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Modern French Fine Dining

Google: 4.7 · 1,378 reviews

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Paris, France

Saint James Paris

CuisineCreative
Executive ChefSaint James Paris: Grégory Garimbay
Price€€€€
Dress CodeFormal
ServiceFormal
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium
Michelin
Gault & Millau
Relais Chateaux

A 19th-century château in the 16th arrondissement, Saint James Paris holds a Michelin star and Green Star under chef Grégory Garimbay, operating within the Relais & Châteaux network. Laura Gonzalez's interior design and a Guerlain spa frame a restaurant program that places French technique in conversation with seasonal and sustainable sourcing, at a price point that competes with Paris's most serious hotel dining rooms.

Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.

Saint James Paris restaurant in Paris, France
About

A Château in the City, a Kitchen with Credentials

Paris has a category of hotel restaurant that rarely gets the credit it deserves outside certain circles: the property-anchored dining room that operates as a serious culinary program in its own right, rather than an amenity appended to room revenue. Saint James Paris, occupying a 19th-century château on the Place du Chancelier Adenauer in the 16th arrondissement, sits firmly in that tier. The property has held Relais & Châteaux membership for years, and in 2025 the restaurant under chef Grégory Garimbay carries both a Michelin star and a Michelin Green Star — a pairing that, across France and beyond, increasingly signals a kitchen committed to sourcing discipline as much as technical achievement.

The Green Star designation is worth pausing on. Michelin introduced it in 2020 to recognise restaurants whose commitment to sustainable gastronomy is substantive rather than decorative. Earning it alongside a conventional star — as Mirazur in Menton and Bras in Laguiole have done in their respective contexts , positions Saint James Paris within a smaller cohort of French kitchens where sourcing provenance and ecological practice are treated as editorial content, not just box-ticking. That dual recognition shapes how Garimbay's creative menu should be read: the technique is in service of ingredients selected with intention, not the other way around.

The 16th and Its Dining Syntax

The 16th arrondissement reads differently from the cluster of multi-starred restaurants that anchor Paris dining in the 7th, 8th, and 1st. Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Arpège, and Le Meurice Alain Ducasse operate in neighbourhoods where foot traffic and visibility reinforce reputation. The 16th offers something structurally different: residential density, private grounds, and a clientele that tends toward repeat regulars rather than tourist-driven covers. For a château property, that geography is appropriate. The setting imposes a particular kind of discretion, and the kitchen at Saint James Paris operates within it.

Among Paris's €€€€ creative dining tier, the closest structural comparisons are the hotel-anchored rooms: Le Gabriel at La Réserve Paris and the dining program at Blanc occupy a similar position , starred kitchens operating within luxury properties where the full experience extends beyond the plate. Saint James Paris competes in that cohort, where the dining room is assessed not only against other restaurant tables but against the total proposition: setting, service architecture, and the physical environment that frames the meal.

Creative French Through a Sustainable Lens

The editorial angle for a kitchen holding both a Michelin star and a Green Star is what might be called the sourcing-technique dialogue: the degree to which imported methods serve indigenous products rather than overriding them. Across France's most decorated sustainable kitchens, from Flocons de Sel in Megève to Troisgros in Ouches, the animating question is the same: does the technique clarify what the ingredient already is, or does it impose a separate identity onto it? The Green Star signals that Garimbay's kitchen has taken a position on that question.

Creative cuisine in Paris , the classification Saint James Paris operates under , covers a wide range of approaches. At its strongest, it describes kitchens that have absorbed classical French training and then applied that technical base to non-canonical ingredients, seasonal constraints, or cross-cultural reference points. The result is neither fusion nor classical revival, but something that uses the full vocabulary of French professional cooking while directing it toward a different set of priorities. For diners familiar with the progression from Paul Bocuse's generation at L'Auberge du Pont de Collonges through the nouvelle cuisine turn to the sourcing-led programs of the 2010s and 2020s, Saint James Paris represents a recognisable point in that lineage , classical foundation, contemporary sourcing ethics, private estate context.

The Green Star's implicit requirement , that sustainability claims be verifiable, not rhetorical , means the kitchen is accountable to Michelin inspectors on provenance, waste reduction, and supply chain relationships, not only on cooking quality. That accountability is what separates the Green Star cohort from broader claims about local and seasonal menus. In the context of Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern and other multi-generational French houses that have built relationships with specific growers over decades, the rigor of verified provenance is a meaningful signal.

The Laura Gonzalez Interior and Its Function

Laura Gonzalez is one of the more closely watched interior designers in French hospitality, known for interiors that draw on maximalist colour and layered pattern without tipping into visual noise. Her work at Saint James Paris contributes directly to the positioning of the property in a competitive set that extends beyond restaurant tables. The design functions as a statement about the kind of guest experience the property is building: one where the spatial environment carries as much weight as the food program.

