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Modern French Vegetable Driven

Google: 4.4 · 428 reviews

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New York City, United States

Le Jardinier New York

CuisineFrench
Price$$$$
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceFormal
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining
We're Smart World

Le Jardinier sits at 610 Lexington Avenue in Midtown, where a produce-driven French menu plays out across a dining room of olive-green velvet and green-veined marble. Seasonal vegetables, sustainably sourced fish, and carefully chosen meats form the structure of the menu, earning the restaurant a place on Opinionated About Dining's North America rankings in both 2024 and 2025. For occasion dining at the upper tier of New York's French table, it occupies a considered, specific niche.

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Le Jardinier New York restaurant in New York City, United States
About

A Room That Commits to Its Argument

The dining room at Le Jardinier makes a case before a single dish arrives. Olive-green velvet furnishings, green-veined marble flooring, and lush plants positioned throughout the space translate the kitchen's produce-first philosophy into architecture. That kind of coherence between interior and menu is relatively rare in New York's upper French tier, where rooms often default to neutral luxury as a hedge against changing fashion. Here, the design is a position, not a backdrop.

The name itself means the gardener, and the room earns it. At the $$$$ price point on Lexington Avenue, Le Jardinier competes in a cohort of French restaurants where the dining room is expected to carry symbolic weight alongside technical ambition. Among that group, the verdant aesthetic is a distinct identifier, which matters considerably when you are booking a table for a milestone occasion and want the setting to do part of the work.

Where Le Jardinier Sits in New York's French Table

New York's upper-end French dining has never been a monolithic category. The city runs from classical luxury houses like Daniel and Café Boulud through the downtown theatricality of Le Coucou to the more relaxed registers of Benoit and Chez Fifi. Le Jardinier occupies its own lane within this spread: a produce-driven French kitchen where vegetables are structural to every dish rather than decorative, operating at a price level where that emphasis is still unusual.

The comparison point that clarifies its position most sharply is Eleven Madison Park, which went fully plant-based in 2021 and operates at a similar price tier. Le Jardinier does not go that far. Carefully sourced meats and sustainable fish remain on the menu, but the hierarchy of the plate tilts toward vegetables and herbs in a way that sets it apart from classically protein-anchored French kitchens like Le Bernardin or Per Se. The We're Smart No Guide, which tracks vegetable-forward restaurants internationally, has noted the concept while flagging that the fully plant-based option remains limited for a menu with this level of green ambition.

Opinionated About Dining, one of the more data-intensive restaurant ranking systems operating in North America, placed Le Jardinier at #276 on its 2024 North America list and moved it to #194 in 2025. That 82-place improvement over a single year is a meaningful signal within that ranking methodology, which aggregates critic and experienced-diner scores rather than relying on a single editorial voice. For comparison, other restaurants at the $$$$ French tier in New York operating at a similar or adjacent format include entries across the OAD list in the 100-300 range, placing Le Jardinier in the upper-middle band of that tier.

The Menu as Occasion Architecture

What makes a restaurant suitable for a milestone meal is partly technical execution and partly the degree to which the menu has a point of view that the occasion can be organized around. Generic luxury menus, however well-executed, tend to flatten into background. Le Jardinier's produce-led French format gives a meal here a specific character: seasonal vegetables, fruits, and herbs as primary actors, with meats and fish in supporting roles.

The awards data references dishes that illustrate how this works in practice. Grilled Spanish octopus with green olives, romesco, and green beans structures a plate around vegetable and legume components as much as the protein. Ora King salmon with smoked chili butter and pak choi uses a premium fish but orients the plate around an Asian-inflected green. Desserts reported in the same source include a Valrhona chocolate crémeux with salted caramel sabayon and a lemon tart with tarragon ice cream, the latter an example of the kitchen's tendency to bring herb-driven brightness into courses where it is not expected.

That sensibility makes the menu legible as a seasonal document. Spring and early summer are the periods when produce-driven French kitchens like this tend to operate at their most expressive, when the ingredient supply aligns most fully with the kitchen's priorities. Autumn brings a different register, with root vegetables and earthier fruit allowing the kitchen to shift register without abandoning its premise. For guests choosing a season for a special occasion, this is a material consideration rather than incidental.

The Midtown location on Lexington Avenue also has practical logic for occasion dining. The address is walkable from several of the city's significant hotels and accessible from multiple transit lines, reducing the logistical friction that can complicate a celebratory evening in outer boroughs or downtown. Pre-theatre or pre-event dinners in this part of the city have a long tradition, and Le Jardinier's format, a full $$$$ French experience rather than a prix-fixe-only lock-in, gives groups some flexibility in how long they occupy the room.

French Produce-Forward Cooking in a Wider American Context

The broader American fine-dining conversation around vegetable-forward menus has moved from novelty to expectation at the leading end of the market. Restaurants like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg and Lazy Bear in San Francisco have built seasonal-produce logic into their operating model at the $$$$ tier. Alinea in Chicago and The French Laundry in Napa approach the same territory from different culinary traditions. Providence in Los Angeles and Emeril's in New Orleans anchor themselves more firmly to protein but incorporate seasonal produce as a primary signal. In New York, Le Jardinier represents the French-kitchen expression of this tendency, distinct from the tasting-menu maximalism of some peers and from the classical protein-first hierarchy of others.

Internationally, the tradition Le Jardinier draws from has precedents in restaurants like Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and, in a different register, Sézanne in Tokyo, where French technique is applied to local and seasonal produce with a lightness that marks a generational shift from the butter-and-reduction anchors of earlier French haute cuisine. Le Jardinier's placement within that international shift gives it a context beyond its OAD ranking.

For a Google reviewer base of 384 responses averaging 4.4 out of 5, the response skews toward guests who found the experience coherent with its premise. That is a meaningful signal for occasion diners, who are more likely than regular visitors to care whether the atmosphere, the food, and the price point feel aligned rather than in tension.

Planning a Visit

Le Jardinier is located at 610 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10022. The restaurant sits in the $$$$ price tier and operates a produce-led French menu with meat and fish. It appeared on Opinionated About Dining's 2024 and 2025 North America rankings (#276 and #194 respectively). For wider context on where it fits in the city's dining scene, see our full New York City restaurants guide. For hotels near the Midtown address, our New York City hotels guide covers the relevant options. Additional city-wide planning resources include our New York City bars guide, our New York City wineries guide, and our New York City experiences guide.

Quick reference: 610 Lexington Ave, Midtown Manhattan | Price tier: $$$$ | OAD North America 2025: #194 | Google: 4.4/5 (384 reviews)

Signature Dishes
Roasted Maine ScallopsHudson Valley DuckHeirloom Beets
Frequently asked questions

Peers You’d Cross-Shop

A small set of peers for context, based on recorded venue fields.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Modern
  • Scenic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Business Dinner
Experience
  • Hotel Restaurant
  • Design Destination
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
  • Sustainable Seafood
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleFormal
Meal PacingLeisurely

Light-filled verdant vision featuring olive-green velvet furnishings, green-veined marble flooring, and lush plants everywhere, evoking a modern greenhouse.

Signature Dishes
Roasted Maine ScallopsHudson Valley DuckHeirloom Beets