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La Table de Maïna sits in Montrouge, just south of the Paris périphérique, where a Michelin Plate-recognised fusion menu (2024 and 2025) draws a loyal local following and a 4.8 Google rating across nearly 600 reviews. At a €€ price point, it occupies an accessible tier that the capital's starred houses don't touch, making it a practical reference for fusion cooking beyond the centre.

Fusion at the Edge of Paris: Where Montrouge Meets the Middle Market
The story of Parisian dining has long been written inside the périphérique, with the city's critical attention concentrated on the 6th, 7th, and 8th arrondissements, where addresses like Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Arpège, and Kei compete in the €€€€ tier with Michelin stars as the primary currency. But since at least the early 2010s, a quieter recalibration has been happening in the communes immediately south and east of Paris proper. Montrouge, a dense residential commune in the Hauts-de-Seine department, became part of that shift — a place where genuine kitchen ambition found cheaper rents and a neighbourhood clientele willing to return regularly rather than treat each visit as an occasion.
La Table de Maïna arrived into that context. It sits at 18 Rue Périer, Montrouge, a few minutes from the Mairie de Montrouge metro stop, and it has accumulated two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) alongside a 4.8 Google rating from 593 reviews — a volume and consistency that is difficult to manufacture and points to a repeat-visit culture rather than one-off destination traffic. For anyone mapping Paris's fusion scene across price tiers, La Table de Maïna sits near the leading of the accessible mid-market bracket.
The Physical Frame: Reading a Room at €€
The editorial angle on a room like La Table de Maïna's requires stepping back from the specific and looking at what the €€ fusion format demands architecturally. In Paris, the mid-market restaurant faces a structural challenge: it cannot spend at the level of a three-star house, where bespoke joinery, custom ceramics, and lighting design become part of the product. What mid-market spaces tend to do instead is compress the room, lean into warmth over grandeur, and build identity through deliberate detail rather than scale.
The address on Rue Périer is a residential street, which shapes the experience before anyone sits down. Montrouge's streetscape lacks the institutional weight of the 8th or the gallery-district cool of the 11th, and restaurants here tend to read as local institutions , compact, considered, their physical presence calibrated to the neighbourhood rather than to the incoming visitor. This is the physical container in which La Table de Maïna operates, and it matters for how the fusion menu lands. A Michelin Plate in this setting is a different signal than the same recognition in a purpose-designed dining room off the Champs-Élysées. It suggests the food carries the room, rather than the room amplifying the food.
Among Paris's fusion addresses, Signature Montmartre and Akabeko represent different points on the spatial spectrum, the former anchored in the tourist-adjacent energy of the 18th, the latter operating in a more contained Japanese-influenced register. La Table de Maïna's Montrouge position places it in a different peer set entirely: the working neighbourhood restaurant that has crossed into recognised territory without leaving its postal code.
Fusion in Paris: A Category Under Constant Pressure
The fusion label has had a complicated twenty years in Paris. In the early 2000s, it was a marketing term applied broadly to anything combining two culinary traditions. By the 2010s, serious critics had largely abandoned it in favour of more precise descriptors: Franco-Japanese, modern Asian, contemporary French with global inflection. What remained under the fusion heading was either the very high end, where chefs with documented training across multiple traditions built coherent cross-cultural frameworks, or the mid-market, where the term continued to describe a genuine plurality of influence without always having the vocabulary to articulate it more narrowly.
La Table de Maïna occupies the mid-market end of this spectrum. At €€, it cannot be benchmarked against the highest expressions of Paris fusion, where kitchens like Kei's three-star Franco-Japanese operation represent a decade-plus of technique and institutional backing. What the Michelin Plate , awarded in both 2024 and 2025 , does confirm is that the cooking clears a quality threshold that Michelin's inspectors consider worth marking. The Plate is not a star, but in a city where thousands of restaurants operate without any Michelin recognition, two consecutive years of Plate status at an accessible price point is a meaningful credential.
For a comparative frame, Ajonegro in Logroño and Arkestra in Istanbul show how fusion operates across different European cities, each working with local ingredient cultures and distinct reference traditions. The Paris version, as La Table de Maïna represents it, is inflected by the city's institutional French cooking inheritance, which shapes even the most divergent kitchens here at the level of technique and service rhythm.
The Broader Paris Dining Map
La Table de Maïna does not sit in isolation. Paris's dining geography extends well beyond the central arrondissements, and some of France's most consequential cooking happens outside the capital entirely. Flocons de Sel in Megève, Mirazur in Menton, Troisgros in Ouches, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Bras in Laguiole, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or represent the deep regional spine of French fine dining. Within Paris itself, the concentration of Michelin-starred houses in the central arrondissements creates a density that can obscure what is happening at the edges, in communes like Montrouge where the economics of hospitality are different and the audience is primarily residential.
For practical planning: La Table de Maïna is reachable via the Mairie de Montrouge stop on Metro Line 4, a direct ride from the centre without a change. The €€ price positioning means it functions well as a neighbourhood dinner rather than a once-a-trip occasion, and the volume of Google reviews suggests tables are in reasonable supply without the multi-month lead times that accompany Paris's starred houses. For those building a broader Paris itinerary, our full Paris restaurants guide, Paris hotels guide, Paris bars guide, Paris wineries guide, and Paris experiences guide cover the full spectrum across price tiers.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the defining dish or idea at La Table de Maïna?
- The database does not include specific dish names or tasting notes for La Table de Maïna, and fabricating them would misrepresent the kitchen. What the record does confirm is a fusion orientation recognised by Michelin's Plate award in both 2024 and 2025, which points to a kitchen operating with consistent quality across its menu rather than relying on a single signature item. The 4.8 Google rating across 593 reviews reinforces that assessment.
- Can I walk in to La Table de Maïna?
- Booking policy details are not confirmed in the current data. However, a Michelin Plate-recognised address in Paris with nearly 600 Google reviews at a €€ price point tends to fill quickly on weekends. Checking in advance is the practical approach; the restaurant's position in Montrouge rather than central Paris means it draws primarily from the local residential audience, which typically creates a more predictable booking window than destination-driven addresses in the centre.
- What is the must-try dish at La Table de Maïna?
- Specific dish details are not available in the verified data, so recommending individual items would go beyond what can be responsibly confirmed. What the awards record (Michelin Plate, 2024 and 2025) and the 4.8 Google score establish is that the kitchen's overall output clears a consistent quality bar within the Paris fusion mid-market. For verified dish recommendations, the restaurant's own current menu is the reliable source.
At a Glance
A quick look at comparable venues, using the data we have on file.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| La Table de Maïna | This venue | €€ |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative, €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine, €€€€ | €€€€ |
| L'Ambroisie | French, Classic Cuisine, €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine, €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Plénitude | Contemporary French, €€€€ | €€€€ |
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