Lutèce

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A seasonal French bistro in Georgetown earning Opinionated About Dining recognition three years running and a 2024 Michelin Plate, Lutèce operates on a tightly edited menu that pivots with the market. The exposed-brick dining room on Wisconsin Avenue reads as a proper neighborhood restaurant, while the wine list — 185 selections with French strengths — and thoughtfully constructed cocktails keep the experience grounded in craft rather than spectacle.

Georgetown's French Counter, Taken Seriously
Wisconsin Avenue in Georgetown has never been short of restaurants, but it has historically been short of French restaurants that eat like they mean it. The better bistros in Washington's more central neighborhoods — whether the sleek Modern French formats around 14th Street or the fine-dining room of Jônt operating at a wholly different price tier — tend to leave Georgetown as secondary real estate for French cooking. Lutèce, at 1522 Wisconsin Ave NW, runs counter to that pattern. Opinionated About Dining placed it at #290 in North America for 2025, following a #293 ranking in 2024 and a Highly Recommended designation in 2023. That three-year upward trajectory in a demanding rankings system signals something more durable than a good opening year.
The room itself frames the experience before the menu arrives. Exposed brick, hardwood floors, and a pressed-tin ceiling create the kind of physical environment that French bistro culture has always depended on: surfaces that absorb the noise of a full room without deadening it, materials that suggest continuity rather than renovation. Bottles of wine line the shelves above the dining room, functioning simultaneously as decoration and as a readable argument about where the kitchen's priorities sit. For date nights and celebratory dinners in Georgetown specifically, the room has developed a distinct reputation , that Opinionated About Dining note about it being a "charming, date-night oasis" reflects what regulars already know.
The Arc of a Meal
French bistro cooking in America has split into two broad modes. The first is nostalgic reproduction: classic dishes rendered faithfully, with consistency as the primary virtue. The second is a more restless approach, where the bistro format , tight menu, convivial room, accessible price point relative to fine dining , becomes a vehicle for seasonal and technically precise cooking that competes upward rather than backward. Lutèce operates in the second mode. Chef Matt Conroy runs a menu that is deliberately short, offering only a handful of appetizers and mains at any given time, and that menu shifts with the market rather than the calendar. That constraint is editorial: fewer dishes mean each one has to justify its presence.
The meal is constructed to move deliberately from lighter, acidic opening notes through richer main-course territory. Dishes like scallop crudo with blood orange and yuzu koshō demonstrate how that opening logic works , citrus acidity and the low-level heat of fermented pepper paste cut through the richness of raw scallop, producing something that reads as French in its precision and Japanese-influenced in its seasoning. The seasonal menu's tendency to incorporate ingredients like razor clam-studded farro alongside cod places Lutèce in a coastal, produce-driven tradition that shares more DNA with the lighter end of contemporary French cooking than with the cream-heavy bistro canon. Two-course meals price at the $$$ tier for cuisine, which positions Lutèce above casual neighborhood dining but well below the tasting-menu formats at minibar or the ambitious counter experiences that anchor the city's fine-dining tier.
Dessert is not an afterthought here. The passion-fruit baba au rhum that appears on the menu is a structural signal: baba au rhum is a technically specific preparation, one that requires careful syrup management and timing to execute properly, and the addition of passion fruit updates a classical form with tropical acidity rather than simply sweetening it. Skipping dessert at Lutèce means missing the course where the kitchen's willingness to reframe French classics is most visible.
The Wine Program and What It Tells You
Sommelier Chris Ray oversees a list of 185 selections drawn from a cellar of approximately 650 bottles. The program's stated strengths are French, which aligns predictably with the kitchen's orientation, but the breadth , 650 inventory against 185 selections , suggests a list built for depth in specific areas rather than broad coverage. Pricing sits at the $$ tier within the wine program (a range of pricing, with some bottles under $50 and some above $100), which makes the list accessible enough that ordering a second bottle becomes a realistic mid-dinner conversation rather than a budget calculation. Corkage runs $35 for guests who bring their own. For a neighborhood bistro in Georgetown, a corkage fee at that level allows serious wine drinkers to bring bottles from personal cellars without feeling penalized. General Manager David Sales and the team under The Popal Group , the ownership structure behind Lutèce , appear to have calibrated the wine experience as an integral part of the format rather than a secondary revenue stream.
