



A Michelin-starred address on Rue Bayen in the 17th arrondissement, Frédéric Simonin positions itself within Paris's serious modern French tier through producer-led sourcing, precise sauce work, and the credentials of a 2019 Meilleur Ouvrier de France. Ranked #450 in Opinionated About Dining's Classical Europe list for 2025, it offers multi-course tasting menus alongside a lunch format that makes the kitchen accessible at a lower commitment.
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- Address
- 25 Rue Bayen, 75017 Paris, France
- Phone
- +33 1 45 74 74 74
- Website
- fredericsimonin.com

Hardwood Floors and Bevelled Mirrors in the 17th
Rue Bayen runs through the Batignolles quarter of Paris's 17th arrondissement, a neighbourhood that sits at some remove from the more trafficked fine-dining corridors around Saint-Germain or the 8th. The room at Frédéric Simonin reflects the residential character of the street: hardwood floors, white walls, and bevelled mirrors that the chef himself has described as a "Parisian apartment." It is a deliberate counterpoint to the grand-hotel dining rooms where he trained. Where those rooms signal occasion through volume and gilding, this one signals it through restraint. The geometry is clean. The atmosphere is focused without being hushed.
That setting frames a cuisine that sits in a specific lane within Paris's €€€€ modern French tier. This is not the provocateur end of the market, where chefs at addresses like Accents Table Bourse or Anona push ingredient combinations into genuinely unfamiliar territory. Nor is it the classical grand-house style of Paul Bocuse - L'Auberge du Pont de Collonges or Auberge de l'Ill. Simonin occupies the ground between: technically rigorous, rooted in the French tradition, but open to what Opinionated About Dining describes as "inventive touches" that push individual plates beyond the purely conventional.
The Credentials Behind the Counter
The trajectory that produced this kitchen is well documented. Before opening on Rue Bayen, Simonin spent time at Ledoyen, now home to Amâlia and the broader Alléno operation, and at Le Meurice, and worked alongside Joël Robuchon. In 2019 he was awarded the Meilleur Ouvrier de France title, a competition-based credential that recognises technical mastery rather than restaurant performance. It is the kind of distinction that places a chef in a comparable set alongside figures at addresses like Flocons de Sel in Megève or Bras in Laguiole, where craft precision is as legible in the execution as in the sourcing.
The Michelin one star places the restaurant within a defined tier: recognised at a European level, operating in a competitive Parisian field that includes multi-starred addresses, but occupying a distinct space through scale, neighbourhood, and format. For comparison, the Parisian €€€€ modern French bracket also contains Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V, Plénitude, and Kei, houses with larger footprints, higher star counts, or international hotel backing. Simonin's position in that tier is as a chef-proprietor address with a smaller platform and a more direct relationship between the kitchen's technical choices and what arrives at the table.
What the Cuisine Is Actually Doing
OAD's assessment of the kitchen identifies three consistent qualities: producer respect translated into sourcing precision, the clear presence of vegetables, herbs, and fruit as structural rather than decorative elements, and a particular strength in reductions and sauces. The last point is significant. Sauce work is the discipline in French cooking that most directly measures classical training, it requires time, technique, and an understanding of how heat, fat, and acid interact across long reduction cycles. At Simonin, where the kitchen carries MOF credentials and a lineage through Robuchon, that dimension of the plate carries specific weight.
The cuisine is described as moving between traditional and challenging. That framing positions it differently from kitchens at, say, Frantzén in Stockholm or FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai, where the creative departure from classical form is the central proposition. At Simonin, the classical form is the foundation, and the inventive moments arrive as inflection rather than rupture. That is a distinct editorial position for a kitchen to hold, and it accounts for the OAD classification of "Remarkable" rather than something further along the creative spectrum.
Vegetables, herbs, and fruit appearing prominently in the plates also connects to the sourcing ethos. The chef treats producers as part of the restaurant's team, a framing that, in practice, means the sourcing decisions are visible on the plate rather than buried under technique. That approach is now common enough in Paris's serious dining tier, across houses like Auberge de Montfleury and 114, Faubourg, but it remains a reliable signal of kitchen priorities when it is genuinely the case rather than promotional language.
Booking This Restaurant: What to Know Before You Go
The restaurant operates Monday through Friday for both lunch and dinner. Saturday and Sunday are closed, which is an important logistical note for visitors planning around a weekend itinerary. The split service, noon to 2pm for lunch, 7:30pm to 10pm for dinner, follows a traditional Parisian schedule without extended walk-in windows.
At the €€€€ price point, with a Michelin star, forward planning is the practical baseline. Multi-course tasting menus at this level in Paris typically require reservations several weeks ahead; the lunch menu offers an accessible entry point both logistically and financially, though the kitchen's full technical range tends to be more visible across the longer dinner format. A Google rating of 4.6 across 493 reviews indicates sustained diner satisfaction that crosses the tourist-and-local divide, the kind of score that reflects repeat visits and a stable kitchen.
The 17th arrondissement location on Rue Bayen adds a logistical consideration that works in the diner's favour: this is not a neighbourhood where tables are surrendered quickly to turn the room. The residential context of Batignolles sets a different pace from the 8th or 1st, and that translates into a dining experience less subject to the ambient pressure of a high-traffic tourist corridor.
For visitors building a Paris itinerary around serious restaurants, this address fits neatly as a lunch anchor on a weekday. The neighbourhood is close enough to central Paris to pair with afternoon plans, and the lunch format allows the kitchen's strengths, particularly the sauce work and sourcing precision, to be assessed at a lower commitment than a full evening tasting. Dinner remains the format where the kitchen's full ambition is most legible, but the lunch route into Simonin is one of the cleaner access points in the Paris €€€€ tier.
For comparable modern French kitchens in other regions, Troisgros - Le Bois sans Feuilles in Ouches and Mirazur in Menton offer useful points of reference for how the tradition extends beyond the capital.
Planning Your Visit
Address: 25 Rue Bayen, 75017 Paris. Hours: Monday to Friday lunch (12pm–2pm) and dinner (7:30pm–10pm); closed Saturday and Sunday. Budget: €€€€, full tasting menu at dinner; more accessible lunch format available. Reservations: Advance booking required; weekday lunch is the more available entry point. Recognition: Michelin one star; Meilleur Ouvrier de France 2019.
What Do Regulars Order at Frédéric Simonin?
Regulars and critics consistently point to the sauce and reduction work as the kitchen's most distinctive quality, and it reflects the chef's classical training at Ledoyen and under Robuchon. Beyond that, the sourcing-led approach means the menu shifts with the producer calendar, so dishes built around vegetables, herbs, and seasonal fruit tend to reflect the kitchen at its most characteristic. The multi-course tasting menu is where those elements are most fully expressed; the lunch menu delivers the same sourcing philosophy at a condensed format. Wine by the glass is highlighted as a strong option, which makes the lunch format particularly workable for solo diners or those who want to match pours to courses without committing to a full bottle.
Just the Basics
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Frédéric Simonin | $$$$ | 17th arrondissement (Les Ternes), Modern French Gastronomique | |
| Pavyllon | $$$$ | 8th Arrondissement (Champs-Élysées), Modern French Bistro with International Influences | |
| Contraste | $$$$ | Faubourg Saint-Honoré, Modern French Fine Dining | |
| Pur' - Jean-François Rouquette | Gaillon, Modern French Fine Dining | $$$$ | |
| FIEF | $$$$ | 11th Arr. - Popincourt, Modern French 100% Local | |
| Nomicos | $$$$ | 16th Arr. - Passy, Modern Mediterranean French Fine Dining |
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