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    Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan

    Clos Des Gourmets

    290pts

    Serious French cooking at an accessible price.

    Clos Des Gourmets, Restaurant in Tokyo

    About Clos Des Gourmets

    Clos Des Gourmets is a Michelin Plate-recognised French bistrot in Shirokanedai, Tokyo, delivering Parisian-lineage cooking at ¥¥ pricing — an unusual value proposition in the city's French dining category. The intimate room puts guests close to the chef, and the 4.8 Google rating across 47 reviews confirms consistent quality. Book a few weeks out; this is one of Tokyo's easier Michelin-recognised reservations to secure.

    Verdict

    Clos Des Gourmets is one of the most direct yes-decisions for French food in Tokyo at the ¥¥ price tier. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) and a 4.8 Google rating across 47 reviews confirm what the format promises: serious French cooking in an intimate room where the chef is close enough that the meal feels less like a restaurant and more like a private dinner. If you want Parisian bistro-level technique without paying ¥¥¥¥ prices, book this.

    About Clos Des Gourmets

    The atmosphere here is the point. This is a small, close-quarters room in Shirokanedai, Minato City — a residential pocket of Tokyo that sits well away from the tourist circuits. The energy is quiet and focused. There is no ambient buzz designed by an interior consultant. What you get instead is the sound of a kitchen working at close range, a room where conversations stay low because the tables are near enough to one another that volume becomes a choice, and a setting that reads more like a Parisian apartment dinner than a formal dining room. For food-focused travellers who find theatrical service distracting, this is a feature, not a compromise.

    The restaurant's lineage traces directly to a mentor's kitchen in Paris's 7th arrondissement — the name, the cooking philosophy, and the approach to hospitality all carry that inheritance. That kind of transmitted identity is common in Japanese fine dining, where discipleship is taken seriously, but it is rarer to see it applied to French cuisine with this degree of fidelity. The result is a restaurant that reads as genuinely French in its reference points rather than Franco-Japanese fusion. One documented signature is tête de cochon , grilled cuts from a pig's head , which places the menu firmly in the bistrot tradition of using the whole animal with technique, not novelty.

    ¥¥ pricing is the most decisive data point for value assessment. Tokyo's French dining scene spans a wide range: at the leading end, venues like L'Effervescence, Sézanne, and Château Restaurant Joël Robuchon deliver high production-value experiences at corresponding prices. Clos Des Gourmets operates at a fraction of that cost with Michelin recognition, which is a rare combination. The closest structural comparator in the French-in-Tokyo category at a higher price point is Florilège at ¥¥¥ , also chef-driven, also intimate. But Clos Des Gourmets gives you that same quality-to-price argument at one tier lower, which matters if you are eating across multiple meals on a single trip.

    Proximity to the chef is a deliberate part of the experience. Guests in a small room with an open or semi-open kitchen are participating in the meal differently than they would at a larger venue. This is not a room where you can have a loud birthday celebration without it affecting every other table. It is, however, a very good room for a serious dinner where the cooking is the main event. If your group is looking for occasion dining with spectacle and ceremony, ESqUISSE or L'Effervescence are better-suited formats. If you want cooking that speaks for itself in a room where the chef is doing the talking with the food, Clos Des Gourmets is the right call.

    For explorers building a multi-city Japan itinerary around serious food, Shirokanedai sits within Tokyo's broader dining geography alongside venues covered in our full Tokyo restaurants guide. If you are extending to other cities, the chef-driven, intimate-room format you will find here has direct parallels at HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, akordu in Nara, and Goh in Fukuoka. For French at this price-to-quality ratio outside Japan, Les Amis in Singapore and Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier are worth the comparison.

    Booking is rated easy, which at a small Tokyo French restaurant with Michelin recognition is worth flagging as a genuine advantage. The low seat count typical of rooms this size means that availability can shift quickly around holidays, but this is not a venue where you need to set an alarm three months out. Plan ahead by a few weeks and you should be fine. For broader trip planning, our Tokyo hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city.

    Know Before You Go

    Cuisine
    French (bistrot tradition, Parisian lineage)
    Price tier
    ¥¥ , strong value for Michelin-recognised French in Tokyo
    Awards
    Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025
    Guest rating
    4.8 / 5 (47 Google reviews)
    Location
    Shirokanedai, Minato City, Tokyo , residential neighbourhood, away from central tourist areas
    Room format
    Intimate, small-capacity dining room; chef visible and close to guests
    Booking difficulty
    Easy , book a few weeks ahead; no extreme lead time required
    Leading for
    Food-focused couples or small groups; serious diners who want technique over ceremony
    Not ideal for
    Large parties, loud celebrations, or guests who prioritise theatrical service
    Nearby references
    Explore our full Tokyo restaurants guide for broader context; 1000 in Yokohama and 6 in Okinawa for regional comparisons