Washington's contemporary dining scene has developed several distinct tiers. At the high end, destination restaurants like Jônt operate as tasting-menu commitments. Mid-range contemporary cooking has expanded significantly, with venues like Oyster Oyster building reputations around sustainability-led New American menus, and Albi and Causa occupying the higher end of the neighborhood-restaurant tier with distinct regional identities. Lutèce holds its own tier: a French bistro with genuine critical standing, priced accessibly relative to its peer set, operating in a neighborhood that rewards consistency. The 2024 Michelin Plate, combined with three consecutive Opinionated About Dining recognitions, places it in a competitive set that punches above the Georgetown zip code.
Planning Your Visit
Lutèce is at 1522 Wisconsin Ave NW in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. The restaurant serves lunch and dinner, and given the tight seasonal menu that can change quickly, visiting during peak seasonal transitions , late autumn into winter, or late spring , tends to surface the most compelling iterations of the kitchen's market-driven approach. The wine list's French depth makes it worth consulting with the sommelier rather than ordering by the glass alone. Given the bistro's standing in OAD rankings and its Michelin recognition, reservations are advisable, particularly for weekend dinner. The Google rating of 4.5 across 421 reviews reflects a consistency that extends across different visitor types and occasions. For a broader look at Washington's dining options across all price tiers and cuisines, see our full Washington, D.C. restaurants guide, or explore hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences across the city. For context on how French Contemporary cooking performs at different price points across the country, the range runs from neighborhood bistros like Lutèce up through formal rooms such as Per Se in New York, Le Bernardin, The French Laundry in Napa, Addison in San Diego, and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the atmosphere like at Lutèce?
- The dining room runs on exposed brick, hardwood floors, and a pressed-tin ceiling, with wine bottles shelved above the room. It reads as a classic bistro environment , warm and convivial without being loud. Opinionated About Dining, which ranked Lutèce #290 in North America in 2025, described it as a "charming, date-night oasis." The price tier ($$) and Michelin Plate recognition confirm it as a serious neighborhood restaurant rather than a casual drop-in spot.
- What should I order at Lutèce?
- The menu is short and seasonal, so specific dishes rotate, but the kitchen under Chef Matt Conroy has shown a consistent approach: lighter, acid-forward appetizers built around seafood and bright citrus notes, main courses that incorporate grains and coastal proteins, and desserts that rework classical French forms with modern seasonal additions. Opinionated About Dining has specifically noted the scallop crudo, cod with razor clam farro, and the passion-fruit baba au rhum as representative of the kitchen's approach. The wine list, with French strengths across 185 selections, pairs well with the bistro format.
- Is Lutèce suitable for children?
- The bistro format and $$ price point make Lutèce more accessible than Washington's tasting-menu rooms, but the emphasis on a carefully paced, course-driven meal and a wine-forward dining environment means it is calibrated toward adult diners. Families with older children comfortable with a relaxed, multi-course French dinner in a traditional bistro setting will find it suitable. For more casual or family-oriented dining options across Washington, D.C., see our full D.C. restaurants guide.
Nearby-ish Comparables
Comparable venues for orientation, based on our database fields.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lutèce | French, Contemporary | $$ | This venue |
| Albi | United States, Middle Eastern | $$$$ | United States, Middle Eastern, $$$$ |
| Causa | Peruvian | $$$$ | Peruvian, $$$$ |
| Oyster Oyster | New American, Vegetarian, Vegetarian (Sustainable) | $$$ | New American, Vegetarian, Vegetarian (Sustainable), $$$ |
| Bresca | Modern French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Gravitas | New American, Contemporary | $$$$ | New American, Contemporary, $$$$ |
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