Seven movements, composed each morning from the brittle dawn of the Marché d'Aligre. A kitchen tilted toward stillness, restraint, and a single, honest flame.
Maison Lumière is not a performance. It is a slow correspondence between the soil, the season, and the hand of the cook. A plate, here, is a sentence we have been writing for fourteen years — never finished, often rewritten, occasionally true.
Read the philosophy →A tasting menu that unfolds like a chapter. Each course built from a single produce of the week — the rest is restraint, technique, and the trust we keep with our growers.
See full menu →Born in the Vercors, trained by Bernard Pacaud, and quietly building, since 2010, a kitchen whose only ambition is to disappear behind the plate.
An education in classical French restraint. Three apprenticeships, two seasons in Japan, and a fixed conviction that the cook is a translator — never an author. The plate, he insists, is the produce's own sentence.
The kitchen has kept the same sixteen seats since the day it opened. We have never expanded. We never will. There is no shortage of good restaurants — only of attention.
The chef's story →"A room of breath-held silence. Vionnet has perfected the art of doing less, beautifully. The most considered French cooking in Paris today."— Le Monde · Gastronomie
Service from 19:30, Wednesday through Saturday. Reservations are released six weeks in advance.
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