Skip to Main Content
← Collection
Lyon, France

Accentué

LocationLyon, France
Michelin

In Lyon's rapidly changing 7th arrondissement, Accentué occupies a former neighbourhood bistro that now serves as a stage for cooking rooted in French technique but pulled across continents by spice. Chef Ashwin Vijaykumar, trained in French pastry and cuisine via New Zealand, works with ingredients drawn from India, Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and the Americas, making this one of Gerland's more distinctive addresses for cross-cultural French cooking.

Accentué restaurant in Lyon, France
About

Gerland's Shifting Table

Lyon's 7th arrondissement has been in steady transition for the better part of a decade. The Gerland quarter, once defined by industrial lots and local workers' canteens, has gradually attracted a different kind of restaurant: smaller, more personal, less anchored to the bouchon tradition that still defines how the city talks about itself internationally. Accentué, at 97 rue de Gerland, fits that pattern precisely. It operates in a space that was previously a neighbourhood bistro, now stripped back and relit as a bright, contemporary room, and it uses that clean-slate setting to pursue a cooking philosophy that has little to do with quenelles or tablier de sapeur.

That shift matters in context. Lyon's canonical reputation rests on a tradition running from La Mère Brazier through to the multi-starred contemporary French addresses that have since clustered around Presqu'île and the 6th. Places like Le Neuvième Art and Takao Takano extend that lineage with rigour and Michelin recognition. Accentué is doing something different: it is working with French culinary structure as a grammar, then speaking in a vocabulary assembled from four or five other continents. That is a harder sell in a city this protective of its food identity, which is partly why finding it requires heading south past the Gerland stadium into a neighbourhood that isn't yet on most international visitors' itineraries.

Members Only

The shortlist, unlocked.

Hard-to-book tables, cellar releases, and concierge-planned trips.

Get Exclusive Access →

Where the Ingredients Come From

The sourcing logic at Accentué is the most useful lens through which to read the menu. French cooking has long engaged with colonial spice routes, but that engagement has usually been subordinate, spice as accent rather than architecture. Here the relationship is reversed. Ingredients drawn from India, across Southeast and East Asia, from Africa, the Middle East, and the Americas appear not as decorative flourishes applied to an otherwise conventional French plate, but as structural elements that determine what the dish actually is.

Chef Ashwin Vijaykumar's background explains the instinct, if not the specific mechanics. Born in India and trained in French pastry and cuisine in New Zealand, he arrives at this kitchen with a supply chain of references that most French-trained chefs simply do not carry. The grey prawn toast that has drawn attention from visitors sits in this frame: fine herbs and a turmeric mayonnaise, with gochugaru, the Korean chilli flake, folded in. The dish is recognisably French in its precision and presentation logic, and entirely un-French in its spice profile. Turmeric and gochugaru are not pantry staples in most Lyon kitchens; here they function as primary flavour coordinates, not afterthoughts.

This approach positions Accentué in a small but growing niche within French regional dining. A handful of chefs trained outside metropolitan France, or outside France entirely, are now working through provincial cities with exactly this kind of dual fluency. The results tend to be more interesting than either straight fusion cooking or orthodox local cuisine, because the technical rigour of French training remains visible while the ingredient palette genuinely expands the range of what can be put on a plate. For the broader French restaurant conversation, see comparisons across very different registers: from the coastal sourcing logic at Mirazur in Menton to the terroir-driven discipline at Bras in Laguiole and the classical foundations of Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern. Accentué is playing in none of those registers, but the comparison sharpens what is actually distinctive about the Gerland project.

The Room and the Floor

The physical transformation from bistro to contemporary dining room is deliberate and legible. Bright rather than moody, the interior sets a tone that matches the cooking: open rather than reverential, curious rather than conservative. There is a small courtyard at the rear, which in Lyon's warmer months functions as the more desirable seating option and changes the rhythm of the meal slightly, loosening what might otherwise feel like a more contained indoor experience.

Jennifer Palopoli runs the floor, and the couple-at-the-helm structure is worth noting in terms of what it produces operationally. Smaller Lyon restaurants that operate this way tend toward greater consistency in service and tone than those relying on larger brigade systems. The communication between kitchen and dining room in a two-person core operation of this kind is, almost by necessity, tighter. Whether that holds on busier evenings is the kind of question that only repeated visits can answer, but the model has proved durable at comparable Lyon addresses like Au 14 Février, which runs on similar structural logic.

Where Accentué Sits in Lyon's Wider Offer

The city's mid-to-upper restaurant tier is well-populated. Burgundy by Matthieu represents one strand of modern Lyon cooking, grounded in regional French produce and technique at the €€€ price point. Accentué operates in a different register, its distinctiveness coming not from wine-region alignment or Rhône-valley sourcing, but from the deliberate reach beyond French ingredient geography. That makes direct price-tier comparisons less useful than contextual ones. Among Lyon's internationally influenced addresses, Accentué occupies a position closer to Miraflores, the city's Peruvian restaurant, than to the classically French fine-dining tier. Both are making cases for non-French ingredient traditions within a city that has historically been resistant to that argument.

For visitors already working through Lyon's more established addresses, Accentué offers a change of register without requiring a change of city. It sits at a meaningful remove from the Presqu'île concentration of celebrated restaurants and is leading approached as a deliberate excursion into a neighbourhood that is in the process of becoming something rather than something already formed. That is both a risk and the point. The most interesting restaurant discoveries in any city tend to come from districts in exactly this state of transition.

For broader orientation across Lyon's restaurant scene, EP Club maintains a full Lyon restaurants guide, alongside dedicated guides to hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in the city. If this kind of cross-cultural French cooking interests you elsewhere in France, the ambition being pursued at very different scale and budget levels is visible in the sourcing philosophy at Flocons de Sel in Megève, the technical reach of Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, and, across the Atlantic, in the Creole-French dialogue running through Emeril's in New Orleans and the produce-led precision of Le Bernardin in New York City.

Planning Your Visit

Accentué is at 97 rue de Gerland in Lyon's 7th arrondissement, reachable by metro on line B to the Gerland stop. Given its neighbourhood position and the modest scale of operation implied by the couple-led format, booking ahead is advisable, particularly on weekend evenings when smaller Gerland restaurants fill faster than their address might suggest. Specific hours, booking channels, and pricing were not available at time of writing; direct contact via the restaurant is the most reliable route for current availability. The courtyard seating at the rear is worth requesting when making a reservation during spring and summer months. Troisgros - Le Bois sans Feuilles in Ouches makes a useful day-trip counterpoint if you are building a longer Rhône dining itinerary around a Lyon base.

FAQs

Is Accentué good for families?
The contemporary, unfussy room and generous plating style make it a reasonable option for families with older children, though Lyon's mid-range bistro tier generally offers more forgiving environments for younger ones.
How would you describe the vibe at Accentué?
If you are used to Lyon's more traditional dining rooms, expect something lighter and less ceremonial. The space is bright and contemporary rather than intimate or club-like; if the cooking interests you and you are open to a neighbourhood that is still finding its footing, the atmosphere rewards that flexibility.
What's the signature dish at Accentué?
Go in expecting the grey prawn toast with turmeric mayonnaise and gochugaru to anchor your understanding of what the kitchen is doing: it is the most cited dish in coverage of the restaurant and the clearest single statement of how French technique and cross-continental spice are being put to work here.

Fast Comparison

These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.

Collector Access

Need a table?

Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.

Get Exclusive Access
Members Only

The shortlist, unlocked.

Hard-to-book tables, cellar releases, and concierge-planned trips.

Get Exclusive Access →