Dining & Experiences

L’Étoile dining room
I.
Dining & Experiences

Cooking the Riviera
at sea level.

A small dining room with a bigger window. A handful of unhurried rituals. One good fish, a little flame, and the patience of someone who is not in a rush.

Chef Léa Marchand
Une étoile · Michelin
II.
The kitchen

Léa Marchand cooks
like her grandmother
cooked.

Born in Sault, trained in Lyon, and home again at thirty-two — Léa runs L’Étoile with a small brigade and a deep belief that good food does not need to announce itself. The menu changes by the season, the morning catch, and the conversation she had with the farmer at five.

7 Movements
1 Michelin Key
100% Within 40 km
III.
A sample menu

Seven movements,
always changing,
never long.

A few extracts from this evening’s composition. Tap each to read the kitchen’s notes.

Premier mouvement

Loup de mer · au sel

A whole sea bass, baked in coarse salt from Camargue, opened tableside, served with the lightest of butters.

Caught at dawn · Île de Lérins
Lemon · garden picked
For two persons
Deuxième mouvement

Tomates · 17 façons

Seventeen tomatoes from a small farm in Saint-Paul, dressed seventeen ways. Léa changes the order each evening.

Vegetable course
Available June – September
Suitable for vegetarians
Troisième mouvement

Agneau · de Provence

A shoulder of Provençal lamb, seven-hour-braised over rosemary, with a small glass of Banyuls and patience.

Family farm · Sault
Heritage breed
Wine pairing recommended
Final

Figues · au miel

Figs from our garden, warmed with honey from our beehives, served with crème fraîche and the smallest of biscuits.

From the Maison garden
In season · August onwards
Allergens: dairy, gluten

Tasting menu €185 · Pairing €110 · The full menu is presented in the dining room. Allergies, intolerances and quiet wishes are accommodated by Chef Léa with care.

L’Étoile · dinner

Tuesday — Sunday

Two seatings · 19h30 & 21h45. Closed Mondays for the kitchen’s rest.

Garden terrace · lunch

Daily · all summer

12h30 — 14h30 · Under the wisteria · Children welcomed loudly.

Le Bar · all hours

From 17h until late

A small honesty bar, a Steinway in the corner, and Pascal who knows what you mean.

IV.
Six rituals

Slow ways
to spend a day.

Atelier 01

A morning with Chef Léa

Two hours in the kitchen, two recipes you’ll cook badly at home, an apron stitched with your initials.

Saturdays · 09h30 Reserve a place
Atelier 02

The cellar at midnight

A late-night descent into the Étoile cave with sommelier Pascal — nine wines, none of them shouted.

Wednesdays · 21h00 Reserve a place
Atelier 03

Sea-glass mornings

Six o’clock coffee on the rocks, then a walk for the morning catch and conversation that doesn’t require an answer.

Daily · weather permitting Join the walk
Atelier 04

Le Riva at noon

Our 1962 Aquarama takes six guests to Île Sainte-Marguerite for an unhurried picnic and a long swim.

June — September Charter the Riva
Atelier 05

The garden hour

Eight hectares of citrus, fig and slow-blooming jasmine. Maps provided, phones discouraged, hammocks accepted.

Self-guided · always Pick a hammock
Atelier 06

A small library

Three thousand books, green velvet, a fire most evenings of the year. Bertrand will recommend something.

Always open Take a book home
V.
A day, in pieces

From six in the morning
until quietly past midnight.

06:00 · Sea-glass mornings

Coffee on the rocks, then a slow walk for the morning catch.

08:30 · Breakfast in the orangery

Cherry compote, soft cheese, croissants made before the sun was finished.

11:30 · Garden hour

Maps, hammocks, lemon trees, no phones. Madame Rose may join you.

13:00 · Terrace lunch

A long lunch under the wisteria. Children welcomed loudly.

16:30 · Tea & a quiet book

Library hours. A panelled room. Three thousand books. A fire.

19:30 · L’Étoile · seven movements

Léa cooks the day. Pascal pours the night. The sea is the third guest.

23:00 · Le Bar

A small Steinway in the corner. A short list of regrets. None served here.

A table is an act
of small ceremony.

Most of our evenings sell out by the third Thursday. We hold a few seats by candle, for those who insist quietly.

Reserve a table