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    Restaurant in North Salem, United States

    La Bastide by Andrea Calstier

    775pts

    Michelin-starred French tasting, intimately small room.

    La Bastide by Andrea Calstier, Restaurant in North Salem

    About La Bastide by Andrea Calstier

    La Bastide by Andrea Calstier is a Michelin-starred French tasting-menu restaurant in North Salem, operating just four evenings a week in a deliberately small dining room. At $$$$ pricing with a 640-selection wine list and a kitchen that draws from southern French technique, it is one of the most focused fine-dining options in Westchester — and one of the hardest to get into.

    Book This If You Want a Michelin-Starred Tasting in a Room with Fewer Than a Dozen Tables

    La Bastide by Andrea Calstier holds a Michelin star and operates with a seat count small enough that availability disappears fast. Thursday through Sunday evenings are the only windows, with service ending at 8 PM — which means the window to get in any given week is narrow. If you are planning around a special occasion or a weekend in Westchester, book as far in advance as possible. This is not a walk-in situation.

    The Space

    The dining room at La Bastide is deliberately small. A modern farmhouse on Titicus Road in North Salem, the property frames pastoral views that set a tone before the first course arrives. The room holds only a few tables, which makes the atmosphere function less like a restaurant and more like a private dinner — one where the pacing is unhurried and the ratio of staff to guest is high. Husband-and-wife team Chef Andrea Calstier and General Manager Elena Oliver run the floor personally, which means the hospitality has a coherence that larger operations rarely achieve. If you have been once, you will notice on a return visit how the room feels calibrated for concentration: the menu is the event, and the space supports that without distraction.

    The Tasting Menu

    The cooking here draws from southern French traditions and moves through the meal with precision. A salad of grilled gem lettuce arrives paired with poached celtuce, cured egg yolk, and olive oil sabayon , a combination that sounds simple and lands as something considerably more considered. Squab with rosemary and fig leaf sits alongside grilled black sea bass with artichokes and razor clams as evidence of the kitchen's range across protein and technique. The dessert course is a particular strength: the pairing of chocolate and goat cheese is an unconventional finish that works as a deliberate final statement rather than a sweet formality. The arc from first course to dessert is tight. Nothing here drifts or fills time. For a returning visitor, the dessert course alone warrants attention , if you skipped it or shared on your first visit, do not do so again.

    The Wine Program

    Wine Director David Berube and Sommelier Neal Dupont Pochat Baron oversee a list of 2,465 bottles across 640 selections, with particular depth in French producers. The pricing sits at the $$ tier , meaning the list spans entry-level through mid-range bottles, with $100+ options available but not the dominant register. Corkage is $100 if you bring your own. The wine program earned Esquire's Leading Martinis in America recognition in 2025, which speaks to the bar side of the program as well. For a French tasting menu of this caliber, having a France-heavy list handled by credentialed sommeliers is a meaningful advantage over relying on a general wine list.

    Value and Positioning

    At the $$$$ price tier with a cuisine pricing of $66+ per person for a two-course baseline, this is a full-spend evening. Against Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, which operates at a comparable price point and similar farm-adjacent setting, La Bastide is more intimate and more French in its orientation , less conceptually driven around provenance, more focused on classical French technique applied to seasonal ingredients. If you are deciding between the two for a Westchester tasting experience, La Bastide is the right call if you want a smaller room and a kitchen rooted in southern France. Blue Hill at Stone Barns is the better choice if the farm-to-table narrative matters to you as part of the evening.

    Further afield, The French Laundry in Napa and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg operate in the same register of Michelin-starred, intimate, tasting-menu-driven dining , but require travel to California. For the Northeast, La Bastide is one of the few options that delivers that level of focus and credential outside of Manhattan.

    Practical Details

    Hours: Thursday–Saturday 5–8 PM, Sunday 6–8 PM. Closed Monday–Wednesday. Reservations: Hard to get; book as far ahead as your schedule allows. Budget: $$$$ cuisine pricing ($66+ for a two-course baseline, before wine); wine list priced at $$ with corkage at $100. Wine: 640 selections, 2,465 bottles, France strength, managed by Wine Director David Berube and Sommelier Neal Dupont Pochat Baron. Getting there: North Salem is approximately an hour from Manhattan; no public transit to the venue, so plan on driving or a car service. Nearby: Cenadou and Purdy's Farmer & the Fish are the closest dining alternatives in the area.

    Is It Worth Booking?

    Yes, if a Michelin-starred French tasting menu in a room this intimate is the format you want. The 4.8 Google rating across 56 reviews is consistent with a kitchen and front-of-house that rarely miss. For a return visitor, the progression from the kitchen's technical vegetable work through to the chocolate-and-goat-cheese dessert is the reason to come back. The room is small enough that a second visit feels different from the first , you will catch things you missed. For first-timers arriving from New York City, this is worth the drive in a way that most suburban Westchester restaurants are not.

