Restaurant in Nice, France
JAN
450Pearl PointsOne menu, 20 seats, clear point of view.

About JAN
JAN runs a 20-seat, set-menu-only dinner in Nice's old town, Tuesday through Saturday. South African chef Jan Hendrik van der Westhuizen builds menus around sweet-sour tension and smoky, acidic flavour contrasts — cooking with a clear point of view rather than generic fine-dining polish. Rated 4.8 across nearly 1,000 Google reviews, it's the most personally authored meal in the city at this price tier.
Should You Book JAN? The Verdict
Yes — but only if you commit to the format. JAN runs a single set menu, seats 20 people, and opens Tuesday through Saturday from 7 PM only. If you want à la carte flexibility or a casual drop-in, this is not your table. If you want the most focused, personal cooking in Nice — a menu shaped by South African sensibility filtered through years on Monaco yachts and French Riviera ingredients , book it and don't overthink it. With a Google rating of 4.8 across nearly 1,000 reviews, the room consistently delivers at the level the price promises.
What Returns Visits Reveal
First-timers come for the novelty: a South African chef running a tasting menu in Nice's old town. What keeps people returning is the internal logic of the cooking. The menu plays sweet against sour, smoke against acid , a set of tension-driven flavour decisions that you notice more sharply the second time, when you're not absorbing the room and the story simultaneously. The 20-seat capacity means the chef is present in a way that larger kitchens can't replicate. On a return visit, you're not hoping to catch a glimpse of the cooking philosophy , you're reading it more fluently.
The cheese bar across the street is worth noting on a second visit too. First-timers often treat it as an afterthought. It isn't. A buffet of around twenty cheeses, served with preserves, dried fruit, and a selection of beverages, is a considered extension of the meal , not a shortcut. Plan time for it rather than rushing to a post-dinner bar elsewhere.
The Menu Format and What It Demands
A single set menu means no negotiation at the table. The kitchen decides the direction; you decide whether to trust it. At the €€€€ price point, that's a fair arrangement if the cooking has point of view , and at JAN it does. South African culinary references appear through specific techniques and flavour combinations rather than as decoration, giving the menu a geographic identity that most tasting menus in this price tier lack. If you've eaten at [Mirazur in Menton](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/mirazur-menton-restaurant), you'll recognise the same willingness to anchor a menu in a specific place and biography rather than chasing a generic idea of fine dining.
The format also means dietary restrictions need to be communicated well in advance. A 20-seat room with a single menu has limited room to improvise. If you have serious restrictions, contact the restaurant when booking , don't wait until you arrive.
Wine at JAN: What the Format Implies
The database record doesn't detail the wine list, but the structure of the meal points toward a pairing-first approach. A set menu at this price tier in a 20-seat room is almost always engineered around wine pairing , the sequence of sweet-sour-smoky-acidic flavour work is precisely the kind of cooking that rewards a guided pairing rather than a single bottle chosen blind. For food-and-wine travellers, the pairing option, if offered, is worth taking. The Provence and Languedoc-Roussillon regions produce wines with the acidity and aromatic character that complement the kitchen's flavour directions. Rosés and structured whites from the Côtes de Provence appellation are a reasonable starting point for those who prefer to choose independently, though a sommelier's guidance through a menu this specific will serve you better than self-navigation. Enthusiasts interested in how French Riviera sommeliers approach pairings with globally-influenced tasting menus will find more context in [our full Nice restaurants guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/nice).
For comparison: [Arpège in Paris](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/arpge-paris-restaurant) and [Flocons de Sel in Megève](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/flocons-de-sel-megve-restaurant) both run pairing-optimised tasting menus at comparable price tiers where the wine service is inseparable from the food experience. JAN operates in the same register , the wine list isn't a separate decision, it's part of the same conversation.
Booking JAN: When and How
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which is accurate relative to the broader tasting menu category , this isn't a venue where you're competing with 10,000 other people for 12 seats. But 20 seats across five evenings a week still means availability tightens during Nice's peak tourist season (late June through August and the Monaco Grand Prix window in May). Book two to three weeks out as a baseline; four to six weeks out for Saturday evenings in summer. The restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday, which concentrates demand into a narrower window than a seven-day operation would face. There is no lunch service, so the decision between lunch and dinner is made for you.
