Google: 4.7 · 309 reviews
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Stirwen sits in Etterbeek's mid-tier Modern French bracket, holding consecutive Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025 under chef Mikey Adams. Priced at €€€, it occupies the middle ground between Origine's more accessible offer and the higher-spend creative formats found elsewhere in Brussels's inner communes. A 4.7 Google rating across 288 reviews points to consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance.
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Etterbeek's Modern French Middle Ground
Chaussée Saint-Pierre is not a dining destination in the way that Ixelles's Place Flagey or the streets around Brussels's Grand Place pull visitors with recognisable gravity. It is a residential artery in one of Brussels's inner communes, where the evening crowd is largely local and the room at number 15 fills without fanfare. That context matters for understanding what Stirwen is and what it is not. This is not a restaurant angling for destination status; it is one of a small cluster of serious kitchens that Etterbeek has quietly assembled at the €€€ price point, operating in a register where technique counts more than theatre.
Etterbeek's dining scene has consolidated around a handful of formats. At the accessible end, Origine represents the €€ Modern French tier, where the proposition is neighbourhood reliability rather than culinary ambition. Further up the register, Le Monde est Petit pushes into Creative French territory at the same €€€ price level as Stirwen, while Le Buone Maniere steps into Italian at €€€€. Stirwen sits in the middle of that spread: Modern French in approach, mid-to-upper pricing, and a credential set anchored by back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025.
What the Michelin Plate Signals
The Michelin Plate, introduced as a formal designation separate from starred recognition, indicates that a kitchen is cooking food worth eating and doing so with some consistency. It is a quality floor, not a ceiling, and in Belgium's dense Michelin ecosystem it places a restaurant in a competitive bracket that includes serious neighbourhood kitchens operating well below the starred tier. Belgium carries one of Europe's highest concentrations of Michelin-recognised restaurants per capita; the Plate at Stirwen reads as confirmation of technical standard rather than a claim to distinction among tables like Hof van Cleve in Kruishoutem, Boury in Roeselare, or Zilte in Antwerp.
Consecutive Plates in 2024 and 2025 are worth noting separately. A single-year recognition can reflect a good inspection cycle; two consecutive years suggests the kitchen is operating with enough stability that the same assessors — or different ones — are arriving at the same conclusion. That consistency is what drives a 4.7-star Google average across 288 reviews, a figure that positions Stirwen well inside its peer group in the commune rather than trailing it.
Modern French in Brussels: The Format Context
Modern French cooking in Brussels occupies a specific register. It is neither the classical brasserie format that survives in the Grand Place environs nor the hyper-creative, research-kitchen model that defines a handful of rooms at Belgium's upper end. It sits between those poles: technique-led, product-focused, and generally structured around multi-course menus that allow for some progression without the formality of a full tasting programme. Chef Mikey Adams operates within that format at Stirwen, at a price level , €€€ , that implies a three-course dinner for two with modest wine spend landing in the 120-180 euro range, though precise current pricing should be confirmed directly with the restaurant.
For comparison across Modern French cooking at different scales and geographies, Sketch's Lecture Room and Library in London and Schanz in Piesport represent what the format looks like with deeper resources and a different kind of destination pressure behind them. Stirwen is not playing that game. It is a focused, neighbourhood-anchored kitchen whose ambition appears calibrated to the room and the street it sits on.
The Wine Programme at €€€ Level
At the €€€ tier in a Brussels inner-commune restaurant, the wine programme tends to follow one of two logics: a short, commercially safe list leaning on familiar appellations, or a more considered selection shaped by someone in the kitchen or front-of-house with a genuine point of view on pairing. Modern French cooking at this level lends itself to the second approach , the cuisine's structure, with its sauced proteins, seasonal vegetables, and often a fish course of some weight, gives a thoughtful list real work to do.
Belgium's geographic position gives its mid-range restaurant wine programmes a particular advantage. Proximity to Burgundy, Alsace, the Loire, and the Rhine means that import relationships are shorter and fresher than in many other European markets. A kitchen like Stirwen, working in a Modern French register, would naturally orient toward those regions without the freight cost and markup pressure that add 20-30% to comparable bottles in London or Zurich. For a guest arriving primarily for the food, that structural advantage makes the wine-by-the-glass or shorter bottle list a more reliable proposition than at equivalent price points in less well-positioned markets.
For visitors who want to extend their evening into Belgium's wider wine and drinks scene, the Etterbeek bars guide and wineries guide cover the commune's broader offer. Brussels's inner communes collectively form one of Western Europe's more interesting wine-by-the-glass markets, driven by a restaurant culture that takes pairing seriously at price points below what comparable seriousness costs in Paris or London.
Placing Stirwen in the Brussels Constellation
Brussels does not operate like a city where all serious dining concentrates in one or two postcodes. The inner communes , Ixelles, Etterbeek, Saint-Gilles, Uccle , each carry their own clusters of credentialed tables, and the city's Michelin-recognised kitchens spread across that geography rather than concentrating downtown. Bozar Restaurant anchors the city-centre end of the serious dining spectrum; further from the capital, Willem Hiele in Oudenburg, Bartholomeus in Heist, d'Eugénie à Emilie in Baudour, and L'Eau Vive in Arbre represent the Wallonian and coastal registers. Stirwen does not position itself against those tables; it is an Etterbeek address first, a Brussels address second, and a competitor in Belgium's broader fine-dining conversation only incidentally.
That local orientation is legible in the Google review data. A 4.7 across 288 reviews is not the number of a restaurant chasing visitors or courting out-of-town press. It is the number of a kitchen that has built a local following over multiple years and is feeding it well enough that those guests keep leaving notes.
Planning a Visit
Stirwen is located at Chaussée Saint-Pierre 15, 1040 Etterbeek, in central Brussels's eastern inner commune. The address is reachable by Metro (Merode or Montgomery stations place you within walking distance) or by tram along the main avenues connecting Etterbeek to Ixelles and the EU Quarter. Booking is advisable, particularly for weekend evenings; at the €€€ price point with Michelin Plate recognition, the room is unlikely to have walk-in capacity on peak nights. Hours and current reservation availability should be confirmed through the restaurant's direct channel. For wider planning across the commune, the full Etterbeek restaurants guide, hotels guide, and experiences guide cover the broader neighbourhood.
The Minimal Set
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Stirwen | This venue | €€€ |
| Le Buone Maniere | Italian, €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Le Monde est Petit | Creative French, €€€ | €€€ |
| Origine | Modern French, €€ | €€ |
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