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Cadet holds a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand on Saint-Laurent Boulevard, placing it among Montreal's most-recognized value-driven modern cuisine addresses. With a Google rating of 4.6 across more than 1,500 reviews, the room draws consistent praise from both critics and regulars. For price-conscious diners who want Michelin-level cooking without the $$$$ tier, it is one of the sharper choices on the Main.

The Bib Gourmand Tier on Saint-Laurent
Boulevard Saint-Laurent, long called the Main, has functioned as Montreal's culinary spine for well over a century. The stretch between Sherbrooke and Mont-Royal concentrates an unusual density of serious kitchens, and the competition for attention is correspondingly stiff. In that context, earning a Michelin Bib Gourmand in 2025 is a specific kind of recognition: the designation is reserved for restaurants that deliver cooking above expectation at a price point below the starred tier. Cadet, at 1431 Boul. Saint-Laurent, sits squarely in that category. Its $$ price range positions it well below Michelin-starred neighbours like Mastard or the $$$$-tier Jérôme Ferrer - Europea, both of which carry a full star rather than a Bib. The Bib Gourmand signals something different: value as a virtue, not a compromise.
The Michelin Guide's 2025 Quebec edition placed Cadet among a selective group of addresses where the cooking-to-price ratio justifies a detour. That framing matters on Saint-Laurent, a boulevard where restaurants at every price point compete in the same pedestrian field of view. A Bib Gourmand in this neighbourhood is less a consolation prize than a positioning statement: this is where serious eating meets accessible pricing, and the Guide has confirmed it.
Modern Cuisine in the Mid-Price Register
Montreal's modern cuisine scene has stratified considerably over the past decade. At the upper end, rooms like Mastard and Sabayon operate at the $$$ and starred tier, with tasting menus and booking windows that reflect their position. Below that, the Bib Gourmand bracket functions as its own competitive set: kitchens doing technically considered work at prices a broader audience can sustain. Cadet occupies this bracket with a modern cuisine format that does not require the full ceremony of a multi-course progression to land its cooking with conviction.
Across Canada's broader modern cuisine conversation, the same stratification is visible. Alo in Toronto and AnnaLena in Vancouver anchor the upper tier in their respective cities; Tanière³ in Québec City has staked out a tasting-menu identity rooted in regional produce. Cadet's position is different: it is the rare Michelin-recognized address in Montreal where the bill for two does not require advance budgeting. That alone narrows the peer set considerably.
Globally, the tension between technical ambition and accessible pricing is one of the more productive forces in contemporary restaurant culture. Kitchens working in this register, from Paris Bibs to the equivalent tier in Stockholm's scene around rooms adjacent to Frantzén, often develop more disciplined menus than their starred counterparts, because every element must justify its inclusion without the cushion of a high cover charge. That discipline tends to produce focused, direct cooking.
What the Numbers Say
A Google rating of 4.6 across 1,568 reviews is not a vanity metric. At that volume, the aggregate represents a cross-section of regulars, first-timers, and out-of-town visitors substantial enough to flatten anomalies. Sustained ratings at that level, across that many data points, typically reflect consistent kitchen execution and front-of-house reliability rather than a single exceptional season. For a $$ restaurant on one of Montreal's most competitive corridors, consistency is the harder discipline to maintain.
The combination of Michelin recognition and a high-volume public rating places Cadet in a relatively small cluster of Montreal addresses where institutional critics and general diners align. That alignment is worth noting: Michelin inspectors and first-time visitors are not always looking for the same thing, and rooms that satisfy both audiences tend to be doing something structurally right rather than merely fashionable. See the full Montreal restaurants guide for the broader picture of where Cadet sits among the city's recognized addresses.
The Saint-Laurent Context
Understanding Cadet's position requires a working sense of the block. The Main attracts a mix of wine-bar formats, like Annette bar à vin and Foxy, alongside more formal dining rooms and long-standing neighbourhood institutions. The street is not curated in the way that some purpose-built food districts are; it developed organically, and the result is a mix of registers and formats within walking distance of one another. A Bib Gourmand address in this environment competes as much with casual neighbourhood options as it does with destination rooms, which makes the Michelin recognition a sharper credential here than it might be on a purely fine-dining corridor.
For visitors building a Montreal itinerary, the Main's concentration means that an evening at Cadet can sit naturally alongside a drink at a nearby bar or a walk through the Plateau. Those planning a longer stay in the city will find supplementary context in the Montreal hotels guide, the bars guide, and the experiences guide. For those extending into Quebec or other Canadian cities, Narval in Rimouski, Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln, and The Pine in Creemore represent comparable calibres of cooking at the regional level. The Montreal wineries guide and international modern cuisine comparisons round out the wider picture.
Planning a Visit
Cadet is located at 1431 Boul. Saint-Laurent, accessible from the Saint-Laurent or Sherbrooke metro stations. As a Bib Gourmand address with a 4.6 rating across more than 1,500 reviews, it draws consistent demand; booking ahead is the practical approach, particularly for weekend evenings when the Main operates at full capacity. The $$ price range means the room draws a broad audience, which in turn means walk-in availability at peak times is less reliable than at higher-priced neighbours with smaller covers. Arriving earlier in the evening or on a weeknight generally improves the odds of a table without a reservation, though confirming via the restaurant directly remains the advisable route.
Frequently Asked Questions
Cost Snapshot
A small set of peers for context, based on recorded venue fields.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cadet | $$ | Bib Gourmand | This venue |
| L’Express | $$ | French Bistro, $$ | |
| Schwartz’s | $ | Delicatessen, $ | |
| Toqué | $$$$ | French, $$$$ | |
| Jérôme Ferrer - Europea | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Modern Cuisine, $$$$ |
| Mastard | $$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Modern Cuisine, $$$ |
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