.png)
A Michelin Plate-recognised bouchon on the Rue de Créqui, Daniel et Denise Créqui holds its place in the tighter, more residential end of Lyon's 3rd arrondissement dining scene. The kitchen runs a disciplined Lyonnaise canon, quenelles, tablier de sapeur, tête de veau, while the wine list draws from the Rhône Valley and Beaujolais producers that have long defined how this city drinks. Straightforward to book, honest on price, and consistently rated 4.5 across nearly 1,800 Google reviews.
Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.
- Address
- 156 Rue de Créqui, 69003 Lyon, France
- Phone
- +33 4 78 60 66 53
- Website
- daniel-et-denise.fr

A Bouchon on Its Own Terms
The bouchon tradition Lyon built over several centuries is now maintained by a shrinking number of kitchens that actually hold to its disciplines. Most visitors encounter it first in the tourist-facing lanes of Vieux-Lyon or along the Presqu'île's main arteries, where the category blends into café territory and the cooking softens accordingly. The 3rd arrondissement offers a different register. Rue de Créqui sits a few blocks east of the Rhône, in a neighbourhood that functions as a working residential district rather than a dining destination, and the bouchons that survive here tend to survive on repeat local custom rather than foot traffic. Daniel et Denise Créqui, at number 156, operates in precisely that context.
The room itself carries the physical grammar of the classic bouchon: close-set tables, checkered or tiled surfaces, the kind of ambient warmth that builds as the service progresses. There is no architectural statement being made. That restraint is, in a sense, the statement, the space signals that the kitchen is where the attention goes.
What the Michelin Plate Signals in Lyon
Lyon's Michelin map spans a wide range of ambition and price. At one end sit the starred creative tables: Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen-calibre thinking applied to local produce, at prices that reflect it. Comparison venues in the city's current starred tier include two-star operations such as La Mere Brazier and Le Neuvième Art at €€€€, and one-star addresses such as Burgundy by Matthieu at €€€. Daniel et Denise Créqui holds Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025, which places it in a different but legitimate tier: kitchens that the Guide considers worth noting for consistent quality. For the bouchon category, a Plate awarded in consecutive years functions as a quality signal that separates a kitchen from the many that use the bouchon name loosely.
The €€ price range puts it well below the starred competition, and well below its two sibling addresses in the same group. Daniel et Denise Saint-Jean in Vieux-Lyon and Daniel et Denise Croix-Rousse operate in higher-profile neighbourhoods and at a marginally different price point. The Créqui address is the most workaday of the three, which makes it, for certain visitors, the most authentic of the three.
The Lyonnaise Canon and How the Kitchen Approaches It
The cooking at a serious bouchon is not improvisational. The Lyonnaise canon is fixed and has been for generations: salade de tablier de sapeur with a sauce gribiche, quenelle de brochet in a Nantua sauce built from crayfish, tête de veau with a vinaigrette that has real bite, andouillette prepared in the AAAAA tradition that defines the category. These dishes are evaluated locally not for originality but for execution, whether the quenelle has the right soufflé-like interior, whether the andouillette carries the funk that it is supposed to carry, whether the sauce Nantua uses sufficient crustacean reduction to hold its depth. A 4.5 rating across 1,907 Google reviews suggests this kitchen is meeting those expectations consistently, which is not a given even among established addresses.
For context on what the Lyonnaise tradition looks like at adjacent tables, Le Garet and Cafe Comptoir Abel represent comparable positions in the bouchon hierarchy, while Brasserie Georges offers a larger-format, brasserie-inflected reading of the same tradition. The Lyonnaise kitchen, exported, shows up in different forms at Aux Lyonnais in Paris and Josephine Bouchon in London, though neither operates with the sourcing advantages of being in the city itself.
The Wine List: Rhône and Beaujolais as the Default Register
Lyon's geography places it at the intersection of three wine regions: the northern Rhône to the south, Beaujolais to the north, and the broader southern Burgundy corridor to the northeast. The city's wine culture has historically defaulted to Beaujolais, specifically the crus, not the Nouveau, and to the northern Rhône appellations of Crozes-Hermitage, Saint-Joseph, and Cornas that offer more grip than their price suggests. A bouchon wine list at the Créqui price tier is typically structured around these regional producers, with a carafe format that allows ordering by the smaller measure, which is how Lyon has always drunk at lunch.
The editorial angle on any bouchon wine list is whether it reaches into the smaller Beaujolais cru producers, Moulin-à-Vent, Morgon, Chénas, or stays at the volume-production level. At this price point, the list is unlikely to carry allocations from the kind of growers that sommeliers in Paris or London pursue. What it should offer is honest representation of the Rhône and Beaujolais appellations that pair against the fat-forward cooking of the Lyonnaise canon: acid, light tannin, no oak interference. The carafe of Côtes du Rhône or Saint-Joseph alongside an andouillette is not a compromise; it is the intended pairing, arrived at over decades of local practice.
The gastronomic tradition that shapes Lyon's wine pairings also surfaces in very different formats at Troisgros in Ouches, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Mirazur in Menton, Bras in Laguiole, and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, all of which represent the broader French regional fine dining tradition that Lyon anchors from its central position.
Planning Your Visit
Daniel et Denise Créqui sits at 156 Rue de Créqui in the 3rd arrondissement, east of the Rhône and accessible from the Part-Dieu transport hub. The €€ pricing makes this a realistic lunch stop as well as a dinner address, and lunch is typically the format through which bouchon cooking is best understood, the city uses it that way. Booking in advance is the sensible approach for dinner, given the consistent volume of reviews suggesting regular demand, though the neighbourhood context means the address attracts fewer speculative walk-ins than the Vieux-Lyon bouchons.
At-a-Glance Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daniel et Denise CréquiThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Lyonnaise Bouchon Gastronomique | $$$ | Michelin Plate | |
| Le Suprême | Modern French Bistro | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Quartier Guillotière |
| Chez Pimousse | Modern French Tasting Menu | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Quartier Ouest des Pentes |
| Siprès | Modern Bistronomic French | $$$ | Bib Gourmand | Quartier Jean Macé |
| Cinq Mains | Modern French Bistronomique | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Quartier Quartiers Anciens |
| La Table 101 | Modern French Bistronomie | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Quartier Voltaire Part-Dieu |
Continue exploring
More in Lyon
Restaurants in Lyon
Browse all →Bars in Lyon
Browse all →Hotels in Lyon
Browse all →At a Glance
- Classic
- Cozy
- Iconic
- Rustic
- Lively
- Date Night
- Group Dining
- Family
- Celebration
- Special Occasion
- Private Dining
- Historic Building
- Standalone
- Sommelier Led
- Local Sourcing
- Farm To Table
Warm, intimate setting with checkered tablespoons, wood tables, copper accents, and vintage photographs on walls; authentic time-worn décor reflecting traditional Lyonnaise bouchon character.



