Know Before You Go
Know Before You Go
- Address: 12 Rue Lascaris, 06300 Nice, France
- Hours: Tuesday–Saturday, 7 PM–10 PM. Closed Sunday and Monday.
- Price range: €€€€ (set menu only)
- Seats: 20 (intimate, single-sitting format)
- Format: Single set menu , no à la carte option
- Cheese course: Served at a dedicated cheese bar across the street , allow time for this
- Booking lead time: 2–3 weeks standard; 4–6 weeks for Saturday in peak season
- Booking difficulty: Easy to moderate depending on season
- Dietary restrictions: Communicate at time of booking, not on arrival
- Google rating: 4.8 / 5 (967 reviews)
Who This Is For , And Who Should Look Elsewhere
JAN is the right booking for food and wine travellers who want a meal with a clear perspective, not a technically polished menu that could have been cooked anywhere. The South African influence is substantive , it shapes the flavour logic of the whole menu , not cosmetic. Solo diners and couples will find the 20-seat room well-suited to both; the format is intimate enough that a solo booking at a corner table doesn't feel exposed. Groups of four or more should check on table configuration when booking, as the room's size limits how larger parties are accommodated.
If you want something less prescriptive at the same price tier, [Flaveur](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/flaveur-nice-restaurant) and [Les Agitateurs](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/les-agitateurs-nice-restaurant) both operate in Nice's leading bracket with different formats. For a broader sweep of where JAN sits among the city's leading tables, [our full Nice restaurants guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/nice) covers the field. Wine-focused travellers planning a wider Riviera itinerary should also check [our Nice wineries guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/wineries/nice) and [our Nice experiences guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/experiences/nice) for context on the regional wine culture that underpins menus like this one.
For single-menu tasting experiences elsewhere in France that set a useful benchmark: [Troisgros - Le Bois sans Feuilles in Ouches](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/troisgros-le-bois-sans-feuilles-ouches-restaurant) and [Bras in Laguiole](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/bras-laguiole-restaurant) represent the pinnacle of the format. JAN operates below that register in terms of formal recognition, but the cooking has the same quality of authorship , a point of view you can argue with, not just admire.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Can I eat at the bar at JAN? JAN is a 20-seat restaurant with a single set menu , it is not a bar-dining operation. There is no bar seating for walk-in food service. If you want counter or bar dining in Nice, this is not the venue for that experience.
- What should a first-timer know about JAN? The format is non-negotiable: one menu, no à la carte, dinner only, five nights a week. At €€€€, you're paying for a personal and specific cooking perspective shaped by South African cuisine and French technique. The cheese course happens across the street at a dedicated cheese bar , it's part of the meal, not optional colour. Book two to three weeks out, flag dietary restrictions when you reserve, and give yourself the full evening rather than planning anything after.
- Is lunch or dinner better at JAN? There is no lunch service. JAN opens Tuesday through Saturday from 7 PM only, so dinner is your only option. If a lunch tasting menu in Nice is what you're after, [L'Aromate](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/laromate-nice-restaurant) or [Le Chantecler](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/le-chantecler-nice-restaurant) are worth checking for midday availability.
- What should I wear to JAN? The database record doesn't specify a dress code, but a €€€€ tasting menu in a 20-seat room in Nice's old town implies smart casual at minimum. Avoid beach or resort-casual; you'll be underdressed. Business casual or a step above is appropriate for most diners. If in doubt, dress as you would for a serious restaurant in any European city at this price point.
- Is JAN good for solo dining? Yes. The 20-seat format and set menu structure work well for solo diners , there's no social friction in the single-menu format, and the intimate room means you're not isolated at a table for one in a large space. Solo food and wine travellers are well-suited to this kind of experience. Contact the restaurant when booking to confirm the leading table configuration for one.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at JAN?
