
Le Rigmarole on Rue du Grand Prieuré brings an izakaya sensibility to the 11th arrondissement, holding a consistent position inside Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe rankings since 2023. Chef Robert Compagnon translates Japanese drinking-and-eating culture through a French-sourced lens, making it a reference point for the small but serious Paris izakaya scene. Open daily with long hours, it suits both early-evening and late-night visits.
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- Address
- 10 Rue du Grand Prieuré, 75011 Paris, France
- Phone
- +33 1 71 24 58 44
- Website
- lerigmarole.com

The 11th Arrondissement and the Question of What Casual Means
The stretch of the 11th arrondissement between Oberkampf and the Canal Saint-Martin has become the clearest argument in Paris for what a neighbourhood restaurant can be. This is not the Paris of formal white-tablecloth rooms or destination tasting menus, the latter is well-served by rooms like Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Arpège, and Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V. The 11th operates on different terms: long counters, wine poured without ceremony, kitchens that send out food in a rhythm rather than a sequence. Le Rigmarole at 10 Rue du Grand Prieuré sits in that context, but it approaches the format through an izakaya logic that gives it a position distinct from most of its neighbours.
Rue du Grand Prieuré is a short street running parallel to the busier Boulevard du Temple, quiet enough that the building itself registers before the city noise does. The approach is low-key in the way that restaurants confident in their offer tend to be: nothing about the exterior signals ambition, which in this part of Paris reads as intentional rather than modest. What the 11th has taught the city over the past decade is that the most serious cooking does not always announce itself.
Paris and the Izakaya Format
Japanese izakaya culture arrived in Paris earlier than most European capitals, partly because the city's relationship with Japanese cuisine runs deep, Kei represents one end of the Franco-Japanese register, formal and Michelin-weighted, while a growing number of smaller rooms explore the looser, drink-anchored end. The izakaya format as practiced in Osaka and Kyoto, see Benikurage in Osaka and Berangkat in Kyoto for the original context, organises a meal around drinks, with food arriving as punctuation rather than as chapters. That structure suits the 11th's rhythm precisely: the neighbourhood has never been comfortable with fixed-course formality, and izakaya logic gives kitchens permission to cook in a more responsive, less theatrical mode.
Le Rigmarole is among the addresses that have made this format credible in Paris rather than merely novelty. Opinionated About Dining, which tracks casual dining in Europe with granular seriousness, has ranked it at #74 in 2023, #84 in 2024, and #71 in 2025 in its Casual Europe list. Consistency inside that list over three consecutive years is a more meaningful signal than a single-year appearance: it suggests a room that has found its register and held it. The upward movement from 2024 to 2025 adds directional weight to that reading.
What the Format Delivers
The izakaya model, when executed with the sourcing discipline that a French kitchen context demands, produces something that neither pure Japanese nor pure French cooking arrives at alone. French producers supply ingredients that Japanese technique handles differently from classical French preparation: the fat structures, the temperature approaches, the relationship between salt and acid all shift. Chef Robert Compagnon works within that intersection, and the 11th is probably the right neighbourhood for it, a dining public that is sceptical of concept but receptive to execution.
The format also means the meal is not structured around a single decision made at booking. Dishes arrive, drinks inform the next order, the evening extends or contracts according to how it feels. This is not the Paris of L'Ambroisie, where a meal is an event planned in advance and priced at the top of the market. It is closer to the Paris that the 11th has always represented: food taken seriously without being made solemn.
For broader context on how French culinary tradition operates across registers and regions, the multi-generational households of French gastronomy, Troisgros in Ouches, Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or, Bras in Laguiole, and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, illustrate the classical weight that Paris-based izakaya is implicitly in conversation with, even when working against its conventions. Elsewhere in France, mountain-adjacent precision cooking at places like Flocons de Sel in Megève and coastal sourcing at Mirazur in Menton demonstrate how seriously French kitchens treat ingredient provenance, a standard that Le Rigmarole's format quietly inherits.
Hours, Access, and Timing
The practical case for Le Rigmarole is direct. The kitchen opens Wednesday and Thursday from 12:00 to 2:00 PM, and Friday from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. That daily consistency is unusual for a room at this level of critical attention in Paris, where many comparable addresses close on Sunday and Monday. The long opening window means it absorbs both early-evening and late-sitting visitors without forcing a single-service dynamic.
The address, 10 Rue du Grand Prieuré, 75011 Paris, places it in the 11th arrondissement. The 11th is a neighbourhood that rewards arriving on foot: the surrounding streets give context to what the restaurant is doing and why it finds a natural home here rather than in the more touristically organised arrondissements.
Google reviewers rate the room at 4.7 across 236 reviews. The two data points together, strong public reception and sustained specialist-list recognition, suggest a kitchen that works consistently rather than performing for a particular audience.
Planning Your Visit
Le Rigmarole operates Wednesday and Thursday from 12:00 to 2:00 PM, and Friday from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM at 10 Rue du Grand Prieuré, 75011 Paris. OAD Casual Europe ranking: #71 (2025), up from #84 (2024) and #74 (2023). Google rating: 4.7 from 236 reviews.
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Price Lens
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Le RigmaroleThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Izakaya | $$$$ | ||
| Boutique yam'Tcha | $$$$ | Les Halles, Franco-Chinese Fusion Fine Dining | ||
| Guefen | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | 3rd arrondissement, Modern Levantine Seafood | |
| KGB | $$$ | Saint-Germain-des-Prés, Asian-Influenced Contemporary French Bistro | ||
| Fugue | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Gare de l'Est (10th arrondissement), Franco-Japanese Bistronomic | |
| La Plume Rive Droite | $$$$ | , | 1er Arrondissement, Contemporary French-Japanese Fusion |
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