

Amicis earned its first Michelin star in 2025, marking a sharp upward move for a creative kitchen that had already drawn a Michelin Plate the year before. Located on Rue Mably in central Bordeaux, the restaurant sits in the city's expanding tier of serious contemporary dining. Chef Paul Canales drives a menu that sits outside the region's classic wine-country tradition, making it a notable counterpoint to Bordeaux's bordeaux-first dining culture.

A Star Arrives on Rue Mably
Bordeaux's restaurant scene has spent the better part of a decade catching up with its wine reputation. For a city whose name is synonymous with the world's most scrutinised wine region, the dining options long trailed expectations. That gap has narrowed considerably, and Amicis at 19 Rue Mably represents one of the clearest signals of where the city's creative cooking has arrived. The room sits in the older commercial core of Bordeaux, a neighbourhood of limestone facades and covered passages where the city's 18th-century mercantile confidence is still readable in the stonework. It is the kind of address that rewards the diner who arrives on foot, absorbing the scale of the place before stepping inside.
From Plate to Star: What the Progression Tells You
Michelin's two-year arc at Amicis is worth reading carefully. A Plate in 2024 signals a kitchen cooking at a level that merits attention but has not yet reached the consistency or distinctiveness that earns star recognition. The progression to one star in 2025 means the inspectors returned, found that consistency, and judged the cooking to be of a quality that warrants a detour. That is not a minor administrative update; it is a substantive reassessment. Among Bordeaux's creative kitchens, this places Amicis in a peer set that includes Cent33 at the €€€ tier and separates it from the two-star benchmark set by Le Pressoir d'Argent by Gordon Ramsay, which operates at the same price tier but with the backing of a global restaurant group and a more classically anchored French kitchen.
EP Club's own assessment places Amicis in the Remarkable category, a designation that aligns with the Michelin recognition and reflects the kitchen's position as one of the addresses in Bordeaux that merits specific planning rather than opportunistic booking. A Google score of 4.7 across 153 reviews adds a ground-level signal: the kitchen produces at a level that retains its reputation across a meaningful sample of covers.
Paul Canales and the Creative Tradition He Draws From
The creative cuisine designation at Amicis positions the kitchen outside the classic Bordeaux bistro tradition and outside the region's reflexive entente between sauce cookery and premier cru pairings. In France, the word créative in a Michelin context carries specific implications. It does not mean fusion or novelty for its own sake. It identifies a kitchen where the chef's own sensibility shapes the menu framework rather than a regional canon or a culinary school orthodoxy. The chefs who have built France's reputation in this space range from the produce-led radicalism of Michel Bras at Bras in Laguiole to the technical precision of Alain Passard at Arpège in Paris, or the mountain-rooted intensity of Emmanuel Renaut at Flocons de Sel in Megève. These are kitchens where the classification matters because the food cannot be predicted from the region alone.
Paul Canales operates within that tradition. His kitchen at Amicis sits in Bordeaux's €€€€ bracket, which means the menu pricing positions it against the city's most ambitious tables. At this tier, a creative designation demands more than technique; it requires a coherent point of view that holds across a full meal. The 2025 star suggests the inspectors found it. For context, other French creative kitchens recognised at this level include Mirazur in Menton and, at the extreme end of the spectrum, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, though those represent a different scale of operation and recognition. Closer in format and ambition, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona offers a useful cross-border comparator for creative cooking at a serious but not stratospheric tier.
Amicis in Bordeaux's Current Dining Hierarchy
Bordeaux now supports a layered restaurant market. At the entry tier, traditional Gascon cooking at places like La Tupina holds its own with direct sourcing and a strong regional identity. In the €€€ middle band, kitchens such as Cent33 offer creative menus with a lower price commitment. At the €€€€ level, Amicis competes with L'Observatoire du Gabriel and Le Pressoir d'Argent for the city's serious dining spend, with each kitchen offering a distinct proposition: one anchored in modern French classicism, one in the Ramsay brand's technical ambitions, and Amicis in a chef-led creative programme that now carries independent star recognition.
Other Bordeaux addresses worth cross-referencing at different tiers include Inima and Racines by Daniel Gallacher, which operate with their own distinct approaches and help define how broad the city's current creative range has become. For the full picture of where Amicis sits relative to every tracked table in the city, the EP Club Bordeaux restaurants guide maps the complete hierarchy.
What the Longer French Canon Suggests
France's one-star tier is wide. It contains kitchens at the start of a longer arc toward higher recognition and kitchens that have held the designation for decades with no ambition to move beyond it. The institutional end of that spectrum is represented by houses like Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern and Troisgros in Ouches, where multi-generational family kitchens carry their stars as a matter of historical record. Amicis is at the opposite end of that timeline: a kitchen in its first year of starred recognition, still building the depth of record that longer-established houses possess. That is not a limitation; it is a reason to visit now, while the kitchen is operating with the energy and focus that accompanies fresh recognition.
Planning a Visit
Amicis is located at 19 Rue Mably in central Bordeaux, within easy walking distance of the city's main tram network and the Place de la Comédie. The €€€€ price tier places it at the higher end of the city's restaurant market, and given the recent star award, early booking is advisable; the Michelin effect on reservation demand is consistent and well-documented across French restaurants at this level. Hours and booking method are leading confirmed directly through current channels, as these details were not available at time of publication. For those building a wider Bordeaux itinerary around this level of dining, the EP Club Bordeaux hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide provide the supporting infrastructure for a full visit.
Frequently Asked Questions
How It Stacks Up
A quick peer list to put this venue’s basics in context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amicis | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | This venue |
| Le Pressoir d'Argent - Gordon Ramsay | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Cuisine, €€€€ |
| La Tupina | French Bistro, Traditional Cuisine | €€ | World's 50 Best | French Bistro, Traditional Cuisine, €€ |
| Ishikawa | Kaiseki, Japanese | €€ | Kaiseki, Japanese, €€ | |
| Le Chapon Fin | French, Modern Cuisine | €€€ | French, Modern Cuisine, €€€ | |
| Kedem | Middle Eastern | €€ | Middle Eastern, €€ |
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