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Bermicourt, France

La Cour de Rémi

CuisineTraditional Cuisine
Executive ChefAdriano Dentoni Litta
LocationBermicourt, France
Michelin

A Michelin Bib Gourmand holder for consecutive years, La Cour de Rémi brings traditional French cooking to the rural Pas-de-Calais village of Bermicourt under chef Adriano Dentoni Litta. The €€ price point and 4.7 Google rating across 466 reviews confirm its standing as a serious kitchen operating well outside the metropolitan dining circuit — a reference point for regional cooking done without compromise.

La Cour de Rémi restaurant in Bermicourt, France
About

A Village Address with a Michelin Endorsement

Rural Pas-de-Calais is not where most diners expect to find a kitchen with consecutive Michelin recognition. The region sits north of the grande cuisine corridor that runs through Paris, Champagne, and Alsace — a stretch more associated with agricultural flatlands and market towns than with dining destinations. Bermicourt is a small commune in that territory, and arriving at 1 Rue Baillet requires either local knowledge or deliberate planning. The setting, whatever its modesty, frames what follows: this is a kitchen operating on its own terms, accountable to the standards of its cuisine rather than to the expectations of urban diners passing through.

La Cour de Rémi has held the Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025 — the Guide's designation for kitchens that deliver quality cooking at a price point below the starred tier, defined by the inspectors as good food at moderate prices. At the €€ level, consecutive Bib recognition carries a specific meaning: it signals consistency, not novelty. A single-year Bib can reflect a kitchen in a promising moment; two consecutive years indicate that the kitchen is running a reliable operation, not a one-cycle story. That distinction matters when you are assessing rural French restaurants, where the gap between promise and delivery is often wide.

Traditional Cuisine in a Northern French Register

The Bib Gourmand category has historically been strongest in the provinces, where the logic of traditional French cooking , seasonal product, regional technique, restrained presentation , aligns naturally with the format's price discipline. The northern French tradition draws on a different pantry than the Mediterranean or the Basque country: game, root vegetables, dairy from the bocage, freshwater fish from the Aa and the Canche. Kitchens working in this register tend to prize direct execution over elaboration, and the Bib Gourmand is, in structural terms, the Michelin endorsement most suited to that approach.

Chef Adriano Dentoni Litta is the culinary name attached to La Cour de Rémi. While detailed biographical data is not available in the public record, the Italian surname in a northern French context is itself a data point worth noting. Cross-border culinary movement , Italian-trained cooks working in French provincial kitchens, or French-trained cooks moving into Italian regions , has been a consistent feature of European fine dining since at least the 1980s. The Bib Gourmand track record here suggests that whatever Dentoni Litta's formation, it has been applied with sufficient fluency in the French traditional register to satisfy Michelin inspectors twice running. That is a credential worth weighing, even without a detailed CV.

Traditional cuisine as a Michelin category covers a specific band of cooking: dishes rooted in regional and historical French technique, typically without the creative departures that define contemporary and creative kitchens. At the starred end of the French spectrum, houses like Troisgros - Le Bois sans Feuilles in Ouches, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, and Bras in Laguiole occupy the highest tier of this tradition , each with decades of critical endorsement and national reputations. Auberge du Vieux Puits in Fontjoncouse and Auberge Grand'Maison in Mûr-de-Bretagne represent the tradition in equally rural, regional registers. La Cour de Rémi operates at the Bib rather than the starred level, but the company is instructive: the Bib Gourmand in rural France consistently identifies kitchens that are serious about the same culinary values, priced for local and regional audiences rather than destination travellers.

What a 4.7 Google Rating Tells You

Google's 4.7 score across 466 reviews is a different kind of evidence from Michelin recognition, but it is not irrelevant. For a rural address with a relatively small customer catchment, 466 reviews represents a substantial volume of visits over time. The 4.7 average at that volume indicates that satisfaction is not confined to a single type of visitor , the distribution typically includes local regulars, regional day-trippers, and a percentage of destination diners who planned around the Bib recognition. A kitchen that scores consistently across those different expectations is doing something more than satisfying one specific audience.

The price band , €€ on the Michelin scale , places La Cour de Rémi in accessible territory for most visitors, particularly relative to the cost of comparable Bib Gourmand kitchens in Paris or Lyon. The combination of moderate pricing, consistent recognition, and high audience satisfaction is less common than it might appear: many rural kitchens achieve one or two of those markers, but holding all three over consecutive review cycles requires operational discipline and a steady hand on food cost and quality sourcing.

Planning a Visit to Bermicourt

Bermicourt sits in the Pas-de-Calais department of northern France, in a part of the country that sees less dedicated food tourism than Champagne or Alsace but is well-positioned for travellers moving between the Channel ports and Paris, or for those exploring the broader Hauts-de-France region. The village is a deliberate destination rather than a convenient stop, which means that visits generally require advance planning. Given the Bib Gourmand status and a Google review count that suggests strong local loyalty, booking ahead is the practical approach, particularly for weekend services or lunch sittings during warmer months.

Travellers combining a visit with a broader northern France itinerary may also want to cross-reference Assiette Champenoise in Reims and Au Crocodile in Strasbourg for contrast at the higher end of the regional French dining spectrum. For creative French cooking at a different price tier altogether, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, AM par Alexandre Mazzia in Marseille, and Paul Bocuse - L'Auberge du Pont de Collonges form a separate reference set. For traditional cooking in an Iberian register, Auga in Gijón offers an interesting counterpoint across the border.

For further planning in the area, see our full Bermicourt restaurants guide, our full Bermicourt hotels guide, our full Bermicourt bars guide, our full Bermicourt wineries guide, and our full Bermicourt experiences guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is La Cour de Rémi okay with children?
La Cour de Rémi operates at the €€ price point in a rural French village, which broadly positions it as an informal, accessible restaurant rather than a formal fine-dining address. French provincial restaurants in this category typically accommodate family dining without issue. That said, specific family-facing provisions , children's menus, high chairs, or dedicated early sittings , are not confirmed in the available data. If travelling with young children, contacting the restaurant directly before booking is the practical course.
What should I expect atmosphere-wise at La Cour de Rémi?
A Michelin Bib Gourmand holder in a small northern French village, operating at €€ pricing, generally signals a setting closer to the auberge or maison de pays tradition than to the formal dining room of a starred house. The 4.7 Google rating across a substantial review base suggests the atmosphere lands well with a broad range of visitors, from local regulars to travelling diners. Expect a room that reflects its rural Pas-de-Calais context: restrained rather than theatrical, with the kitchen as the primary point of interest.
What's the must-try dish at La Cour de Rémi?
Specific menu items and signature dishes are not published in the verified record for this kitchen. What is confirmed is that the cuisine type is traditional French, with consecutive Bib Gourmand recognition from Michelin. In that culinary register, the most instructive approach is to follow whatever the kitchen is offering as its market-driven or seasonal selection , Bib Gourmand kitchens in the French provinces typically price and build their menus around available product rather than fixed showpiece dishes. Chef Adriano Dentoni Litta's consistent recognition suggests that the current menu, whatever it contains, is the reliable order.

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