Skip to Main Content
Modern French Bistro

Google: 4.3 · 454 reviews

← Collection
Stockholm, Sweden

Allegrine

CuisineFrench
Executive ChefDanyel Couet
Price€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
Michelin
Star Wine List

A Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised French bistro on Kammakargatan, Allegrine sits in a city better known for New Nordic tasting menus and offers something the Stockholm dining scene rarely provides at this price point: classical French technique delivered without ceremony. Chef Danyel Couet leads a kitchen that has earned consecutive Bib Gourmand distinctions in 2024 and 2025, alongside a White Star recognition from Star Wine List.

Allegrine restaurant in Stockholm, Sweden
About

French Cooking in a City Defined by Nordic Restraint

Stockholm's restaurant conversation tends to circle the same names: the multi-course Nordic tasting menus, the fire-led kitchens, the kaiseki-inflected progression of seasonal produce. It is a city with genuine depth at the leading end, as addresses like Frantzén and AIRA demonstrate. But that conversation leaves a gap at the mid-tier for cooking rooted in a different European tradition. Allegrine, on Kammakargatan 22 in the Norrmalm district, occupies that gap with a French kitchen that has now collected back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand distinctions in 2024 and 2025.

The Bib Gourmand category is worth pausing on. Michelin awards it specifically for good cooking at a moderate price, and it signals something different from a star: the inspectors are not just measuring technical achievement in isolation, they are measuring whether the value equation holds. At the €€ price point, Allegrine is positioned well below the starred tier occupied by Operakällaren or Aloë, making it one of the clearest access points to recognised cooking in the city without a tasting-menu commitment.

The Tension Between Classical Technique and a Modern Room

French cuisine in Scandinavia carries a particular charge. The New Nordic movement, which reshaped how the region's restaurants presented themselves to the world from the mid-2000s onwards, was partly defined by its rejection of French classical hierarchy. Allegrine does not position itself in opposition to that tradition, but it does represent a different inheritance. A kitchen working in the French register is engaged with stocks, reductions, and sauce-work that require discipline over days, not hours, and with a flavour logic that runs through fat and acid rather than through foraged provenance and fermentation alone.

Chef Danyel Couet leads the kitchen here. In the context of Stockholm's dining scene, where many of the recognised addresses have lineages rooted in Nordic produce philosophy, a French-trained perspective at a Michelin-recognised address provides genuine contrast. The tension the editorial angle of New French usually describes, between classical rigour and modern creative instinct, is particularly interesting when it plays out in a city whose dominant culinary identity runs in a different direction entirely. Whether that tension resolves toward the traditional or the contemporary is something the menu itself answers, and the Bib Gourmand signal suggests the balance is landing well with Michelin's inspectors.

The Star Wine List White Star recognition, awarded June 2022, adds a further dimension. Stockholm has a serious wine culture, and a White Star from Star Wine List indicates a list that goes beyond the functional. In a French-leaning kitchen, wine integration tends to be structural rather than decorative, and a recognised list at this price tier is more unusual than it might appear at more expensive addresses.

Where Allegrine Sits in the Stockholm Price Tier

Understanding what Allegrine is requires placing it correctly in Stockholm's price structure. The €€€€ addresses, including AIRA with its two Michelin stars and Operakällaren with one, operate in a different register. Those kitchens justify their price through extended formats, premium ingredient sourcing, and the full apparatus of fine dining service. Allegrine at €€ is making a different argument: that French technique, applied carefully, can deliver recognised cooking without the overhead of the tasting-menu format.

That argument has broader European precedent. Some of the most compelling French cooking in cities like Paris, Lyon, and Geneva has always come from the bistro tier rather than the three-star rooms. Addresses like Hotel de Ville Crissier in Switzerland represent the pinnacle of the formal French tradition, while the real texture of French dining culture lives several tiers below. Allegrine's position in Stockholm is closer to that bistro tradition than to destination fine dining, which is precisely what makes consecutive Bib Gourmand recognitions meaningful.

For readers building a broader Swedish dining itinerary, Allegrine functions as a useful counterpoint to the Nordic-focused addresses that dominate the conversation. Outside Stockholm, restaurants like Vollmers in Malmö, Signum in Mölnlycke, and VYN in Simrishamn represent the regional reach of serious Swedish cooking, and further afield, 28+ in Gothenburg, ÄNG in Tvååker, and Knystaforsen in Rydöbruk offer a sense of how the country's serious restaurant culture extends beyond the capital. French cooking in that context reads as a deliberate alternative rather than a default.

Within Stockholm itself, Cafe Nizza provides another reference point for European bistro cooking in the city, and together these addresses suggest a growing appetite for mid-tier European cooking that does not require the formality of a full tasting menu. For French specifically, the comparison is also worth making internationally: L'Effervescence in Tokyo demonstrates how a French-trained kitchen operating outside France can find a distinctive voice by engaging with its host city's produce and sensibility. The question for Allegrine is similar.

Planning Your Visit

Allegrine is on Kammakargatan 22, in the central Norrmalm area, walkable from most of Stockholm's main transport nodes. The €€ pricing and Bib Gourmand profile place it in the category of restaurants that locals return to regularly rather than saving for once-a-year occasions, which typically means tables are genuinely competed for. At recognised bistro-tier addresses in European capitals, booking two to three weeks ahead is generally prudent for weekend slots; weekday availability tends to open closer to the date. Given consecutive Bib Gourmand recognition across 2024 and 2025, demand is unlikely to have softened. For broader planning across the city, our full Stockholm restaurants guide covers the range from this tier upward, and our Stockholm bars guide, hotels guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide round out the picture for a fuller trip.

Signature Dishes
Côte_de_BœufPiggvar_med_Vit_SparrisAnklever_med_Brioche
Frequently asked questions

Cuisine and Recognition

A compact peer set to orient you in the local landscape.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Modern
  • Cozy
  • Sophisticated
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Business Dinner
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
  • Terrace
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Craft Cocktails
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Views
  • Street Scene
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Chic dining room with serene, Paris-like atmosphere, bright and buzzing space, attractive front terrace.

Signature Dishes
Côte_de_BœufPiggvar_med_Vit_SparrisAnklever_med_Brioche