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CuisineContemporary
Executive ChefFilipe Rizzato
LocationSão Paulo, Brazil
Michelin

Set within the Palácio Tangará hotel in Panamby, Tangará Jean-Georges holds consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) under chef Filipe Rizzato, positioning it among São Paulo's tightest tier of contemporary fine dining. The format draws on Jean-Georges Vongerichten's global contemporary framework while reading clearly Brazilian in its references and produce. A Google rating of 4.8 across nearly 300 reviews points to consistent execution at the top end of the city's price range.

Tangará Jean-Georges restaurant in São Paulo, Brazil
About

Where São Paulo's Fine Dining Meets Considered Space

Approaching the Palácio Tangará in Panamby, the transition from São Paulo's commercial density is deliberate and physical. The hotel occupies grounds that retain the character of a park, and the restaurant's entrance reflects that unhurried register: low light, natural materials, a pace that signals the meal will take time. In a city where fine dining increasingly competes on spectacle, Tangará Jean-Georges operates on the opposite logic — the environment asks you to slow down before a dish arrives.

That atmospheric decision is not accidental. The Jean-Georges brand, built around chef and restaurateur Jean-Georges Vongerichten's decades of work across New York, Paris, and beyond, has consistently favoured restrained settings that let technique carry the weight. In cities from Shanghai to New York, the model has relied on clean lines, precise service rhythms, and cooking that positions European classical training alongside Asian flavour influences. In São Paulo, those same structural principles meet a Brazilian ingredient context — and that tension is where the restaurant finds its clearest identity.

The Contemporary Format in São Paulo's Starred Tier

São Paulo's Michelin-starred contemporary category has expanded steadily over the past decade, and the 2024 and 2025 stars awarded to Tangará Jean-Georges place it inside a competitive cohort that includes [D.O.M. (Modern Brazilian, Creative)](/restaurants/dom-so-paulo-restaurant) at the creative-Brazilian end and Evvai at the Italian-modern end. At the $$$$ price point, the restaurant sits in the city's most expensive dining tier, where guests are choosing between fundamentally different approaches to contemporary cooking rather than simply between cuisines.

What distinguishes the Jean-Georges framework within that peer set is its explicit internationalism. Where [D.O.M. (Modern Brazilian, Creative)](/restaurants/dom-so-paulo-restaurant) has spent years building a lexicon rooted in Amazonian and cerrado ingredients, and where Maní works a Brazilian-international register at a slightly lower price point, Tangará Jean-Georges operates from a cosmopolitan foundation that treats Brazilian produce as one strong input rather than the organising philosophy. That is neither a criticism nor a limitation , it is a clear editorial position about what kind of restaurant this is, and two consecutive Michelin stars confirm that the execution meets the standard the format requires.

Chef Filipe Rizzato holds the kitchen, translating the Jean-Georges conceptual framework into a São Paulo dining room. In Brazil's starred tier, the relationship between an international brand and a local chef is worth noting: the brand provides structural discipline and global positioning signals, while the chef determines how those signals read in the room. Rizzato's consistent recognition across two Michelin cycles suggests that relationship is functioning well at the technical level.

Reading the Room: Atmosphere as Editorial Statement

Contemporary fine dining in São Paulo has split into two broad atmospheric registers. One group , which includes several Pinheiros and Vila Madalena addresses , works the warm, informal energy of a city that does not naturally separate dining from socialising. The other group, particularly in hotel-based restaurants and addresses in the wealthier southern zones, builds environments where the meal is the entire occasion. Tangará Jean-Georges belongs clearly to the second group.

The setting inside the Palácio Tangará imposes a certain physical quietude. The hotel's position within parkland removes the ambient noise of a neighbourhood street, and the restaurant's interior design follows that logic through to lighting levels, table spacing, and the pace at which the room operates. For guests accustomed to the Jean-Georges properties in New York , where the Vongerichten brand operates at a similar register of considered restraint , the São Paulo address will feel legible and coherent. For first-time visitors to this tier of Brazilian fine dining, it reads as the most internationally-aligned option in the city's starred category.

A Google rating of 4.8 across 290 reviews is a useful signal at this price point, where expectations are high and the gap between a satisfying and a disappointing visit is narrow. That consistency of response across a moderately large sample suggests the kitchen and front-of-house are executing at a stable level, not producing occasional brilliant nights surrounded by variance.

São Paulo's Contemporary Scene: Where Tangará Jean-Georges Sits

Understanding what Tangará Jean-Georges offers requires mapping it against the broader São Paulo fine dining pattern. The city's contemporary category has diversified considerably. [Clandestina](/restaurants/clandestina-so-paulo-restaurant) represents one kind of contemporary ambition , intimate, chef-led, rooted in local tradition. [Jacó](/restaurants/jac-so-paulo-restaurant) and [Nomo](/restaurants/nomo-so-paulo-restaurant) occupy different formal registers. [Sal Gastronomia](/restaurants/sal-gastronomia-so-paulo-restaurant) approaches contemporary Brazilian from a different structural position. Each of these addresses answers a different version of the question: what does serious São Paulo cooking look like in 2025?

