.png)
A Michelin Plate-recognised address in the Luberon village of Mérindol, La Terrasse des Cigales brings Provençal cooking rooted in the rhythms of the surrounding landscape. Priced at the accessible €€ tier and carrying a 4.7 Google rating across 630 reviews, it represents the kind of village restaurant where regional identity drives the menu rather than decorating it.
Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.
- Address
- 21 Rue des Cigales, 84360 Mérindol, France
- Phone
- +33 9 80 42 66 49
- Website
- laterrassedescigales.fr

Where the Luberon Meets the Table
The Luberon plateau shapes everything south of Apt: the quality of light, the pace of markets, and the logic of what ends up on a plate. In Mérindol, a compact village of stone houses above the Durance valley, that logic plays out in the kind of restaurant that regional France does quietly well, a terrace address that anchors itself to the season and the surrounding land rather than to any grand culinary statement. La Terrasse des Cigales is a restaurant in Mérindol, France, serving Traditional Provençal cooking at €€ pricing. The name references the cicadas that define Provençal summer, and the setting carries through on that promise: open air, the faint mineral warmth of limestone underfoot, and a menu framing that reflects the Provence terroir rather than gesturing at it.
This is not the register of Mirazur in Menton or the creative ambition of AM par Alexandre Mazzia in Marseille. Those Michelin-starred rooms operate at the top of the French southern tier, with tasting menus priced and paced accordingly. La Terrasse des Cigales sits in a different, arguably more useful category: the Michelin Plate-recognised village restaurant, priced at €€, where the cooking earns recognition without demanding the financial or logistical commitment of a full gastronomic evening. The Michelin Plate, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, signals food prepared with care and consistency rather than theatrical ambition. That distinction matters when choosing where to eat in the Luberon.
Provençal Cooking and What It Actually Means Here
Provençal cuisine has suffered from overuse as a marketing category. Across the region, menus claim the label while pulling ingredients from wholesale suppliers no different from those used in Paris. What distinguishes restaurants that earn Michelin recognition in villages like Mérindol is precisely the refusal of that shortcut. The Luberon sits within reach of some of the most productive agricultural terrain in the south of France: the olive groves of the Alpilles, the market gardens of Cavaillon, the truffle grounds east of Apt, and the vine-covered slopes producing Luberon AOC wines. A Provençal kitchen with genuine terroir grounding draws from these sources, and the rhythm of the menu shifts accordingly across the calendar.
The €€ price positioning at La Terrasse des Cigales places it within the tier where village Provence dining performs most honestly. It is a bracket below the celebrated Provençal addresses like Alain Llorca in La Colle-sur-Loup or La Bastide Bourrelly in Cabriès, and several tiers below the multi-starred rooms at Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen or Troisgros in Ouches. That positioning is a feature, not a compromise. Some of the most honest regional cooking in France happens in this middle tier, where kitchens cannot rely on spectacle and must instead deliver on flavour and sourcing.
The Provençal kitchen at this level typically works around olive oil rather than butter, leans on aromatics including thyme, rosemary, and savory that grow wild on the surrounding garrigue, and builds dishes from vegetables that arrive at peak maturity from nearby markets. Tomatoes in August from the Vaucluse carry a depth that has no equivalent in off-season produce. Courgettes, aubergines, and peppers anchor the summer table; root vegetables and game shift the register toward autumn. A restaurant holding a Michelin Plate across consecutive years in this context is one that handles those seasonal materials with consistent competence.
Mérindol and Its Place in the Luberon Dining Map
Mérindol occupies a quieter corner of the Luberon than the more tourist-dense villages of Gordes or Bonnieux. The village sits at the western end of the Petit Luberon, closer to the Durance and the outskirts of the Pays d'Aix than to the honey-stone hilltop villages that draw weekend visitors in high season. That relative quietness is part of what defines the local dining character. Restaurants here serve a mix of local residents and visitors who have moved beyond the most-photographed routes, and kitchens tend to cook to satisfy repeat diners rather than to capture a single transaction.
A 4.7 Google rating drawn from 653 reviews is a meaningful signal at this scale. For context, village restaurants in the Luberon that sustain that volume of reviews, rather than the handful of ratings typical of smaller addresses, are places where word has spread well beyond the immediate locality. The combination of sustained volume and a high score points to consistent execution across seasons and clientele types, which aligns with the two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions.
For visitors building a Luberon itinerary, Mérindol positions well as a base or day stop. The village is accessible from Aix-en-Provence and from Avignon, both of which connect to regional and international transport. The wider French regional dining context is worth understanding before arriving: addresses like Auberge du Vieux Puits in Fontjoncouse, Bras in Laguiole, and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern show the range of what Michelin-tracked regional cooking looks like across France, from the three-star heritage rooms to the plates that represent the working heart of French provincial dining. La Terrasse des Cigales occupies that provincial tier with purpose. Also of note for context across French regional dining: Flocons de Sel in Megève, Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or, Assiette Champenoise in Reims, and Au Crocodile in Strasbourg illustrate the depth of the country's broader dining map.
Planning Your Visit
La Terrasse des Cigales is located at 21 Rue des Cigales in Mérindol, in the Vaucluse department of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. The €€ pricing makes it accessible for lunch or dinner. Reservations are recommended, especially in summer. The Michelin Plate recognition across 2024 and 2025 suggests a kitchen operating at a consistent standard that rewards a return visit rather than a single pass-through.
Fast Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| La Terrasse des CigalesThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Traditional Provençal | $$ | Michelin Plate | |
| La Bastide du Grand Tilleul | Provencal French-Mediterranean | $$$ | , | Mérindol |
| La Ferme Auberge - Domaine de La Font des Pères | Provençal Farm-to-Table Bistro | $$ | Michelin Plate | Le Beausset |
| Côté Sud | Modern French Provençal | $$ | Michelin Plate | Uchaux |
| Chez Éric | Traditional Provençal French | $$ | Michelin Plate | Montfuron |
| Insitio | Modern Provençal Bistro | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Vaugines |
Continue exploring
More in Mérindol
Restaurants in Mérindol
Browse all →Bars in Mérindol
Browse all →Hotels in Mérindol
Browse all →At a Glance
- Rustic
- Cozy
- Intimate
- Classic
- Casual Hangout
- Group Dining
- Date Night
- Terrace
- Garden
- Open Kitchen
- Standalone
- Beer Program
- Farm To Table
- Local Sourcing
Warm and authentic with wood-fired ambiance; intimate terrasse shaded by fig and mulberry trees in summer, cozy interior with fireplace in winter.

















