Restaurant in Montréal, Canada
Au Pied de Cochon
750ptsFoie gras excess that earns its price.

About Au Pied de Cochon
Au Pied de Cochon is Martin Picard's long-running foie gras institution on Avenue Duluth, holding a Michelin Plate and three Opinionated About Dining rankings in 2025. At $$$, it rewards diners who order deep into the menu — foie gras poutine, duck in a can, stuffed pig's trotter — and come with an appetite for excess. Book 2–3 weeks out for weekends; weeknights are more accessible.
The Verdict
At $$$ per head, Au Pied de Cochon earns its price through sheer conviction. This is Martin Picard's long-running temple to excess on Avenue Duluth, and after more than two decades, it holds three separate Opinionated About Dining rankings for 2025 (Casual North America #439, Leading Restaurants North America #478, and Casual Europe #507) alongside a Michelin Plate. If you want refined, quiet, or light, book elsewhere. If you want foie gras poutine and a stuffed pig's trotter the size of a small roast, this is the right room.
First Visit: What to Expect
The space on Avenue Duluth is loud, close, and deliberately unglamorous. Tables are packed, the room runs warm when it's full, and the energy tips into organized chaos on a Friday or Saturday night. For a first-timer, that is part of the point. The cooking is theatrical and the portions are aggressive, so come with an appetite and at least one person willing to share. Solo diners and couples will find the counter or smaller tables workable, but this restaurant rewards groups who can spread a meal across multiple dishes without any one person shouldering a full order alone.
The menu format is à la carte, not a set tasting menu, which means you control the damage. Two courses with a glass of wine sits around the $$ cuisine pricing range that the venue data confirms; push into three courses with foie gras supplements and a bottle from the 2,100-selection wine list and you are comfortably in $$$ territory. The wine program, overseen by Wine Director Luis Morones and Sommelier Mónica Olvera, carries roughly 37,000 bottles in inventory, with Champagne, Bordeaux, and French regions as clear strengths. Bottle pricing spans a wide range — the list has accessible options alongside serious $100+ bottles — so it is possible to drink well here without the bill going off the rails.
Leading Time to Go
Weeknights are the cleaner experience. Thursday is the sweet spot: the room is active enough to feel right, but the noise level is a step below Saturday peak. Weekend evenings get genuinely loud and the waits between courses can stretch when the kitchen is under full pressure. If it is your first visit and you want to actually hear the person across from you, Tuesday or Wednesday dinner is the practical call. Avoid the last seating on a Saturday if conversation matters to you.
Seasonally, the arrival of fresher produce has softened the menu's harder edges over the years, with seasonal elements now appearing alongside the permanent foie gras anchors. That said, the core dishes , foie gras poutine, foie gras nigiri, duck in a can, and the namesake pig's trotter , are the reason people return regardless of season. Book when you can get a reservation rather than waiting for a specific time of year.
On Takeout and Delivery
Au Pied de Cochon is not designed for off-premise. The dishes that define it , duck in a can, the stuffed trotter, foie gras preparations that arrive hot and require immediate attention , lose significant impact once they leave the room. The experience here is spatial and immediate: the heat, the smell, the presentation timing. A container of foie gras poutine sitting in a delivery bag for twenty minutes is a diminished version of what you came for. If you cannot get a reservation and are weighing delivery as a fallback, redirect the budget. The food does not travel well enough to justify the price at a remove from the kitchen. Save the booking for when you can sit in the room.
How It Compares
For Montreal diners deciding between the top tier, the honest comparison is with Toqué ($$$$) and Jérôme Ferrer - Europea ($$$$). Both ask more per head. Toqué delivers tighter, more technically refined cooking in a quieter room. Europea leans into formality and occasion dining. Au Pied de Cochon at $$$ is the better value pick if maximalism is your preference and you are not paying for quiet or ceremony. For modern cuisine at the same price point, Mastard is worth considering as a more restrained alternative. And if you are exploring the wider Montreal restaurant scene, our full Montreal restaurants guide covers the range across budgets.