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • Is Clos Des Gourmets worth the price? Yes, clearly. Michelin Plate recognition at ¥¥ pricing is a rare combination in Tokyo's French dining category. You are getting a documented, award-recognised level of cooking at a price point well below what comparable French restaurants charge. If you are price-sensitive but want serious food, this is where the value argument is strongest.
    • What should a first-timer know about Clos Des Gourmets? Go in expecting a quiet, close-quarters experience where the cooking is the focus. The room is small and intimate , the chef is nearby and the atmosphere is low-key rather than formal. The menu draws on Parisian bistrot tradition, so expect classical French technique rather than fusion or innovation. A documented signature is tête de cochon, so come open to offal and whole-animal cooking.
    • How far ahead should I book Clos Des Gourmets? A few weeks is typically enough. Booking is rated easy, which is a meaningful advantage over Tokyo's harder-to-access French restaurants. Around Japanese public holidays or Golden Week, build in extra lead time. Outside those windows, this is not a venue that requires the months-ahead planning that Michelin-starred rooms demand.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Clos Des Gourmets? Bar seating specifics are not confirmed in available data. Given the room's intimate format and small capacity, the distinction between bar and table seating may be limited. Contact the restaurant directly to confirm seating options before planning around it.
    • Is Clos Des Gourmets good for a special occasion? It depends on what kind of occasion. For a birthday or anniversary where the meal itself is the celebration , quiet, focused, chef-proximate , yes. For a group celebration that needs space, noise tolerance, and theatrical service, this format is not the right fit. Consider ESqUISSE or L'Effervescence if production value and room scale matter more than intimacy.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Clos Des Gourmets? Tasting menu specifics , structure, price, course count , are not confirmed in available data. What is confirmed is that the kitchen holds Michelin Plate recognition and a 4.8 rating, which suggests consistent quality at the price tier. At ¥¥, the per-head outlay should remain accessible relative to comparable French rooms in Tokyo. Confirm current menu format when booking.
    • What are alternatives to Clos Des Gourmets in Tokyo? For French at a higher price tier with more ceremony, Florilège (¥¥¥) is the closest structural comparator. For multi-starred French with full production value, L'Effervescence and Sézanne operate at ¥¥¥¥ and represent a significant step up in both price and format. If you want to shift category entirely, HAJIME in Osaka shows what chef-driven, philosophy-forward cooking looks like at the starred level in a different city.

    Compare Clos Des Gourmets

    Booking Options Near Clos Des Gourmets
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Clos Des GourmetsFrench¥¥Easy
    HarutakaSushi¥¥¥¥Unknown
    RyuGinKaiseki, Japanese¥¥¥¥Unknown
    L'EffervescenceFrench¥¥¥¥Unknown
    HOMMAGEInnovtive French, French¥¥¥¥Unknown
    FlorilègeFrench¥¥¥Unknown

    A quick look at how Clos Des Gourmets measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Clos Des Gourmets worth the price?

    At the ¥¥ tier, yes — this is one of the cleaner value decisions for French food in Tokyo. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) confirm the kitchen is operating at a consistent level. For the price, you are getting a Paris-trained chef cooking from a genuine lineage, not a hotel bistro approximation. If you want a comparable spend with Japanese-inflected French cooking, L'Effervescence runs higher and leans more cerebral — Clos Des Gourmets is the call if you want the cooking to feel personal rather than architectural.

    What should a first-timer know about Clos Des Gourmets?

    The room is small and close-quarters in Shirokanedai, Minato City, which means proximity to the chef is part of the deal — not incidental to it. The chef's philosophy, the restaurant's name, and signature dishes like tête de cochon all trace back directly to his mentor and his time in Paris's 7th arrondissement. Come expecting a personal, Franco-centric experience rather than a French-Japanese hybrid. This is not a place to show up without a reservation.

    How far ahead should I book Clos Des Gourmets?

    The exact booking window is not publicly documented, but a Michelin Plate room of this size in Tokyo at the ¥¥ tier fills quickly. Booking 2 to 4 weeks ahead is a reasonable floor; for weekend dinners or special occasions, push further out. The intimate format — close quarters, chef in view — means covers are limited, and there is no buffer of large-table seats to absorb walk-in demand.

    Can I eat at the bar at Clos Des Gourmets?

    The venue data does not confirm a bar counter as a distinct seating option. What the format does offer is close physical proximity to the chef across the room, which functions similarly — guests describe it as feeling invited by a friend rather than seated in a conventional restaurant. If counter dining is your primary draw, confirm the seating arrangement directly when booking.

    Is Clos Des Gourmets good for a special occasion?

    It works well for a two-person occasion where intimacy is the point. The small room, the chef's personal cooking philosophy, and the Michelin Plate recognition give it enough occasion weight without the formality of a full tasting-menu operation. For larger groups or a more theatrical special occasion, HOMMAGE or RyuGin would carry more ceremony — Clos Des Gourmets is the choice when the occasion calls for something that feels like a private dinner rather than a celebration in a dining room.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Clos Des Gourmets?

    The specific menu format and pricing are not confirmed in available data, so a direct cost-per-course verdict is not possible. What the record does establish: the chef trained in Paris, inherited both his culinary philosophy and restaurant name from his mentor, and holds two Michelin Plates at the ¥¥ price tier. That combination suggests the format, whatever its structure, is priced below where the kitchen's pedigree would sit at a comparable Paris address. Confirm the current menu format at the time of booking.

    What are alternatives to Clos Des Gourmets in Tokyo?

    L'Effervescence is the comparison for French fine dining with more elaborate technique and a higher price point. HOMMAGE runs a more structured, formal French experience. Florilège leans into French cooking with local Japanese sourcing and a counter format. For pure Japanese fine dining at a similar intimacy level, Harutaka (sushi counter) and RyuGin (Japanese kaiseki) are the reference points, though neither overlaps on cuisine — they are relevant only if French is not a fixed requirement.

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