    For more dining, lodging, and local context, see our full North Salem restaurants guide, our North Salem hotels guide, our North Salem bars guide, our North Salem wineries guide, and our North Salem experiences guide.

    Compare La Bastide by Andrea Calstier

    Recognized Venues: La Bastide by Andrea Calstier and Peers
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    La Bastide by Andrea CalstierWINE: Wine Strengths: France 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;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Corkage Fee: $100 Selections: 640 Inventory: 2,465 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: French Pricing: $$$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Dinner STAFF: People Wine Director: David Berube Sommelier: Neal Dupont Pochat Baron Chef: Andrea Calstier General Manager: Elena Oliver Owner: Andrea Calstier, Elena Oliver; Head to this modern farmhouse in Westchester where a soothing design perfectly complements sweeping views of the pastoral landscape. Husband and wife duo Chef Andrea Calstier and General Manager Elena Oliver are at ease in their intimate dining room, a space fit with only a few tables and perfectly calibrated for the tasting to come. The menu draws on their upbringing in the south of France. A simple-sounding salad is so much more with grilled gem lettuce paired with poached celtuce, cured egg yolk, and an olive oil sabayon. Squab with rosemary and fig leaf is as accomplished as grilled black sea bass with artichokes and razor clams. Dessert is a particular strength, and the combination of chocolate with goat cheese is a thrilling finale.; Esquire Best Martinis in America (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024)$$$$
    Le BernardinMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    AtomixMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    Lazy BearMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    AlineaMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    Atelier CrennMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$

    What to weigh when choosing between La Bastide by Andrea Calstier and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to La Bastide by Andrea Calstier?

    Dress in line with a Michelin-starred tasting menu: polished but not black-tie. The setting is a modern farmhouse in North Salem, so the tone is refined without being formal. Think business casual at minimum — jackets are not required but fit the room. Avoid overly casual clothing; this is a $$$$ dinner, and the room reads accordingly.

    Does La Bastide by Andrea Calstier handle dietary restrictions?

    Given the intimate size of the dining room and the tasting menu format, it is standard practice at restaurants of this type to accommodate restrictions when notified in advance. check the venue's official channels when booking to flag any dietary needs. The menu draws on southern French traditions, so dairy and animal proteins feature prominently — communicate ahead if that is a concern.

    What are alternatives to La Bastide by Andrea Calstier in North Salem?

    North Salem has very few comparable fine-dining options at this tier. The nearest alternatives with similar ambition are in broader Westchester County. For a Michelin-starred tasting experience closer to Manhattan, Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Pocantico Hills is the most direct comparison, though it operates at a significantly higher price point and larger scale. La Bastide is the more intimate, more personal choice if you are already in northern Westchester.

    Can La Bastide by Andrea Calstier accommodate groups?

    The dining room is deliberately small — only a few tables by design. Large groups are unlikely to be accommodated easily; this is not a venue built for parties of 8 or more. Parties of 2 to 4 are the natural fit. If you have a larger group, check the venue's official channels; they may have options, but do not assume availability.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at La Bastide by Andrea Calstier?

    Yes, if a Michelin-starred French tasting menu in a room this small is the format you are after. The cuisine pricing baseline is $66+ per person before wine, and with a corkage fee of $100 and a 2,465-bottle wine list, a full evening runs well into $$$$ territory. The Michelin 1 Star (2024) and a Google rating consistent with high satisfaction across 56 reviews support the price. For a la carte flexibility at a lower spend, this format is not for you.

    Is La Bastide by Andrea Calstier good for a special occasion?

    It is one of the stronger special-occasion choices in Westchester County. The Michelin star, the husband-and-wife ownership by Chef Andrea Calstier and GM Elena Oliver, and the pastoral farmhouse setting make the experience feel considered rather than generic. The small table count also means the room does not feel like a large event venue. Book as far ahead as possible — availability at this size disappears quickly.

    Is lunch or dinner better at La Bastide by Andrea Calstier?

    Dinner only. La Bastide does not serve lunch — hours are Thursday through Saturday 5–8 PM and Sunday 6–8 PM, with Monday through Wednesday closed. There is no midday service to compare. Plan your visit around those windows, and note that Sunday has a later start at 6 PM.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    closed
    Wednesday
    closed
    Thursday
    5 PM-8 PM
    Friday
    5 PM-8 PM
    Saturday
    5 PM-8 PM
    Sunday
    6 PM-8 PM

    Recognized By

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