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Modern Plant Based French Bourgeois

Google: 4.6 · 3,801 reviews

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Paris, France

Faubourg Daimant

CuisineVegan
Price€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
Michelin

Faubourg Daimant, on Rue du Faubourg Poissonnière in Paris's 10th arrondissement, holds a Michelin Plate (2025) for plant-based cooking that positions it at the serious end of the city's vegan dining tier. At the €€ price point, it draws a 4.6 Google rating across more than 3,000 reviews — a signal of both consistency and genuine local traction.

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Faubourg Daimant restaurant in Paris, France
About

The 10th and the Question of Where Paris Plants Its Flag

Paris's vegan dining scene has spent the last decade catching up to cities like London and Berlin, where plant-based cooking had already moved through its earnest phase and into something more technically demanding. The 10th arrondissement, long defined by its mix of immigrant food culture along the Canal Saint-Martin corridor and the quiet professionalism of its neighbourhood restaurants, has become one of the arrondissements where that shift is most visible. Faubourg Daimant, at 20 Rue du Faubourg Poissonnière, sits squarely in that evolution: a Michelin Plate recipient in the 2025 guide and a restaurant drawing over 3,000 Google reviews at a 4.6 average, which in any cuisine category suggests something beyond novelty.

The French capital's relationship with animal-free cooking has historically been complicated. Classical French technique is built around butter, cream, and fond, and the country's AOC traditions tie identity to specific animal products. What has changed is not a sudden abandonment of those traditions but a parallel track emerging alongside them — one in which sourcing rigour, seasonal produce discipline, and technical ambition are applied to vegetables with the same seriousness that Arpège applied when Alain Passard famously pivoted toward his kitchen gardens in the early 2000s. Faubourg Daimant operates in that tradition's wake.

What the Ingredient Logic Tells You

The editorial case for plant-based cooking in Paris increasingly rests on sourcing, not ideology. The city's proximity to some of France's most productive agricultural regions means that a kitchen committed to seasonal, plant-led menus is working with material that arrives in a different condition than it does in northern European cities. Île-de-France market gardens, Loire Valley vegetables, and Brittany's coastal produce all feed into the capital's supply chains at a pace that rewards chefs who build menus around what is actually available rather than what a fixed card demands.

At the €€ price tier, Faubourg Daimant is not competing with the tasting-menu ambition of, say, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen or Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V. Those are €€€€ operations with three Michelin stars and infrastructure to match. The relevant comparison is the mid-market Parisian restaurant that takes its food seriously without the ceremony, the kind of address where the Michelin Plate recognition means the guide's inspectors found the cooking worth noting without the full critical apparatus of star consideration. That is a specific and crowded tier — and holding a 4.6 across more than 3,000 reviews within it is a more meaningful signal than any single award.

The ingredient sourcing logic also distinguishes Faubourg Daimant from the wave of purely aesthetics-led vegan restaurants that proliferated in Paris after 2015. Those addresses often prioritized visual presentation and international superfood vocabulary over classical French produce discipline. The Michelin acknowledgment points toward cooking grounded in French culinary logic applied to plant material: stocks built from vegetable matter rather than bones, sauces derived from reduction and emulsification rather than butter-mounting, and a seasonal rotation that follows the market rather than a fixed format.

The Rue du Faubourg Poissonnière Address

The physical approach to the restaurant sets expectations correctly. Rue du Faubourg Poissonnière runs from the Grands Boulevards north through the 10th, passing through a neighbourhood that is neither the polished arrondissements of the Right Bank nor the studied cool of the 11th. It is a working street with real foot traffic, and a restaurant succeeding here is doing so on the strength of the food and the regulars, not on tourist proximity or neighbourhood branding.

That context matters for understanding how Faubourg Daimant fits into the broader Paris dining map. The 10th has its own critical mass of serious eating: natural wine bars, immigrant-inflected neighbourhood spots, and the kind of Franco-Asian cooking represented at the three-star level by Kei elsewhere in the city. A plant-based restaurant earning Michelin attention in this context is not riding a trend , it is competing on merit in a neighbourhood that eats out habitually and has strong opinions about value.

Vegan Fine Dining: The European Peer Set

Faubourg Daimant's positioning becomes clearer when placed against the broader European trajectory of plant-based fine dining. Cities like Zurich have produced operations such as KLE, which applies Swiss precision to vegan tasting menus at a higher price tier. Seoul's Légume demonstrates that the format works across culinary traditions when sourcing and technique are taken seriously. In France itself, the vegetable-forward tradition extends from Bras in Laguiole, where Michel Bras's gargouillou became a reference point for serious plant-based composition decades before the term had cultural currency, through to the mountain kitchens of Flocons de Sel in Megève and the Mediterranean produce logic of Mirazur in Menton.

Faubourg Daimant does not operate at the same scale or price point as any of those references, but it draws from the same French tradition of treating vegetables as primary rather than supplementary. The Michelin Plate places it inside that lineage in a way that pure market reputation alone would not.

Planning Your Visit

The €€ pricing means a meal at Faubourg Daimant sits comfortably below the threshold of the city's formal dining tier. For comparison, the three-star addresses clustered in the 8th , L'Ambroisie in the Marais aside , typically price at three to four times this level. The mid-market vegan tier in Paris is genuinely competitive, which makes the sustained 4.6 review score across a large sample size the more reliable indicator of quality.

VenueCuisinePriceMichelinPeer Set
Faubourg DaimantVegan€€Plate 2025Mid-market plant-based, 10th arr.
Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenCreative French€€€€3 StarsGrand-scale tasting menu, 8th arr.
KeiContemporary French€€€€3 StarsFranco-Japanese, 1st arr.
L'AmbroisieClassic French€€€€3 StarsClassical formal dining, Marais
Le Cinq, Four Seasons George VFrench Modern€€€€3 StarsHotel grand dining, 8th arr.

Bookings at Paris restaurants in this tier vary, but given the review volume and Michelin attention, reservations in advance are advisable, particularly for weekend service. For further planning across the city, see our full Paris restaurants guide, Paris hotels guide, Paris bars guide, Paris wineries guide, and Paris experiences guide. For regional context, the classically-trained end of French restaurant culture is well represented at Troisgros in Ouches, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or.

Signature Dishes
croquettes cochonnescaviar d'algues bretonneschou farci
Frequently asked questions

Where the Accolades Land

A quick snapshot of similar venues for side-by-side context.

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

Feutrée atmosphere with subdued lighting, ochre velvet banquettes, Art Nouveau lamps, smoked walls, and contemporary art in a Belle Époque-inspired setting.

Signature Dishes
croquettes cochonnescaviar d'algues bretonneschou farci