin-starred destination.
Is The Bishop good for a special occasion?
Yes — two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a 4.7 rating across more than 500 reviews make it the most credentialled option for a celebratory dinner in Leiden. It suits occasions where the food should be the centrepiece rather than the backdrop. If full tasting-menu formality is what you want, confirm the current format when booking, since the world cuisine approach at €€€ can vary in structure.
What are alternatives to The Bishop in Leiden?
For a more casual evening at a lower price point, Café Visscher and Bistro Bord'o are the most practical alternatives in the city. Wielinga and In den Doofpot suit guests who want a Dutch-focused menu rather than world cuisine. Woods is the option if you are prioritising atmosphere over kitchen ambition. None of them carry the Michelin Plate recognition that The Bishop holds for both 2024 and 2025.
Location
Middelweg 7-9, 2312 KE Leiden, Netherlands
Compare The Bishop
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Bishop | €€€ · World Cuisine | €€€ | Easy |
| Wielinga | €€€ · Modern French | €€ | Unknown |
| Café Visscher | €€ · French | €€ | Unknown |
| Bistro Bord'o | €€ · Contemporary | €€ | Unknown |
| In den Doofpot | €€€ · Creative | €€€ | Unknown |
| Woods | €€ · Modern Cuisine | €€ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Leiden for this tier.
Also Consider
- Wielinga, €€€ · Modern French, €€
- Café Visscher, €€ · French, €€
- Bistro Bord'o, €€ · Contemporary, €€
- In den Doofpot, €€€ · Creative, €€€
- Woods, €€ · Modern Cuisine, €€
How The Bishop Compares in Leiden
At the €€€ level, The Bishop has two direct competitors in Leiden: In den Doofpot (Creative, €€€) and Wielinga (Modern French, €€€). Of the three, The Bishop carries the strongest documented track record with consecutive Michelin Plates and the largest review sample. In den Doofpot suits diners who want a more creative, boundary-pushing approach; Wielinga suits those with a specific preference for classic French technique. If your priority is kitchen credibility and consistency, The Bishop is the clearest choice in the city at this price tier.
One tier down, Bistro Bord'o (Contemporary, €€) and Café Visscher (French, €€) both offer serious cooking at lower spend. Choose one of those if the €€€ price point needs to come down but you still want food with intention. Café de Gaper (International, €€) is the more accessible, lower-commitment option for a casual evening without sacrificing a central Leiden location.
For the food-oriented traveller comparing across the Netherlands rather than just within Leiden, The Bishop sits in similar territory to Wils in Amsterdam and Scherp in Middelburg, both world-cuisine kitchens at €€€. The Bishop is the easiest of the three to book and requires the least travel logistics if you are already in Leiden. If you are building a multi-city Dutch itinerary and want to benchmark against starred rooms, the step up to Ciel Bleu in Amsterdam or Aan de Poel in Amstelveen is significant in price and formality, but the quality ceiling is higher.
Recognized By
Explore Leiden
Save or rate The Bishop on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
