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Michelin Starred Franco Belgian Fine Dining

Google: 4.8 · 149 reviews

← Collection
CuisineCreative
Executive ChefChristophe Hardiquest
Price€€€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityIntimate
Michelin
Les Grandes Tables Du Monde
The Best Chef
Opinionated About Dining
La Liste
We're Smart World

Menssa occupies the address where Christophe Hardiquest ran Bon Bon, reframed around a counter format, Belgian terroir, and a serious plant-based programme. The Michelin-starred kitchen draws heavily on woodland ingredients and local culinary assets, with a deliberately limited number of covers that keeps the experience close and precise. Ranked 230th in Opinionated About Dining's Classical in Europe list for 2025 and recognised by Les Grandes Tables du Monde, it is one of the more considered creative addresses in the Brussels arc.

Menssa restaurant in Woluwe-Saint-Pierre, Belgium
About

Avenue de Tervueren, Reimagined

Avenue de Tervueren is one of Brussels' longer, more ceremonial arteries, running eastward through the wooded corridor that connects the European quarter to the Forêt de Soignes. The stretch through Woluwe-Saint-Pierre carries a residential gravity that most restaurant addresses in Brussels' inner ring lack: quieter, more settled, with the kind of neighbourhood character that makes a counter-format dining room feel like a genuine discovery rather than a destination engineered for foot traffic. Menssa sits at number 453 on that avenue, at the same address that housed Bon Bon for years, and the change of name marks a deliberate re-orientation of what the kitchen is doing and why.

Belgium's creative dining circuit has always occupied an unusual position in European terms. It lacks the international visibility of Paris or Copenhagen, yet produces a disproportionate number of kitchens working at serious technical levels, many of them outside the capital itself. Hof van Cleve - Floris Van Der Veken in Kruishoutem, Boury in Roeselare, and Zilte in Antwerp all demonstrate that Belgium's leading creative tier is distributed rather than centralised. Within Brussels itself, the Woluwe-Saint-Pierre corridor has historically punched above its weight for fine dining, and Menssa continues that pattern.

Counter Dining and the Belgian Woodland

The format at Menssa is built around the counter, with a deliberately limited number of covers. Counter dining in this context is not theatre for its own sake: in Belgium, as in Japan, the restricted seating format signals a kitchen organised around precision and a specific guest-to-cook ratio rather than maximised throughput. It is the same logic that positions Willem Hiele in Oudenburg and Bartholomeus in Heist as distinctive addresses in Belgium's creative tier, where intimacy of format becomes part of the editorial statement.

What makes Menssa's culinary direction particularly specific to its geography is the emphasis on woodland ingredients. The Forêt de Soignes, which begins just east of the restaurant's address, is one of the largest beech forests in Belgium, and the broader tradition of cooking with foraged and forest-adjacent produce has deep roots in Belgian and Flemish kitchen culture. Mushrooms, bark-aged preparations, game, and the full spectrum of ingredients that emerge from temperate deciduous woodland define a culinary vocabulary that is neither French nor Flemish in origin but genuinely pan-Belgian. At Menssa, that vocabulary functions as the primary flavour logic rather than a decorative accent, distinguishing the kitchen's approach from the more classically French-aligned creative cooking at addresses like Bozar Restaurant in Brussels.

The Plant-Based Programme as Structural Commitment

One of the more significant signals about where Belgian creative dining is heading comes from Menssa's plant-based offer. It is not a menu adaptation or a secondary track for non-meat diners: the kitchen presents 100% plant-based dishes at the same technical level as the rest of the menu. That parity matters because it reflects a broader shift in how serious European kitchens are treating plant-based cooking, moving it from accommodation to ambition.

The comparison point here is instructive. At a city like Paris, plant-based ambition at the creative tier remains relatively rare, with Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen and its peers still operating within frameworks where protein-led menus are the reference. In Milan, Enrico Bartolini similarly anchors its creative output in more conventional ingredient hierarchies. Menssa's decision to treat plant-based cooking as structurally equivalent to the rest of the menu places it in a smaller peer set across Europe, where the forest and field are given equal weight to the sea and the pasture.

Awards Context and Peer Positioning

Menssa holds a Michelin star, first awarded in 2024 and retained in 2025, which places it within Brussels' one-star tier rather than the two-star bracket. The distinction matters in practical terms: a one-star address at the €€€€ price point in a neighbourhood like Woluwe-Saint-Pierre signals a kitchen operating at a level that requires commitment from the diner without the full formality of a two-star experience. The accessible seriousness of the format is part of the point.

Beyond Michelin, the 2025 recognition picture is more layered. Menssa was awarded Les Grandes Tables du Monde membership in 2025, a designation that operates as a peer-selected signal of quality across the international creative dining circuit. La Liste's 2025 ranking places the kitchen at 75 points, and the Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe ranking places it at number 230 for 2025. Taken together, those three signals from independent classification systems create a consistent picture of a kitchen operating in the upper-middle tier of European creative dining, well above the local neighbourhood reference and well within the set that serious diners treat as obligatory research when building a Brussels itinerary.

The Google review score of 4.8 from 125 reviews adds a further data point: it suggests a guest experience that maps closely to the kitchen's formal recognition, without the common gap between critical acclaim and actual diner satisfaction that affects some technically ambitious restaurants.

Where Menssa Sits in Woluwe-Saint-Pierre's Dining Range

Woluwe-Saint-Pierre's restaurant offer spans a wider range than the address might suggest. At the neighbourhood level, Bottega Vannini provides a credible Italian option at the €€ tier, and Le Mucha covers classic cuisine at the same price point. Sanzaru sits at €€€ with a modern cuisine focus. Menssa operates at €€€€, which places it in a different category entirely: it is not competing with the neighbourhood brasserie tier but with Brussels' broader fine dining circuit, and it holds its position within that circuit on the strength of its awards record and format precision rather than proximity to the city centre.

For visitors building a broader Brussels or Belgian dining programme, our full Woluwe-Saint-Pierre restaurants guide maps the neighbourhood in full, while hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in Woluwe-Saint-Pierre are covered in separate guides. Within Belgium's broader creative dining circuit, addresses like d'Eugénie à Emilie in Baudour and L'Eau Vive in Arbre offer useful comparison points for the register of cooking that Menssa is working in.

Planning a Visit

Menssa is located at Avenue de Tervueren 453, 1150 Woluwe-Saint-Pierre, accessible by tram from central Brussels via the Tervueren line. Given the limited cover count and the restaurant's current awards momentum in 2025, booking well in advance is advisable; the combination of Les Grandes Tables du Monde membership and a retained Michelin star generates the kind of international interest that compresses availability quickly. The €€€€ price tier is consistent with a full counter tasting experience. No specific booking method or hours are confirmed in available records, so contacting the restaurant directly or monitoring its website for reservation access is the practical starting point.

Frequently asked questions

Cuisine-First Comparison

A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Modern
  • Intimate
  • Sophisticated
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Business Dinner
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Sommelier Led
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
  • Organic
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Warm, convivial atmosphere with modern natural design featuring an undulating walnut counter and overhanging wooden tree, blending elegance and intimacy.