JAN seats 20 people in a single dining room — there is no bar counter seating option documented for the restaurant. At €€€€ and with a fixed set menu format, the experience is structured around the full sit-down service. If counter-style or drop-in dining is what you want, La Merenda nearby is a better fit.
What should a first-timer know about JAN?
The format is non-negotiable: one set menu, served Tuesday through Saturday from 7 PM only, in a 20-seat room near the Nice port. Chef Jan Hendrik van der Westhuizen builds the menu around South African flavour references — sweet-sour contrasts, smoky and acidic notes — so expect a personal perspective rather than a classic French tasting format. The cheese course moves to a separate cheese bar across the street, with around 20 cheeses on offer. Go in knowing you are committing to the kitchen's direction for the evening.
Is lunch or dinner better at JAN?
JAN does not serve lunch — the restaurant opens at 7 PM Tuesday through Saturday and is closed Sunday and Monday. Dinner is your only option, which also means the 20-seat room is always operating at full evening-service intensity. Plan around a full night rather than a quick meal.
What should I wear to JAN?
The venue is described as cosy and romantic, seating just 20 people at €€€€ with a single set menu format. Smart dress is appropriate — this is not a casual neighbourhood spot. That said, Nice skews less formal than Paris, so a jacket is considered rather than required. Avoid overly casual clothing given the price point and intimacy of the room.
Is JAN good for solo dining?
A 20-seat room running a fixed set menu is one of the more comfortable formats for solo diners — you are not ordering differently from anyone else at the table, which removes the usual awkwardness. The booking difficulty is rated Easy relative to the tasting menu category, so securing a solo seat is less of a fight than at comparable venues. If solo dining with a strong chef perspective appeals, JAN is a reasonable choice in Nice at this price tier.
Location
12 Rue Lascaris, 06300 Nice, France
Compare JAN
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| JAN | Modern French, Modern European, Creative | €€€€ | Easy |
| Flaveur | Modern French, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| L'Aromate | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Pure & V | Neobistro - Nordic, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| La Merenda | Niçoise, Provençal | €€ | Unknown |
| Les Agitateurs | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Flaveur — Modern French, Creative, €€€€
- L'Aromate — Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Pure & V — Neobistro - Nordic, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- La Merenda — Niçoise, Provençal, €€
- Les Agitateurs — Creative, €€€€
At the €€€€ tier in Nice, JAN is the most idiosyncratic option — and that's both its appeal and its limitation. The single set menu format means you're committing to the chef's direction entirely. If that suits you, the cooking has more geographic and biographical specificity than either Flaveur or L'Aromate, both of which operate with stronger French classical roots. Flaveur is the better choice if you want technical Modern French cooking with room to order à la carte; L'Aromate suits diners who want the tasting menu format without the cross-cultural flavour work JAN prioritises. Les Agitateurs is the most creative and informal of the €€€€ group — lower ceremony, higher surprise — and works well for diners who find JAN's intimate formality slightly pressured.
If budget is a real consideration, La Merenda at €€ is the honest answer for Niçoise cooking without the fine-dining overhead. It won't give you the tasting menu experience, but it will give you some of the best traditional cooking in the city at a fraction of the price. Don't treat it as a fallback — it's a different category entirely. Pure & V sits at €€€€ with a Nordic-inflected neobistro format that shares JAN's willingness to look outside French tradition, but reads younger and less formal in execution.
For food and wine travellers on a single visit to Nice, the clearest decision framework is this: book JAN if you want a meal with a defined perspective and are happy ceding control to the kitchen. Book Flaveur if you want Modern French at the same price tier with more flexibility. Book Les Agitateurs if you want creativity without the ceremony. JAN is the hardest booking to replicate — the format, the scale, and the chef's biography combine in a way the other venues don't match — but it asks the most of the diner in return.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 7 PM-10 PM
- Wednesday
- 7 PM-10 PM
- Thursday
- 7 PM-10 PM
- Friday
- 7 PM-10 PM
- Saturday
- 7 PM-10 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
Explore Nice
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