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Hanoi, Vietnam

Senté (Nguyen Quang Bich Street)

CuisineVietnamese Contemporary
Price₫₫
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Michelin

Senté on Nguyễn Quang Bích brings Vietnamese contemporary cooking to one of Hoàn Kiếm's quieter streets, earning consecutive Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025. The mid-range price point sits well below Hanoi's premium Vietnamese Contemporary tier, making Michelin recognition accessible without the four-course commitment. With 1,256 Google reviews averaging 4.7 stars, the kitchen's consistency reads clearly in the numbers.

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Address
20 P. Nguyễn Quang Bích, Cửa Đông, Hoàn Kiếm, Hà Nội, Vietnam
Phone
+84 911 048 920
Website
sente.vn
Senté (Nguyen Quang Bich Street) restaurant in Hanoi, Vietnam
About

A Quieter Street, A Considered Kitchen

Nguyễn Quang Bích runs parallel to the busier arteries feeding Hoàn Kiếm's Old Quarter, and arriving here feels like a deliberate deceleration. The street's scale is residential rather than commercial, and Senté reads against that backdrop as a restaurant that has chosen its address carefully. There is no neon, no queue-management clipboard. The approach sets an expectation the kitchen appears to sustain: something considered, sourced with purpose, priced for regulars as much as for visitors.

Within Hanoi's Vietnamese Contemporary category, Senté occupies a specific position. Gia and comparable ₫₫₫₫ addresses represent the premium end of the same tradition, where multi-course menus and elaborate technique carry prices that narrow the audience. Senté operates at ₫₫, a mid-range bracket that places it alongside everyday Vietnamese dining on cost while delivering a kitchen recognised by Michelin two years running.

What Michelin Plates Mean in This Context

The Michelin Plate, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, signals consistent recognition from Michelin. In a city where Michelin's Vietnam coverage is still relatively recent and the starred tier is small, consecutive Plate recognition carries weight as a consistency marker rather than a consolation prize. It places Senté inside a defined peer group: restaurants that Michelin inspectors have returned to, found reliable, and continued to endorse. A Google average of 4.7 across 1,340 reviews reinforces that the inspector's assessment and the wider diner experience align closely.

For comparison, Tầm Vị occupies a similar price tier while staying within a more traditional Vietnamese register. Senté's contemporary framing distinguishes it: the cuisine type points toward technique and presentation choices that engage with Vietnamese ingredients on terms informed by current cooking ideas, rather than reproducing heritage formats unchanged. That distinction matters when reading the Michelin recognition, which in the contemporary category tends to reward exactly that kind of disciplined translation.

Ethical Sourcing as a Kitchen Position

Vietnamese contemporary cooking at its most purposeful has increasingly engaged with sourcing questions that older fine-dining frameworks in the country largely ignored. The shift tracks a broader regional pattern: across Vietnam's emerging restaurant scene, from Anan Saigon in Ho Chi Minh City to Nén Danang in Da Nang, kitchens working in the contemporary register have made producer relationships and ingredient traceability part of their identity rather than a footnote on the menu. The ₫₫ price point at Senté makes that approach more consequential.

Hanoi's position in northern Vietnam gives it access to a distinct agricultural corridor. Highland vegetables from the north, freshwater fish from the Red River delta, and herb varieties that don't travel well to southern kitchens are all within closer reach here than they would be in Ho Chi Minh City. A kitchen on Nguyễn Quang Bích that takes sourcing seriously is working with a different ingredient palette than its Vietnamese Contemporary peers further south, and the recognition reflects, in part, what a kitchen can achieve when geography and intention are aligned. For readers tracking this trend across the country, Bờm in Ho Chi Minh City, Little Bear, and Madame Lam offer useful southern counterpoints in the same contemporary category.

Where Senté Sits in the Hanoi Scene

Hoàn Kiếm hosts a wide spread of dining formats, from single-dish noodle shops to multi-room tasting menu destinations. Senté's coordinates within that spread are clear: it is neither a heritage canteen nor a special-occasion blowout. The ₫₫ bracket positions it as a restaurant where the cooking is the event but the bill stays accessible. That combination of ambition and accessibility is not especially common in Hanoi's contemporary tier, where the natural tendency has been for serious kitchens to price upward as recognition accumulates.

Backstage and Lamai Garden offer adjacent moods in Hoàn Kiếm for readers building a broader itinerary. At the higher end of the district's contemporary offer, Hibana by Koki operates in the ₫₫₫₫ teppanyaki tier, providing a useful reference for how far the price spectrum runs within the same neighbourhood. For readers building a longer stay around the country's Vietnamese contemporary scene, Tre Dining, ST25 by KOTO, and La Maison 1888 in Da Nang represent the category's range across Vietnam's three major dining cities.

Planning Your Visit

Senté is at 20 Nguyễn Quang Bích, Cửa Đông, Hoàn Kiếm, a short walk from the lake and the Old Quarter's core streets. Advance reservation is sensible, particularly for evenings and weekends. The ₫₫ pricing means a full meal here runs comfortably below what the same level of Michelin recognition would cost at a comparable address in Bangkok or Singapore, which makes the timing argument for visiting during this phase of the restaurant's recognition curve reasonably clear.

Signature Dishes
Black rice in lotus leaf with grilled Australian short rib beef & salted quail eggsShrimp, pomelo and lotus root saladSenté milk tea with lotus pearls
Frequently asked questions

Where It Fits

Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Hidden Gem
  • Quiet
  • Elegant
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Business Dinner
  • Group Dining
  • Celebration
  • Family
Experience
  • Courtyard
  • Garden
  • Standalone
  • Historic Building
Drink Program
  • Beer Program
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Views
  • Garden
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Cozy and tranquil with French colonial villa architecture, lotus murals, elegant decorations, green plants, and a courtyard setting that evokes ancient Vietnamese charm away from Old Quarter bustle.

Signature Dishes
Black rice in lotus leaf with grilled Australian short rib beef & salted quail eggsShrimp, pomelo and lotus root saladSenté milk tea with lotus pearls