Restaurant in Carmel-by-the-Sea, United States
Chez Noir
830Pearl PointsMichelin-starred seafood in a real house.

About Chez Noir
Chez Noir is a Michelin-starred seafood-focused restaurant in a converted Carmel-by-the-Sea Craftsman, run by Chef Jonny and Monique Black with a warmth that larger California fine-dining venues rarely match. Ranked #472 on Opinionated About Dining North America (2025) and #6 on Esquire's Best New Restaurants (2023), it earns its $$$$ price point — but seats are scarce and reservations should be made well in advance.
Verdict
Chez Noir earns its Michelin star the hard way: in a residential Craftsman in Carmel-by-the-Sea, with a dining room that has genuine scarcity built in. Seats are limited, demand is high, and the kitchen's seafood-forward French-Spanish cooking is precise enough to justify the $$$$ price point for a special occasion. Book it for a celebration dinner or a serious date night. If you cannot get a table, Aubergine Carmel is the closest alternative at the same price tier, though the experience there leans more formal and less intimate.
About Chez Noir
The scarcity here is structural, not manufactured. Chef Jonny Black and his wife Monique run the restaurant out of a Craftsman-style residence on 5th Avenue, and the second floor of the building is literally where they live. That proximity shapes everything: the room is small, the pacing is personal, and service has the ease of a well-run household rather than the choreography of a hotel dining room. Monique oversees the floor, and the result is a warmth that larger, more decorated restaurants in California rarely manage.
The cooking draws on French bistro technique applied to what the California coast actually produces. Seafood drives the menu: sea bass and abalone appear regularly in the awards notes, and the kitchen treats both with the seriousness you would expect from a Michelin-starred operation. The French-Spanish framing is not a gimmick — it gives the menu range, moving between the clean acid of coastal Spanish cooking and the richer, more structured textures of French bistro tradition. For context, this is the kind of focused regional ambition you see at places like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg or Lazy Bear in San Francisco, but delivered at a scale that makes the room feel genuinely personal rather than produced.
Canelés that close the meal have been singled out specifically in Michelin's own notes: vanilla-scented, with a caramelized exterior and a custardy interior. That level of pastry precision at the end of a seafood-focused menu is a signal about the kitchen's overall discipline. It is not an accident. The same care that goes into sourcing local abalone goes into the pastry work, and that consistency across courses is what separates a one-star kitchen from a restaurant that just happens to do one thing well.
On the editorial angle of whether the food travels: Chez Noir does not appear to operate a takeout or delivery program, and the format of the restaurant — intimate room, timed service, composed plates , is not one designed for off-premise consumption. The canelés, in theory, might survive a short trip, but the seafood dishes that anchor the menu are built to be eaten at the pass. If you are planning a celebration and cannot be in the room, this is not the venue. The experience is the room.
Chez Noir ranked #472 on the Opinionated About Dining North America list in 2025 and landed at #6 on Esquire's Leading New Restaurants list in 2023. Those two data points together tell you something useful: it entered with significant critical momentum and has sustained a Michelin star since. For a venue of this size and format, in a town that does not have the restaurant density of San Francisco or Los Angeles, that is a meaningful result. It belongs in the same conversation as The French Laundry in Napa or Le Bernardin in New York City in the sense that it is a destination restaurant that requires planning, not a walk-in discovery.
Google reviews sit at 4.6 across 208 ratings, which is a strong signal for a $$$$ restaurant where expectations are high and critical diners are the norm. The spread of reviews suggests consistent execution rather than a venue living off a single viral moment.
If you are in Carmel for a weekend and are weighing where to spend your one serious dinner, Chez Noir is the answer assuming you have the reservation. If you do not, start pursuing one now: booking difficulty is rated hard, and last-minute availability is unlikely, particularly for dinner on a Friday or Saturday. Check the full Carmel-by-the-Sea restaurants guide for alternatives if you are still in the planning phase.
Practical Details
Reservations: Hard to secure; book as far in advance as possible, especially for weekends. Price tier: $$$$ , budget accordingly for a full dinner with drinks. Dress: No stated dress code in available data, but the Michelin-star context and $$$$ pricing suggest smart casual at minimum. Location: 5th Avenue between Dolores and San Carlos, Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA 93921. Set menu: A set menu option exists alongside à la carte , the kitchen recommends it for first-timers. Group size: The intimate room format favors couples and small groups; larger parties should confirm availability when booking. Nearby stay: See the Carmel-by-the-Sea hotels guide for properties within walking distance.
Worth Knowing
Chez Noir sits on the west side of the Santa Lucia Highlands, making it the natural dinner anchor if you are exploring Carmel rather than the Highway 101 corridor wine country. If your trip extends to wineries, the Carmel-by-the-Sea wineries guide covers what is accessible from town. For bars before or after dinner, the bars guide and experiences guide are useful complements. The residential setting means the neighborhood is quiet by late evening, so plan your evening arc accordingly rather than assuming a lively post-dinner street scene.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Chez Noir in Carmel-by-the-Sea?
Aubergine at L'Auberge Carmel is the closest rival at the top end — also Michelin-recognized and similarly difficult to book, but more formal in setting and service. Casanova suits couples who want European bistro atmosphere without the $$$$ commitment. Cultura is the pick for a California-Mexican format with strong local produce sourcing. Akaoni is a compact sushi counter worth considering if raw fish is what you're after. Brunos Market and Deli is the practical pivot for daytime eating when you don't need a full dinner.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Chez Noir?