Know Before You Go
Practical Details
- Address: 536 Av. Duluth E, Montréal, QC H2L 1A9
- Price range: $$$ (cuisine $$, approximately $40–$65 for a typical two-course meal before wine and supplements)
- Booking difficulty: Moderate , book at least 2–3 weeks ahead for weekends; weeknight availability is more accessible
- Meals served: Lunch and Dinner
- Wine list: ~2,100 selections, 37,000 bottles in inventory; strengths in Champagne, Bordeaux, France, Spain, Italy, California
- Google rating: 4.5 / 5 (3,437 reviews)
- Awards: Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual North America #439 (2025); OAD Leading Restaurants North America #478 (2025)
- Takeout / delivery: Not recommended , the food does not hold away from the kitchen
- Group suitability: Works well for groups of 4–6; sharing across multiple dishes is the right approach
Pearl Picks: If You're Planning Around This Visit
Montreal has a strong surrounding field. For a contrasting experience at a similar price tier, Mastard offers modern cuisine that pulls back from the richness. If you want to explore regional cuisine in a different Canadian context, Tanière³ in Quebec City is the most serious option in the province outside Montreal, and Alo in Toronto sets the benchmark for tasting-menu ambition in English Canada. For something closer in spirit , focused, produce-driven, regional cooking , Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln is worth the detour if you are moving through Ontario. Locally, Sabayon and Othym represent the modern Montreal register at a different register of intensity. Round out your trip with our Montreal hotels guide, Montreal bars guide, and Montreal experiences guide.
Compare Au Pied de Cochon
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Au Pied de Cochon | Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #507 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #439 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #478 (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); Martin Picard’s ode to foie gras continues to charm with its unapologetically gluttonous menu, though, after 20-some years, seasonal fresh elements have begun to creep in. Still, foie gras remains the star — in foie gras poutine, foie gras nigiri and duck in a can. Still hungry? How about the namesake (and enormous) stuffed pig’s trotter? The wine list is solid.; WINE: Wine Strengths: Champagne, Bordeaux, France, Spain, Italy, California, Mexico, Argentina, Chile Pricing: $$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Selections: 2,100 Inventory: 37,000 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: French Pricing: $$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Lunch and Dinner STAFF: People Wine Director: Luis Morones Sommelier: Mónica Olvera Chef: Frèdèric Lobjois General Manager: Víctor Hugo Barrera Owner: Presidente InterContinental Mexico City; Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #196 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #489 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #458 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Recommended (2023); Opinionated About Dining Gourmet Casual Dining in North America Ranked #50 (2023) | $$$ | — |
| L’Express | $$ | — | |
| Schwartz’s | $ | — | |
| Toqué | $$$$ | — | |
| Jérôme Ferrer - Europea | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Mastard | Michelin 1 Star | $$$ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Au Pied de Cochon accommodate groups?
Groups can be accommodated, but the tight, packed room on Avenue Duluth is not built for large parties. Tables of 4 to 6 are the practical ceiling for a comfortable experience. If you're organising something bigger, check the venue's official channels well ahead of time — this is not a venue with banquet infrastructure.
Is Au Pied de Cochon good for a special occasion?
Yes, if the occasion calls for excess rather than ceremony. Au Pied de Cochon is Michelin Plate-recognised and ranked in Opinionated About Dining's top 500 in North America, but the room is loud and deliberately unglamorous. It suits a birthday or celebration where the food is the event — not a proposal dinner requiring a quiet corner.
How far ahead should I book Au Pied de Cochon?
Book at least two to three weeks out for weeknight tables; weekend slots go faster and are worth targeting a month ahead. This is one of Montreal's most in-demand rooms at the $$$ tier, and the foie gras-forward menu draws consistent repeat visitors who plan ahead.
Can I eat at the bar at Au Pied de Cochon?
Bar seating is available and worth considering if you're visiting solo or as a pair without a reservation. It gives you access to the full menu without the advance booking pressure, though availability is not guaranteed on peak nights.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Au Pied de Cochon?
The menu format here is not a formal tasting structure — it's an à la carte-driven experience built around signature dishes like foie gras poutine, duck in a can, and the stuffed pig's trotter. Order multiple courses rather than looking for a set menu. At $$ for cuisine (per the venue's own pricing), two courses land in a reasonable range before drinks.
Is Au Pied de Cochon worth the price?
At $$$ overall, Au Pied de Cochon delivers a point of view you can't replicate elsewhere in Montreal: Martin Picard's unapologetic foie gras-centred cooking, backed by Michelin Plate recognition and consistent OAD top-500 placement in North America. If rich, high-fat, ingredient-forward cooking is what you're after, the value case is strong. If you want lighter or more refined fare, Toqué at $$$$ makes more sense.
What are alternatives to Au Pied de Cochon in Montreal?
Toqué and Jérôme Ferrer - Europea are the closest fine-dining comparisons, both at $$$$ and offering more polished room environments. For something at a similar price tier with a modern rather than maximalist approach, Mastard is the cleaner alternative. If you want Montreal comfort eating rather than a full dinner commitment, Schwartz's and L'Express both operate at lower price points with their own institutional status.
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