La Charcuterie
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La Charcuterie on Chaussée d'Alsemberg earns its Michelin Bib Gourmand status — held in both 2024 and 2025 — by anchoring a sharing-format menu in the kind of casual, neighbourhood-rooted confidence that Saint-Gilles does well. Under chef Rikard Hult, the kitchen pitches at the €€ tier without sacrificing ambition, making it one of the more considered value propositions in the inner-Brussels dining circuit.

A Street, a Format, and What the Menu Reveals
Chaussée d'Alsemberg runs south through Saint-Gilles as one of those arterial streets that accumulates restaurants the way older Brussels neighbourhoods accumulate character: gradually, without a plan, until a stretch of pavement becomes something worth seeking out. La Charcuterie sits at number 108, on a block where the residential scale of the commune keeps dining rooms honest. There is no grand entrance architecture to read here, no neighbourhood-as-destination branding to negotiate. The signal is quieter than that.
What the menu structure tells you before a single plate arrives is something worth understanding. The sharing format — the operating logic at La Charcuterie — is not simply a stylistic choice. Across European mid-tier dining, sharing menus have become the default mechanism for kitchens that want to express range without the discipline of a fixed tasting sequence. At their worst, they scatter. At their leading, they build a coherent argument about what a kitchen actually does well. The Michelin Bib Gourmand, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, suggests the latter is what's happening here: the Guide's recognition of good cooking at a fair price is a precise instrument, and consecutive listings are harder to earn than a single-year mention.
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Sharing formats impose a particular discipline on the host rather than the kitchen. The diner must make decisions about pace, sequence, and proportion that a set-course menu eliminates entirely. This is either a feature or a friction point, depending entirely on the table. Saint-Gilles' dining culture, shaped by decades of neighbourhood bistro tradition alongside a newer wave of contemporary formats, has generally embraced this , the commune's clientele skews toward regulars who know how to read a room and a menu without needing a guide.
What the structure at La Charcuterie implies about the kitchen is a confidence in individual components. A menu designed for sharing lives or dies on whether each plate holds on its own before it becomes part of a collective spread. The cuisine type , listed simply as sharing , signals that the kitchen is not working within a single national tradition or technique school, but building a menu around what travels well to the centre of a table. Chef Rikard Hult operates within this framework, and the consecutive Bib Gourmand recognitions indicate that the format and the food are in alignment.
Placing La Charcuterie in the Saint-Gilles Mid-Range
At the €€ price point, La Charcuterie occupies a specific position in a neighbourhood that has seen its dining options stratify in recent years. Comparison venues in the immediate area include ANJU (Korean Contemporary) and Flamme (Country cooking), both operating at the same tier, alongside iOda (Vegetarian) at comparable pricing. A step above, Colonel Louise (Meats and Grills) and Dolce Amaro (Italian) both move into the €€€ bracket.
Within the €€ cohort, La Charcuterie's distinction comes from format rather than geography. Most neighbourhood sharing restaurants in Brussels sit closer to wine-bar-with-food territory. A Bib Gourmand at this price tier indicates something more deliberate: the Guide's criteria require that the cooking quality justifies the recognition independently of the value proposition, not merely because of it. A 4.6 rating across 561 Google reviews adds a second data layer that broadly confirms the Michelin signal rather than contradicting it.
For wider Belgian context, the country's restaurant circuit runs from neighbourhood-rooted mid-tier tables like this through to the starred heavyweights: Hof van Cleve - Floris Van Der Veken in Kruishoutem, Boury in Roeselare, Zilte in Antwerp, Willem Hiele in Oudenburg, and Bartholomeus in Heist. La Charcuterie operates at the other end of that spectrum by design. In Brussels proper, Bozar Restaurant represents the city-centre institutional register; La Charcuterie is its neighbourhood counterpart. For sharing-format benchmarks elsewhere, IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada and Agnes in Sint-Martens-Bodegem offer different market-position comparisons within the same format category.
The Neighbourhood as Context
Saint-Gilles rewards the kind of dinner that begins with a walk. The commune's grid of nineteenth-century streets, with Art Nouveau facades distributed at irregular intervals, establishes a pace that larger Brussels neighbourhoods don't quite replicate. Arriving at Chaussée d'Alsemberg 108 on foot from the centre puts you in the right register for what La Charcuterie offers: a meal that functions as a neighbourhood event rather than a destination pilgrimage. The distinction matters because it shapes what to expect from the room and the service tempo.
Brussels' inner-commune dining culture has historically prioritised this kind of embeddedness over spectacle. The Bib Gourmand, which the Michelin Guide specifically attaches to restaurants offering quality within accessible budgets, fits the Saint-Gilles register more naturally than a starred format would. The neighbourhood's own character , resistant to tourist-facing polish, more interested in the regulars than the one-time visitor , aligns with what the sharing format produces when it works: a table that looks different every time based on who ordered and what arrived first.
Planning a Visit
La Charcuterie sits at Chaussée d'Alsemberg 108 in the 1060 Saint-Gilles postcode, accessible by tram from central Brussels. The €€ pricing and consecutive Bib Gourmand recognition make advance booking advisable; this is the kind of neighbourhood restaurant whose reputation fills tables from local repeat custom rather than tourist flow. No booking method or hours data is available in the EP Club record at this time, so confirming current reservation options directly is recommended. For the full picture of what the neighbourhood offers across formats and budgets, see our full Saint-Gilles restaurants guide, and for planning around accommodation and other experiences, consult our full Saint-Gilles hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
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At-a-Glance Comparison
A quick peer reference to anchor this venue in its category.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| La Charcuterie | Sharing | €€ | Bib Gourmand | This venue |
| La Buvette | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Modern Cuisine, €€€ | |
| Nénu | Vietnamese Contemporary | €€ | Vietnamese Contemporary, €€ | |
| ANJU | Korean Contemporary | €€ | Korean Contemporary, €€ | |
| Colonel Louise | Meats and Grills | €€€ | Meats and Grills, €€€ | |
| Dolce Amaro | Italian | €€€ | Italian, €€€ |
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