Tangará Jean-Georges answers that question through the lens of international fine dining infrastructure , global brand credibility, hotel-anchored setting, European classical technique with strong Asian influence, and Brazilian produce read through that international grammar. For a specific kind of guest , one arriving from New York, Paris, or Tokyo with a calibrated sense of what starred contemporary cooking should deliver , this address provides the clearest entry point into São Paulo's fine dining tier.

The comparison also extends beyond the city. Brazil's Michelin-recognised contemporary restaurants share certain characteristics while differing sharply in emphasis. [Lasai in Rio de Janeiro](/restaurants/lasai-rio-de-janeiro-restaurant) operates from a garden-led, hyper-local position quite distinct from Tangará Jean-Georges's cosmopolitan register. In Salvador, [Manga in Salvador](/restaurants/manga-salvador-restaurant) works with the northeast's particular ingredient ecology. Further afield, [Mina in Campos do Jordão](/restaurants/mina-campos-do-jordo-restaurant) and [Primrose in Gramado](/restaurants/primrose-gramado-restaurant) represent the growing regional fine dining infrastructure. [Castelo Saint Andrews - Gramado in Vale do Bosque](/restaurants/castelo-saint-andrews-gramado-vale-do-bosque-restaurant) and [Orixás | North Restaurant in Itacaré](/restaurants/orixs-north-restaurant-itacar-restaurant) extend the map further. Within that national picture, Tangará Jean-Georges occupies the position of São Paulo's most internationally-legible starred address , a specific role that has genuine value for certain travellers.

Globally, the Jean-Georges brand's approach to local-market integration is worth understanding through comparison. [César , Contemporary in New York City](/restaurants/csar-new-york-city-restaurant) and [Jungsik , Contemporary in Seoul](/restaurants/jungsik-seoul-restaurant) represent different models of how international contemporary cooking reads in major cities , and against those reference points, the São Paulo address offers its own version of a cosmopolitan fine dining conversation.

What to Order

The database record for Tangará Jean-Georges does not include verified signature dish information, and inventing specific menu items would misrepresent what is actually served. What the available evidence does support is a clear recommendation framework: at a $$$$-tier Jean-Georges address with two consecutive Michelin stars, the tasting menu format, where available, will reflect the kitchen's full range of technique. The Jean-Georges brand's hallmark across its global properties has been the integration of Asian-inflected sauces and emulsions into classically-structured contemporary plates , light, precise, often built around contrast between clean acidity and rich fat. Guests who have eaten at Jean-Georges properties in other cities will recognise that structural logic. Guests arriving fresh to the brand should prioritise dishes that demonstrate the kitchen's treatment of Brazilian produce within that international framework, rather than gravitating towards familiar European preparations.

For the broader São Paulo dining and drinking picture alongside a visit here, see [our full São Paulo restaurants guide](/cities/sao-paulo), [our full São Paulo bars guide](/cities/sao-paulo), [our full São Paulo hotels guide](/cities/sao-paulo), [our full São Paulo wineries guide](/cities/sao-paulo), and [our full São Paulo experiences guide](/cities/sao-paulo).

Know Before You Go

  • Address: R. Dep. Laércio Corte, 1501 , Panamby, São Paulo, SP 05706-292
  • Price range: $$$$ (top tier of São Paulo fine dining)
  • Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024 and 2025)
  • Chef: Filipe Rizzato
  • Cuisine: Contemporary (Jean-Georges framework; international with Brazilian produce)
  • Guest rating: 4.8 / 5 (290 Google reviews)
  • Booking: Advance reservations strongly advised given starred status and hotel-restaurant format
  • Setting: Within the Palácio Tangará hotel, Panamby , hotel grounds retain parkland character
  • Leading timing: Dinner is the primary occasion for the full contemporary format; São Paulo's fine dining tier operates year-round, though the city's cultural calendar peaks in the southern hemisphere autumn (March to May) and winter (June to August), when business travel and event-driven bookings are heaviest

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the leading thing to order at Tangará Jean-Georges?

The kitchen at Tangará Jean-Georges operates within the Jean-Georges framework , a contemporary approach built on classical European technique with strong Asian flavour influences, applied here to Brazilian produce. Two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) confirm that the tasting menu format is where the kitchen's range is most fully expressed. Within that format, prioritise dishes that place Brazilian ingredients inside the Jean-Georges structural logic: light emulsions, precise acidity, and contrast between clean and rich elements. Specific current menu items are not confirmed in this record; the restaurant should be contacted directly for the current programme.

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