La Table de Franck Putelat




Carcassonne's only two-Michelin-star address, La Table de Franck Putelat sits outside the medieval walls on Chemin des Anglais and ranks among France's most decorated regional tables. With 88 points on La Liste 2025 and consistent placement inside the Opinionated About Dining top 150 for Europe, it delivers a level of modern cuisine rarely found this far from Paris or Lyon, at prices that still undercut equivalent two-star tables in the capital.

Two Stars in the Languedoc: What Serious Cooking Costs Outside Paris
France's two-Michelin-star tier is concentrated, as it has always been, around Paris, Lyon, and the grandes maisons of Burgundy and Alsace. What makes the Languedoc an interesting case study is how seldom that tier reaches this far south and west. Carcassonne is better known for its UNESCO-listed fortified city than for its restaurant culture, and most visitors eating near the medieval walls will find themselves at mid-range traditional tables like Comte Roger or Brasserie à 4 Temps. La Table de Franck Putelat is a different proposition entirely, operating at a price point and award level that would be unremarkable in the 7th arrondissement but reads as a genuine outlier for a city of this size in southern France.
The address at 80 Chemin des Anglais places the restaurant outside the old city, in a quieter setting removed from the tourist circuit that surrounds the Cité. That physical separation matters: the experience here is not about trading on the backdrop of ramparts and drawbridges but about the food itself as the primary argument. For the traveller weighing where to commit a serious dinner budget in Carcassonne, that distinction is worth holding onto.
The Award Record and What It Signals About Value
The case for spending at this level in Carcassonne rests on a verifiable track record across multiple independent systems. La Table de Franck Putelat holds two Michelin stars, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, making it one of a small number of two-star addresses in the entire Occitanie region. La Liste, which aggregates critical opinion across sources globally, scored it 88 points in 2025 and 87 in 2026, placing it comfortably inside the top tier of French regional restaurants. Opinionated About Dining, which draws on a data-heavy methodology weighted toward experienced frequent diners, ranked it 95th in Classical Europe in 2023, 131st in 2024, and 132nd in 2025.
That last trajectory, a slight drift down the OAD ranking while holding Michelin stars and a high La Liste score, reflects something instructive about how different systems weight different things. OAD rankings respond sensitively to the frequency and recency of visits from its specialist panel; a restaurant in Carcassonne will always accumulate fewer data points than a peer table in Paris or San Sebastián, regardless of cooking quality. The Michelin retention and La Liste score offer a more durable signal. Taken together, the award set positions this restaurant in a competitive tier occupied by houses like Bras in Laguiole and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern: regionally anchored, Michelin-endorsed, and operating well clear of the capital's cost base.
Google reviewers score it 4.7 across 733 ratings, a volume that implies a broad and consistent experience rather than a narrow fan base. For a €€€€ address in a city that sees significant tourist traffic alongside a local clientele, that breadth of approval is meaningful context.
Where This Sits in Carcassonne's Dining Spread
Carcassonne's restaurant offer splits into three broad tiers. At the accessible end sit the traditional and brasserie tables clustered around the Cité and the Bastide: Comte Roger for regional classics at €€, Brasserie à 4 Temps for direct French cooking, and La Table d'Alaïs for modern cuisine at the €€ price point. The middle tier brings Domaine d'Auriac, a Languedoc-anchored address at the $$$ level, and La Barbacane, a classic cuisine table at €€€. La Table de Franck Putelat occupies the summit at €€€€, with the awards architecture to justify the distance from those mid-range peers.
The value argument is not that this restaurant is cheap. It is that two-Michelin-star modern cuisine at a regional French address typically costs less than an equivalent meal in Paris or along the Côte d'Azur, where real estate and labour markets push menu prices to a different ceiling. A traveller who has eaten at Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen or Mirazur in Menton will recognise the award tier and likely find the Carcassonne price point favourable by comparison. Against its regional French peers, places like Flocons de Sel in Megève or Troisgros in Ouches, the proposition is similar: serious cooking at a serious price in a setting where the overhead structure supports a better ratio than the capital.
The Cuisine and What Modern Means Here
The cuisine classification is modern, and in the context of two-star French cooking that word covers a meaningful range. At this award level, modern typically implies a classical French technique base extended by contemporary thinking on sourcing, texture, and menu structure. The Languedoc location adds a regional dimension worth noting: the Aude department produces AOC wines, aged cheeses, and game that find their way into the serious kitchens of the region in a way that distinguishes southern French cooking from its Parisian counterpart.
Chef Franck Putelat has held two stars in Carcassonne through consecutive Michelin cycles, which signals consistency rather than novelty-seeking. Two-star retention over multiple years in a regional setting requires a kitchen that performs reliably across a broad service calendar, not just during peak season when the leading ingredients are easiest to source. The restaurant operates Tuesday through Saturday for both lunch (12–2pm) and dinner (7:30–9:30pm), and is closed on Monday and Sunday. The lunch service at this price and award level represents one of the more considered value decisions available in the city: two-star cooking in daylight hours often comes with a shorter, more focused menu at a lower price than the evening.
Planning a Visit
The address at 80 Chemin des Anglais is accessible by car from the city centre and from the main hotels around the Bastide. The restaurant's hours run Tuesday through Saturday, with the kitchen closed on Sunday and Monday, which means weekend visitors with a Sunday departure will need to plan accordingly. Booking in advance is advisable for any two-star address, and particularly so for dinner on Friday and Saturday when demand is highest. The €€€€ price range places this firmly in the special-occasion or serious-itinerary category rather than a spontaneous dinner decision.
For visitors building a broader Carcassonne itinerary, the full picture of what the city offers across dining, accommodation, drinking, and wine is covered in our full Carcassonne restaurants guide, our full Carcassonne hotels guide, our full Carcassonne bars guide, our full Carcassonne wineries guide, and our full Carcassonne experiences guide. For those tracking modern cuisine across Europe at this award level, comparison points beyond France include Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai.
Frequently Asked Questions
Nearby-ish Comparables
A quick peer reference to anchor this venue in its category.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| La Table de Franck Putelat | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | This venue |
| Comte Roger | Traditional Cuisine | €€ | Traditional Cuisine, €€ |
| Domaine d’Auriac | Languedoc French | $$$ | Languedoc French, $$$ |
| La Barbacane | Classic Cuisine | €€€ | Classic Cuisine, €€€ |
| La Table d'Alaïs | Modern Cuisine | €€ | Modern Cuisine, €€ |
| Le restaurant Bernard Rigaudis | French Cuisine | French Cuisine |
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