Skip to Main Content
Modern French Market Bistro

Google: 4.7 · 529 reviews

← Collection
Tours, France

Casse-Cailloux

CuisineModern Cuisine
Price€€
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
Michelin
Star Wine List

A Michelin Plate-recognised address on Rue Jehan Fouquet, Casse-Cailloux sits in Tours' mid-market modern cuisine tier alongside peers like La Deuvalière and Case. Holding consecutive Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, it represents the kind of serious but accessible cooking that defines the Loire Valley's provincial dining character. Google reviewers rate it 4.7 across nearly 500 responses, a consistency signal worth noting at the €€ price point.

Casse-Cailloux restaurant in Tours, France
About

Where the Loire Valley Eats on Its Own Terms

There is a particular kind of French provincial restaurant that exists in the gap between brasserie habit and starred ambition. It is not trying to be Paris. It is not performing rurality for tourists. It cooks with focus, prices with honesty, and builds a local following that reads in Google review counts before it reads in guidebook columns. In Tours, that tier is populated by a cluster of modern cuisine addresses in the €€ bracket, and Casse-Cailloux on Rue Jehan Fouquet has been one of the more consistent presences in it, holding a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025.

The Michelin Plate is not a star. It is worth being precise about that distinction. What the designation signals is that Michelin's inspectors found the cooking worth flagging as competent and considered — a quality threshold that sits above the noise of undifferentiated neighbourhood restaurants but below the formal ceremony of starred dining. In a city like Tours, where the serious mid-market is competitive and diners have real options, consecutive Plate recognition over two years is a signal of sustained delivery rather than a single good season.

Modern Cuisine in the Loire Context

The Loire Valley's relationship with food is shaped by geography and restraint in equal measure. The region grows some of France's most expressive vegetables, raises river fish that rarely travel well enough to appear on Parisian menus, and produces wines — Vouvray, Chinon, Bourgueil , that have long been underpriced relative to their quality. The cooking that emerges from this context tends to be product-led and grounded rather than technique-forward and theatrical. Modern cuisine here reads differently than modern cuisine in Lyon or Paris: it is more likely to find its identity in what the Loire basin provides than in imported reference points.

That regional grounding is the cultural context in which Casse-Cailloux operates. The designation "modern cuisine" covers a wide range in France , from bistronomie with a light hand on classical technique to more deliberate contemporary menus , but in Tours at the €€ price point, it almost always means a short, market-driven format with roots in French tradition and edges softened or sharpened depending on what is available. It is a format that rewards return visits over single-occasion tourism, and the 496 Google reviews averaging 4.7 suggest exactly that kind of sustained local engagement.

The Peer Set in Tours

Tours has developed a recognisable cluster of modern cuisine restaurants in the €€ tier that function as genuine alternatives to one another rather than obvious hierarchies. La Deuvalière and Case. occupy the same price band and cuisine category. La Rissole also sits in this bracket, as does the broader conversation around what serious but affordable cooking looks like in a mid-sized French city. La Roche Le Roy steps up to €€€ and represents the more formal tier of the city's dining, while Les Bartavelles rounds out the picture of where Tours invests its culinary attention. Within this set, Casse-Cailloux's consecutive Michelin recognition gives it a modest credential advantage over unlisted peers, though it would be wrong to treat the Plate as a sharp differentiator in a city where several addresses cook at a comparable level of seriousness.

For context on what the Michelin Plate means relative to the full spectrum of French restaurant recognition, it helps to frame the distance. At the other end of that spectrum sit addresses like Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Mirazur in Menton, Troisgros in Ouches, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, and Bras in Laguiole , destinations that operate at a different scale of investment, both financial and logistical. Casse-Cailloux does not compete in that register, nor does it need to. Its value proposition is precision at an accessible price in a city that has the agricultural and viticultural resources to support exactly that.

The modern cuisine category itself has become an international conversation, with addresses like Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai defining what the format looks like at its most technically ambitious. And closer to home, Flocons de Sel in Megève shows how a regional French address can build a distinct identity through place and product. These comparisons illuminate rather than diminish what Casse-Cailloux represents: a version of the same culinary mode operating closer to the ground, for a local audience, at a price that does not require a special occasion to justify.

Planning a Visit

Casse-Cailloux is at 26 Rue Jehan Fouquet in Tours, a central address that places it within reach of the city's historic core. The €€ pricing positions it as a viable option for a weeknight dinner rather than solely a celebration meal , which, in the Loire Valley, means it pairs logically with an afternoon in the vineyards before sitting down to eat. Tours is well-connected by TGV from Paris Montparnasse, typically around an hour, making it a realistic day-trip or short-break destination for those approaching from the capital.

For accommodation options in Tours, our full Tours hotels guide covers the range of what is available near the city centre. Visitors planning a broader Loire itinerary may also find value in our Tours bars guide, our Tours wineries guide, and our Tours experiences guide , the wine context in particular is hard to separate from any serious consideration of eating well in this part of France. The full picture of where to eat in the city is in our full Tours restaurants guide.

Booking details are not confirmed in our current data, so contacting the restaurant directly at the Rue Jehan Fouquet address is the advisable route for reservations and current hours.

Signature Dishes
Lamb's lettuce soup with truffle creamCod with Touraine saffron and fennel sauerkrautPavlova with Adour kiwi fruitVeal headJapanese-inspired tuna starter
Frequently asked questions

Pricing, Compared

A quick peer reference to anchor this venue in its category.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Modern
  • Intimate
Best For
  • Business Dinner
  • Group Dining
  • Casual Hangout
  • Date Night
Experience
  • Terrace
  • Standalone
Drink Program
  • Natural Wine
Sourcing
  • Farm To Table
  • Local Sourcing
  • Natural Wine
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Cozy bistro with vintage vinyl records, red banquettes, and colorful ambient lighting creating a warm, relaxed yet refined atmosphere.

Signature Dishes
Lamb's lettuce soup with truffle creamCod with Touraine saffron and fennel sauerkrautPavlova with Adour kiwi fruitVeal headJapanese-inspired tuna starter