Les Jardins Sauvages - La Grée des Landes
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A Michelin Plate-recognised table inside La Grée des Landes, Les Jardins Sauvages brings modern cuisine to rural Brittany through the combined lens of chefs Gwern Khoo and Ben Tham. The mid-range pricing sits accessibly against the quality of the recognition, and the setting in La Gacilly gives it a character that urban fine dining cannot replicate.
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- Address
- Les Tablettes, 56200 La Gacilly, France
- Phone
- +33 2 99 08 50 50
- Website
- lagreedeslandes.com

Where Brittany's Landscape Shapes the Plate
La Gacilly is not a city that announces itself loudly. Tucked into the Morbihan department of southern Brittany, this small market town has long been associated with the Yves Rocher botanical empire and a quieter, more considered relationship with the natural world than France's bigger culinary destinations. When serious cooking takes root in places like this, it tends to do so with a different logic than the urban fine-dining circuit: the sourcing geography is tighter, the clientele more local, and the chef's point of reference shifts from peer competition toward something closer to place. Les Jardins Sauvages, the restaurant at La Grée des Landes, operates inside that context, and the Michelin Plate recognition it has carried consecutively through 2024 and 2025 confirms that what is happening here registers beyond the local radius.
The Setting Before the First Course
Approaching La Grée des Landes, the dominant sensory fact is green. Brittany's bocage countryside closes in around the property, and the transition from road to estate carries the kind of deceleration that the leading rural dining destinations use deliberately. The restaurant takes its name from this environment. Jardins sauvages, wild gardens, is not incidental branding: it signals an orientation toward the untamed, the foraged, and the seasonal rhythms of a specific patch of Atlantic French landscape. Where Paris's leading tables, from Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen to the contemporary heavyweights at Assiette Champenoise in Reims, operate in urban pressure-cooker environments where comparison is constant and visibility is the currency, Les Jardins Sauvages works in relative seclusion. That seclusion is part of the proposition.
Two Chefs, One Kitchen: The Making of a Modern Cuisine in Rural France
The editorial angle here is not the biography of any single cook but the broader phenomenon of international training meeting French terroir in an unexpected geography. Gwern Khoo and Ben Tham share the kitchen at Les Jardins Sauvages, and the fact that two named chefs carry joint credit is itself a signal worth reading. In French fine dining, the singular chef-proprietor narrative has long been the dominant mode, from the generational continuity visible at Troisgros in Ouches to the deeply individual vision at Bras in Laguiole. A collaborative kitchen model, particularly one in a rural Breton setting, represents a different structural choice. It suggests a culinary conversation rather than a monologue.
The names Khoo and Tham carry Southeast Asian resonance into a firmly French context. This is not unusual in the broader arc of modern cuisine, where chefs trained across multiple continents bring layered reference points to European kitchens. What matters in practice is whether that cross-cultural foundation translates into a coherent dining experience rather than a confused one. The Michelin Plate, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, suggests a kitchen that has found its register. The Michelin Plate designation marks cooking that the inspectors consider good enough to recommend, positioned below starred recognition but above the undifferentiated mass of unlisted restaurants. Holding it across two consecutive years indicates consistency, not a single good season.
Les Jardins Sauvages operates in a different register from all of these, at a mid-range price point and in a setting that prioritises quiet rather than prestige signal. That is a deliberate competitive position, not a concession.
Modern Cuisine and the Mid-Range Promise
The cuisine type listed is modern cuisine, a broad designation that in practice covers anything from technically rigorous tasting menus to relaxed seasonal cooking with contemporary plating sensibilities. At the €€ price range, Les Jardins Sauvages sits well below the four-figure territory occupied by the leading Parisian addresses and far below mountain luxury like Flocons de Sel in Megève. In rural Brittany, that mid-range positioning makes the Michelin recognition more, not less, meaningful: the inspectors are evaluating cooking on its own terms, not on the strength of a prestigious address or an established house reputation.
Modern cuisine in a botanically oriented environment has a particular logic. The wild garden framing suggests that the kitchen's sourcing vocabulary draws heavily from the surrounding region, with foraged and cultivated plants likely playing a structural role in the menu's seasonality. Brittany's Atlantic climate produces exceptional vegetables, shellfish, and dairy, and the coastal proximity means that the fish supply is traceable to short supply chains. These are not invented virtues: they are geographical facts that define what good cooking in this part of France can look like when a kitchen chooses to use them. The comparison point here is not other Brittany restaurants but any kitchen, at whatever price level, that claims a local sourcing identity. The question is always whether the sourcing shows in the cooking, and a sustained Michelin Plate over two years suggests the answer is yes.
These are obviously different in scale and ambition, but they share an interest in the specificity of place as the organising principle of modern cuisine. Les Jardins Sauvages operates at a smaller amplitude, in a quieter town, with a price point that removes the high-stakes entry anxiety of starred dining.
Planning a Visit
La Gacilly is a deliberate destination rather than a transit stop. The town sits in the Morbihan, reachable from Rennes or Vannes, and a meal at Les Jardins Sauvages fits logically within a longer Breton stay rather than a day trip from a major city. The €€ pricing makes it accessible for extended visits where the restaurant is one element among several rather than the single focal point of a trip. Given the rural hotel setting at La Grée des Landes, an overnight stay turns the meal into a full experience of the environment the kitchen draws from. For what else the area offers, the La Gacilly bars guide, the wineries guide, and the experiences guide cover the surrounding cultural and hospitality offer in full.
In Context: Similar Options
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Les Jardins Sauvages - La Grée des LandesThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Bio & Locavore French Gastronomic | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | |
| Roscanvec | Modern Breton Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | Old Town Vannes |
| L'Attilio - Château de Noirieux | French Gastronomic with Italian Influences | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | Briollay |
| La Citadelle | Modern French with South American influences | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | historic center |
| Le 1825 - La Table | Modern French Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | Gesté |
| POPS | Modern French Bistronomic | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Pornichet |
Continue exploring
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Restaurants in La Gacilly
Browse all →At a Glance
- Rustic
- Elegant
- Scenic
- Intimate
- Sophisticated
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Garden
- Extensive Wine List
- Natural Wine
- Farm To Table
- Organic
- Local Sourcing
- Garden
Harmonious, serene, and sober atmosphere with natural light through glass walls overlooking the potager and gardens, creating a peaceful connection to nature.









