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    Restaurant in Denver, United States

    Brasserie Brixton

    210pts

    Montreal-bistro comfort with a Michelin nod.

    Brasserie Brixton, Restaurant in Denver

    About Brasserie Brixton

    Brasserie Brixton earns its 2024 Michelin Plate with a Montreal-influenced French bistro menu — steak frites, chicken fricassee, and blood sausage wontons — at a mid-range $$$ price point in North Denver. A 4.7 Google rating across nearly 500 reviews confirms it holds up visit to visit. Book a week ahead for weekends; this is a neighborhood regular's restaurant that rewards repeat visits.

    A 4.7-Star Neighborhood French Spot That Earns Its Michelin Plate

    Brasserie Brixton holds a 4.7 Google rating across 479 reviews — a number that matters in North Denver, where the dining scene skews toward fast-casual and the competition for neighborhood loyalty is real. If you have already been once and left happy, the question is not whether to return. It is what to order next, and whether this is the kind of place worth building a weekend routine around. The short answer: yes, with some caveats about what it is and is not trying to be.

    The concept is rooted in the casual bistros and wine bars of Montreal, not Paris. That distinction shapes everything from the price point ($$$ puts you in mid-range Denver territory, not special-occasion splurge) to the tone of service and the format of the menu. This is French food designed to be eaten regularly, not reverently. Think steak frites with creamy pepper sauce and chicken fricassee with Boursin pomme purée rather than tasting menus and tableside theater. For comparison, the ambition at Brutø or The Wolf's Tailor operates at a different register entirely. Brasserie Brixton is not chasing that. It is doing something arguably harder — making a French bistro format feel genuinely approachable without losing the craft that earned it a 2024 Michelin Plate.

    What the Weekend Daypart Delivers

    The editorial angle here matters: Brasserie Brixton is worth thinking about as a weekend destination, not just a dinner spot. The bistro format , compact menu, convivial room, natural wine list , translates well to the unhurried pace of a Saturday or Sunday visit. French onion soup as a late-morning anchor, a glass from the natural wine list, steak frites to follow. That is not a conventional brunch sequence, but it is the kind of thing a Montreal-style bistro does well precisely because the menu does not segregate into brunch-specific items. You eat what is on the menu because what is on the menu is worth eating at any hour.

    Kitchen also runs blood sausage fried wontons with tamari vinaigrette , a signal that the menu is not rigidly traditional. That dish sits alongside the burger (described as excellent in the Michelin recognition) and the French staples. For a returning visitor, this is where the menu opens up. The wontons are the kind of item you skip on a first visit because you default to the classics, and the right move on a second visit. The Michelin Plate acknowledges the overall package: a kitchen that can execute both the comforting and the inventive without the menu feeling internally inconsistent.

    Booking and Logistics

    Booking difficulty is moderate. This is not a venue where you need to set a calendar reminder three weeks in advance, but it is popular enough that walk-ins on a weekend morning or evening carry risk. Book two to five days ahead for weekday visits; aim for a week out if you want weekend flexibility. The address , 3701 N Williams St, Denver, CO 80205 , puts it in North Denver, which means it draws a neighborhood crowd rather than a tourist one. That is a practical consideration: parking is generally easier than in RiNo or downtown, and the vibe skews local rather than destination-driven.

    Hours are not confirmed in our database, so verify directly before visiting. Phone is not listed; the most reliable booking path at this price point in Denver tends to be OpenTable or Resy , check both. Given the venue has no listed website, a quick Google search will surface current hours and reservation availability.

    Ratings Snapshot

    • Google: 4.7 / 5 (479 reviews)
    • Michelin: Plate (2024)
    • Price tier: $$$ (mid-range Denver)
    • Cuisine: French bistro (Montreal-influenced)

    Practical Details

    DetailBrasserie BrixtonSaftaTavernetta
    CuisineFrench (Montreal-style bistro)IsraeliItalian
    Price Range$$$$$$$$
    Michelin RecognitionPlate (2024)Not listedNot listed
    Google Rating4.7 (479 reviews)Not listedNot listed
    Booking DifficultyModerateModerateModerate
    Leading ForWeekend bistro, date nightGroup dining, vegetarianDate night, pasta focus
    NeighborhoodNorth DenverRiNoUnion Station

    For a broader view of where Brasserie Brixton fits in the city's dining options, see our full Denver restaurants guide. If you are building a full weekend itinerary, our Denver hotels guide, Denver bars guide, Denver wineries guide, and Denver experiences guide cover the rest.

    Pearl Picks , If You Are Exploring Further

    If the Montreal-bistro format appeals and you want to see how French technique scales up across the country, Le Bernardin in New York City sits at the apex of French fine dining in the US. For French cooking with genuine classical pedigree at the global level, Hotel de Ville Crissier and L'Effervescence in Tokyo represent what the format can become at its most committed. Closer to home and in the Denver contemporary space, Beckon and Annette are worth knowing. For high-concept American dining that shares some of Brasserie Brixton's commitment to craft without the French frame, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, The French Laundry in Napa, and Emeril's in New Orleans offer useful calibration points across price tiers and formats. Also worth knowing in the Denver contemporary space: Alma Fonda Fina for accessible neighborhood dining at a lower price point.

    Compare Brasserie Brixton

    Is Brasserie Brixton Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Brasserie Brixton$$$Moderate
    The Wolf's Tailor$$$$Unknown
    Tavernetta$$Unknown
    Brutø$$$$Unknown
    Alma Fonda Fina$$Unknown
    Safta$$$Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Brasserie Brixton handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is small and French-focused, so options for plant-based or gluten-free diners are limited by format. The kitchen does include inventive items alongside classics, which suggests some flexibility, but this is not a venue with a sprawling menu built around substitutions. Call ahead if restrictions are serious — the compact menu means fewer workarounds than at a larger restaurant.

    How far ahead should I book Brasserie Brixton?

    Book two to three days out for weekday dinners; aim for a week ahead on weekends. This is not a same-day walk-in situation reliably — it holds a 4.7 Google rating across nearly 500 reviews and draws steady neighborhood traffic at 3701 N Williams St. It is not as difficult to secure as a tasting-menu restaurant, but popular enough that last-minute plans carry risk.

    Is Brasserie Brixton good for solo dining?

    Yes. The bistro format — small room, approachable vibe drawn from Montreal casual wine bars — suits solo diners well. A compact natural wine list and well-crafted cocktails mean you can eat and drink without anchoring to a full table experience. At $$$, a solo meal with a glass of wine is a reasonable spend for a Michelin Plate-recognized kitchen.

    What should I order at Brasserie Brixton?

    The steak frites with creamy pepper sauce and chicken fricassee with Boursin pomme purée are the core French bistro bets — both sit squarely in the rib-sticking, comfort-forward register the kitchen is built around. The blood sausage fried wontons with tamari vinaigrette is the menu's sharpest pivot toward something more inventive and worth ordering if you want to see where the kitchen takes risks. The burger also draws consistent attention.

    What should a first-timer know about Brasserie Brixton?

    This is a neighborhood French bistro in North Denver, not a formal dining room — the draw is approachable comfort cooking with a Montreal casual-bar sensibility, recognized with a Michelin Plate in 2024. The menu is short by design, so come knowing what format suits you: it rewards diners who want a focused meal with natural wine, not those seeking a broad a la carte spread. Pricing sits at $$$, which is fair for the quality tier.

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