If you're undecided between dishes, Michelin's own notes on Chez Noir describe the set menu as a tour of the greatest hits — so yes, it's the lower-risk order at a $$$$-tier restaurant where choice paralysis is real. The format suits first-timers especially well, given the seafood-forward California-French cooking style where the kitchen's strengths tend to cluster.
What should a first-timer know about Chez Noir?
The restaurant operates out of a residential Craftsman home on 5th Avenue in Carmel — the dining room is upstairs; Chef Jonny Black and Monique Black's actual home is above that. Seats are genuinely scarce, not a marketing line, so book as far ahead as possible. At $$$$ per head with a Michelin star earned in 2025, this is a sit-down commitment, not a drop-in dinner.
What should I order at Chez Noir?
Michelin's notes specifically call out the seafood — sea bass and abalone — as the dishes that make the biggest impression, and the canelés as a dessert worth staying for. Beyond those, the set menu is the safest path for a first visit, since it covers the kitchen's range without requiring you to navigate a la carte at this price point.
Does Chez Noir handle dietary restrictions?
This is not documented in available venue data, so check the venue's official channels before booking — especially important at a $$$$ tasting-menu format where courses are sequenced in advance. Given the seafood-heavy focus, pescatarians are well-placed; strict vegetarians or those with shellfish allergies should confirm the kitchen's flexibility ahead of time.
Is Chez Noir good for a special occasion?
Yes — the combination of a Michelin star (2025), a residential setting that feels genuinely personal rather than hotel-formal, and Monique Black's front-of-house approach (Michelin describes the experience as being invited into their home) makes this a strong pick for birthdays, anniversaries, or a celebratory dinner anchoring a Carmel trip. It ranked #6 on Esquire's Best New Restaurants in 2023, so the occasion is backed by real recognition, not just atmosphere.
Is Chez Noir worth the price?
At $$$$, Chez Noir delivers a Michelin-starred meal in a format that's more personal than most restaurants at this price tier — the residential setting and owner-led service are genuine differentiators. Ranked #472 on Opinionated About Dining's 2025 North America list, it has the credentials to justify the spend. If you're comparing against Aubergine Carmel, the choice comes down to format: Chez Noir is warmer and more intimate; Aubergine is more classically formal.
Location
5th Ave between Dolores and, San Carlos St, Carmel-By-The-Sea, CA 93921
Carmel-by-the-Sea, United States
Compare Chez Noir
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chez Noir | Located in the tiny seaside hamlet of Carmel, Chez Noir is one of the best places to dine and drink if you happen to be staying on the other side of the Santa Lucia Highlands from the 101 corridor, or...; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #472 (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2025); If Chef Jonny and his wife, Monique Black (who oversees the service team) make you feel as if you're being invited into their own home, well, that's because the second floor of this Craftsman-style residence is their home. The two have an abundance of fine dining bona fides, but here they aim for a more approachable feel. The cooking draws upon French bistro fare and showcases the bounty of the California coast, with seafood, like spot-on sea bass and swoon-worthy abalone, making a big impression. If selecting from the many delectable dishes proves too difficult, opt for a set menu offering a tour of the greatest hits. Just don't skip the ethereal vanilla-scented canelés with an ideal balance of crisp caramelized exterior and creamy, custardy interior.; Esquire Best New Restaurants #6 (2023) | $$$$ | — |
| Aubergine Carmel | Michelin 2 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Casanova | $$$ | — | |
| Akaoni | $$$ | — | |
| Brunos Market and Deli | — | ||
| Cultura | $$ | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Chez Noir and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Aubergine Carmel — French Coastal, $$$$
- Casanova — European, $$$
- Akaoni — Japanese, $$$
- Brunos Market and Deli — American Deli, American Deli
- Cultura — Mexican, $$
Chez Noir and Aubergine Carmel are the two $$$$ options in town, and the choice between them comes down to what kind of special occasion you are planning. Aubergine is more formally structured, with the kind of service architecture you expect from a hotel-adjacent fine-dining room. Chez Noir is warmer and more personal, driven by the Blacks' residential setting and Monique's floor presence. Both hold Michelin recognition in the Carmel area. If the meal is a quiet anniversary dinner where you want to feel looked after rather than processed, Chez Noir has the edge. If you want the full ceremony of a white-tablecloth tasting experience, Aubergine is the call.
Casanova at $$$ is the practical alternative when Chez Noir is fully booked — it covers European bistro ground with a long track record in Carmel and is significantly easier to get into. The experience ceiling is lower, but for a relaxed dinner rather than a destination meal, it is a reasonable fallback. Akaoni at $$$ is the right choice if Japanese is the preference — it operates in a different category entirely and is not a direct substitute for Chez Noir's French-Spanish seafood cooking, but it is one of the better value-for-money options in town at its price point.
For lower-budget evenings, Cultura at $$ handles Mexican with more seriousness than the price suggests, and Bruno's Market and Deli is the practical daytime option for provisions or a casual lunch. Neither competes with Chez Noir as a dinner destination, but both serve a different use case. The decision tree is simple: if you can get a Chez Noir reservation and the occasion justifies $$$$ spending, book it. If not, Casanova at $$$ is the next move.
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