In Paris hotel dining, the interior is rarely incidental. The settings at Le Meurice and the Four Seasons George V are inseparable from their reputations; the room is part of the argument. At Saint James Paris, the château architecture and Gonzalez's design create a framework that is specifically Parisian in its reference points , history, craft, decorative complexity , but interpreted through a contemporary sensibility. That combination is deliberate, and it sets a particular register for the dining experience before the first course arrives.

Guerlain Spa and the Full-Day Proposition

The presence of a Guerlain spa on the grounds changes the logic of a visit. Properties with serious spa programs in Paris , and relatively few city-centre hotels can claim the private grounds necessary to operate one at proper scale , attract a different booking pattern than destination-dinner restaurants. Guests more often arrive for a half-day or full-day sequence: treatment, lunch or dinner, the grounds themselves. The Relais & Châteaux network reinforces this pattern; member properties are evaluated on the total guest experience, which creates structural pressure to maintain quality across all touchpoints, not only the kitchen.

For the dining room specifically, this means the reservation pool is not limited to Parisians seeking a dinner table. Hotel guests, spa visitors, and international Relais & Châteaux members who plan itineraries around the network's properties all form part of the clientele. That diversity, combined with a property that is physically set apart from the street, gives the room a character that differs from the open-reservation dynamics of standalone Paris restaurants.

Where Saint James Paris Sits in the Paris Creative Tier

Paris's one-star creative tier is more crowded than it was a decade ago. Kitchens with international training, sustainable sourcing credentials, and hotel or estate settings have multiplied. What differentiates Saint James Paris within that cohort is the combination of factors that are difficult to replicate: private château grounds in a residential arrondissement, Relais & Châteaux membership with its associated service standards, a Guerlain spa partnership, and a restaurant that has now achieved dual Michelin recognition. Each element is available in isolation elsewhere; the specific combination is not.

For diners comparing this to the creative programs at Enrico Bartolini in Milan or JAN in Munich, the Saint James proposition is recognisably European in its ambitions but distinctly Parisian in its delivery: classical technique, sustainable sourcing commitment, and a setting that treats history as a working material rather than a backdrop.

The Google review average of 4.7 across 1,290 reviews reflects a guest base that returns and recommends. For a property at this price tier, that volume of ratings with sustained quality scores is a more reliable signal than any single review.

See the broader context in our full Paris restaurants guide, our full Paris hotels guide, our full Paris bars guide, our full Paris wineries guide, and our full Paris experiences guide.

Planning Your Visit

Saint James Paris is located at 5 Place du Chancelier Adenauer, 75116 Paris. Reservations and enquiries are handled through the property directly at saintjames-paris@relaischateaux.com or by telephone at +33 (0)1 44 05 81 81. Full details are available at saint-james-paris.com. The price range is €€€€, consistent with comparable hotel dining rooms holding Michelin stars in Paris. EP Club rating: 4.8/5.

Quick Reference

Saint James Paris, 5 Pl. du Chancelier Adenauer, 75116 Paris , Michelin 1 Star + Green Star 2025, Relais & Châteaux member, Guerlain spa, creative cuisine under Grégory Garimbay, €€€€.

What Dish Is Saint James Paris Known For?

Saint James Paris operates under a creative cuisine classification, with chef Grégory Garimbay holding both a Michelin star and a Green Star in 2025. The Green Star designation, shared by only a select number of Paris addresses, signals a kitchen where the sourcing of ingredients is as integral to the program as the cooking technique itself. Specific signature dishes are not publicly documented in our records, but the dual Michelin recognition and the kitchen's creative-with-sustainability positioning indicate a menu built around seasonal French produce treated with technical discipline. Reservations and current menu details are leading confirmed directly with the property.

Signature Dishes
Arctic char with almond and plum juiceLobster with spicy sauceChocolate and lichen pod dessertCod with lemon-balm butter
Frequently asked questions

Awards and Standing

A quick look at comparable venues, using the data we have on file.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Romantic
  • Sophisticated
  • Classic
  • Opulent
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Celebration
  • Business Dinner
Experience
  • Garden
  • Terrace
  • Private Dining
  • Historic Building
  • Hotel Restaurant
  • Design Destination
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Sommelier Led
Sourcing
  • Farm To Table
  • Local Sourcing
Views
  • Garden
Dress CodeFormal
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleFormal
Meal PacingExtended Experience

Grand yet intimate setting with exquisite traditional design, fireplace seating, and a library; outdoor garden dining with linden-flower perfume and soft evening lighting creates an enchanting, timeless atmosphere.

Signature Dishes
Arctic char with almond and plum juiceLobster with spicy sauceChocolate and lichen pod dessertCod with lemon-balm butter