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A Michelin Plate-recognised address in the heart of Périgueux, Le Pétrocore brings modern technique to the produce-saturated larder of the Dordogne. Earning consecutive Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025, it occupies the mid-tier of the city's dining scene alongside peers such as Hercule Poireau and L'Épicurien, and carries a 4.9 Google rating across 121 reviews.
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- Address
- 15bis Rue Eguillerie, 24000 Périgueux, France
- Phone
- +33 7 60 25 38 47
- Website
- restaurant-lepetrocore.fr

Where the Périgord Larder Meets Modern Menu Logic
Rue Eguillerie sits close to the old Roman core of Périgueux, where the city's medieval quarter tightens into narrow stone streets before opening onto cathedral squares. Arriving at Le Pétrocore, you are already inside one of France's most produce-laden départements: the Dordogne supplies black truffles, foie gras, walnuts, and duck confit to restaurant kitchens across the country, and the region's identity as a gastronomic source rather than a gastronomic destination is something the more thoughtful tables here have spent years correcting. Le Pétrocore, holding consecutive Michelin Plates for 2024 and 2025, belongs to a small group of Périgueux addresses that argue the produce should be finished and served where it is grown.
The Architecture of the Menu
Modern cuisine as a category covers significant ground in France, running from stripped-back bistronomy to technically complex tasting menus. What distinguishes the more purposeful mid-tier practitioners is how the menu itself is organised: not as a list of ingredients, but as a sequence of decisions about what the Périgord larder does when subjected to contemporary technique. At Le Pétrocore, the recognition across two consecutive years indicates a kitchen operating with consistent quality and defined identity. That distinction matters in a city where the dining tier ranges from the more elaborate €€€ offer at L'Essentiel down through a cluster of €€ modern cuisine rooms including Hercule Poireau and L'Épicurien.
Within the €€ bracket, the question is less about price and more about editorial intent on the plate. The recognition, granted for cooking quality rather than luxury of setting or service formality, signals that the kitchen's decisions are coherent and technically sound. Across France, the kitchens in this cohort tend to construct menus around a clear product logic: seasonal anchors, regional sourcing as a structural principle rather than a marketing note, and technique that reads as purposeful rather than decorative. Le Pétrocore's consistent recognition through both the 2024 and 2025 Michelin cycles suggests that logic is in place here.
Périgueux in Its Wider French Context
It is useful to place Périgueux relative to the broader French restaurant hierarchy. The country's most-discussed modern cuisine addresses, tables like Mirazur in Menton, Troisgros in Ouches, or Bras in Laguiole, operate in a different tier from anything in a provincial city like Périgueux. Even Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen or Flocons de Sel in Megève belong to a conversation about accumulated recognition and infrastructure that small-city addresses rarely enter. What Périgueux can offer, and what Le Pétrocore represents, is a grounded regional proposition: access to some of France's most sought-after raw ingredients at a price tier that the capital's restaurants structurally cannot match. The €€ positioning means the kitchen's sourcing ambition is not subsidised by a €200-per-head tasting menu; it has to be justified at mid-market prices, which is a more honest test of whether regional produce actually drives the cooking.
For comparison, internationally recognised modern cuisine rooms at Frantzén in Stockholm or FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai represent a price and prestige tier several steps removed from what Périgueux offers. The Dordogne's value is in specificity of place, not competition on global ranking tables. Le Pétrocore's comparable set is local and regional, not international.
The Seasonal Timing Question
The Dordogne's culinary calendar has two dominant peaks. Black truffle season runs from roughly December through February, when Périgueux hosts its own truffle market and the département supplies a significant portion of France's Tuber melanosporum harvest. Any kitchen working with genuine local product in this window is operating with one of France's most time-specific ingredients at its most concentrated. The second peak is autumn, when walnut harvest and the early duck season align. For a modern cuisine kitchen drawing on regional produce, both windows represent the most direct connection between menu and geography. Planning a visit around either period increases the likelihood that the kitchen's sourcing commitments are being expressed at their most direct.
Spring and summer bring a different register, lighter and more vegetable-forward, as the region's market gardens come into season. This is worth noting for travellers arriving in warmer months: the Périgord larder in summer is less associated with its famous luxury products and more with the kind of fresh-market cooking that defines provincial French tables at their most direct.
How Le Pétrocore Sits in Périgueux's Dining Options
Périgueux has a modest but coherent restaurant offer for a city of its size. The Italian option at Café Louise sits outside the regional cuisine conversation entirely. Oxalis adds further range to the choice available. Within the modern cuisine cluster, Le Pétrocore's dual Michelin Plate recognition gives it a documented quality signal that not all €€ peers carry. A Google rating of 4.9 across 145 reviews is a high consistency score for a restaurant of this scale, and it suggests the experience is replicable rather than dependent on ideal conditions.
Planning Your Visit
Le Pétrocore is located at 15 Rue Eguillerie, 24000 Périgueux, within walking distance of the city's medieval centre. The price tier places it at about $50 per person. As with most well-regarded small-city restaurants in France, advance booking is advisable, particularly during the truffle season peak in January and February when tables in Périgueux are under greater demand. Reservations are recommended.
Peers in This Market
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Le Pétrocore | Modern Périgord French Fine Dining | $$$ | centre-ville |
| La Taula | Traditional Périgord French | $$$ | Saint-Front |
| Oxalis | Modern French Gastronomique | $$$ | Vieux Périgueux (Old Town) |
| Hercule Poireau | Traditional Périgord French | $$ | centre ville |
| L'Épicurien | French Gastronomic Bistro | $$$ | centre historique |
| Le Seizieme | Traditional French Bistro | $$ | Périgueux |
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