Restaurant in Cap d'Antibes, France
Amarines by Mauro Colagreco
125ptsRiviera-Rooted Creative Cooking

About Amarines by Mauro Colagreco
Amarines by Mauro Colagreco sits on the Cap d'Antibes peninsula, where Colagreco — the Argentine-born chef behind Mirazur in Menton — applies French Mediterranean creative cooking to the produce and oil traditions of the Côte d'Azur. Recognised for creative cooking, it occupies a quieter, more intimate register than his flagship, making it a serious alternative for the peninsula's summer dining circuit.
Where the Garrigue Meets the Table
The Cap d'Antibes peninsula has always operated at a remove from the carnival of Cannes and the density of Nice. Its roads narrow, its pines thicken, and the light off the Baie des Anges arrives at an angle that makes even lunch feel considered. It is the kind of coastline where the ingredients do much of the talking before the kitchen gets involved: olives pressed within kilometres, herbs that grow half-wild on limestone hillsides, fish pulled from water cold enough to matter. Amarines by Mauro Colagreco positions itself squarely inside that tradition, on the Chemin de la Garoupe — one of the peninsula's quieter, tree-lined routes — where the address alone signals a certain deliberateness of choice.
For context on how the peninsula's dining scene sits relative to the broader French Riviera, our full Cap d'Antibes restaurants guide maps the key tables across price points and formats. Amarines occupies a specific register within that map: creative French Mediterranean, driven by produce logic rather than classical technique for its own sake.
The Olive Oil Foundation
French Mediterranean cooking is, at its structural core, an olive oil cuisine. Unlike the butter-led kitchens of Normandy or the cream sauces of classical Lyonnais cooking , represented at its most sustained by houses like Paul Bocuse - L'Auberge du Pont de Collonges , the Provençal and Ligurian traditions treat olive oil as a flavour system, not merely a cooking medium. The Alpes-Maritimes sits at the convergence of those two traditions, and the oils pressed here , from Cailletier olives, the variety behind the AOC Huile d'Olive de Nice , carry a specificity that serious kitchens on this coast treat the way a sommelier treats a grand cru terroir.
Colagreco's broader culinary identity, developed at Mirazur in Menton, has always centred on the garden-to-plate logic that puts local oils, herbs, and coastal produce ahead of imported luxury. That orientation aligns naturally with the Cap d'Antibes context, where the peninsula's own microclimate produces aromatic herbs and stone-fruit with enough intensity to anchor a menu. Amarines applies that same produce-first thinking to a setting and scale different from Mirazur, which ranked number one on the World's 50 Best Restaurants list in 2019 , a credential that gives the broader Colagreco approach its verifiable benchmark.
Other French kitchens working creative registers with strong regional anchors , Bras in Laguiole with its Aubrac plateau sourcing, or Flocons de Sel in Megève with its Alpine produce logic , show that this produce-led creative approach is a distinct French culinary current, not a marketing positioning. Amarines sits within that current on the Mediterranean end of the spectrum.
Creative Cooking on the Côte d'Azur: The Competitive Frame
The recognition Amarines carries , specifically for creative cooking , places it in a peer set defined by culinary ambition rather than classical conservatism. Along the French Riviera and into Provence, creative Mediterranean cooking operates in a relatively small number of serious addresses. AM par Alexandre Mazzia in Marseille represents the western edge of that arc, while Mirazur anchors the Italian border end. Cap d'Antibes sits between those poles, geographically and tonally.
On the peninsula itself, the dining circuit includes Villa Miraé and the long-established Eden Roc, the latter carrying the kind of historical weight that comes from decades of serving the peninsula's summer clientele. Amarines occupies a different position: newer in register, more explicitly creative in its culinary ambition, and connected to a chef whose other work is benchmarked against France's most decorated kitchens. For comparison, the creative tier in Paris , Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, for instance , operates at €€€€ and Michelin three-star level. Amarines does not carry that price or star signal in available records, which may position it as an accessible entry point into the Colagreco culinary world for visitors already on the Riviera.
The broader French fine dining context includes addresses at the very leading of the classification system , Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Troisgros in Ouches, and Assiette Champenoise in Reims , all of which represent the classical and modern French tradition at its most formally recognised. Amarines sits in a different chapter of that story: a coastal, seasonal, produce-anchored table where the Mediterranean climate is as much a collaborator as the kitchen.
For travellers covering the broader French Mediterranean zone, the Grand Hôtel de Cala Rossa in Porto-Vecchio and Le Lys in Luxembourg show how the French Mediterranean cuisine designation extends well beyond the Riviera coastline, though the Alpes-Maritimes version carries the most concentrated ingredient density.
Planning a Visit
Amarines sits at 770 Chemin de la Garoupe in Antibes , a road that runs along the eastern face of the cap, closer to the lighthouse and the pine forest than to the port. The address is most easily reached by car; the peninsula's layout makes taxis from Antibes town or Juan-les-Pins a practical alternative for those staying nearby. Given the summer concentration of visitors on the Côte d'Azur , July and August compress demand across the region's serious tables , booking ahead is the standard approach for any creative-format restaurant in this area. Specific hours and booking methods are not confirmed in available records; contacting the restaurant directly before travelling is advisable.
For those building a fuller stay around the visit, our Cap d'Antibes hotels guide covers the peninsula's accommodation range. The bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide complete the picture for a multi-day visit to one of the Riviera's most concentrated pockets of serious hospitality.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I expect atmosphere-wise at Amarines by Mauro Colagreco?
The Chemin de la Garoupe address, on the quieter eastern side of the cap, sets a tone distinct from the busier port-facing restaurants in Antibes or the grand terrace scale of Eden Roc. Cap d'Antibes dining at this level tends toward the considered rather than the theatrical , rooms that prioritise the food and the coastal light over scene-making. The creative cooking recognition suggests a menu-forward experience where seasonal produce and Mediterranean ingredients do the work. Specific room details are not available in confirmed records, so treating the visit as a discovery rather than arriving with fixed expectations is the sensible approach for first-time guests.
What do people recommend at Amarines by Mauro Colagreco?
The restaurant's creative cooking designation, alongside Colagreco's documented approach at Mirazur , which built its reputation around garden produce, coastal ingredients, and technically precise but produce-led dishes , suggests the menu at Amarines follows a similar philosophy applied to the Cap d'Antibes context. Google reviewers give a five-star average across nine reviews, though the sample size is small enough that individual experiences will vary. Specific dish recommendations are not available in verified records; the format is leading approached as a tasting experience shaped by what the season delivers rather than a menu where individual dishes are reliably static.
Can I bring kids to Amarines by Mauro Colagreco?
Creative-format restaurants at this price position on the French Riviera generally work leading for guests engaged with the full menu experience. Cap d'Antibes in summer is a family destination at its broader level, but multi-course tasting menus with an emphasis on technique and seasonal produce are typically better suited to older children with an existing interest in food. No specific family policy is confirmed in available records; direct contact with the restaurant before booking with younger children is the practical step to take.
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