Restaurant in Wihr-au-Val, France
La Nouvelle Auberge
450ptsAlsace's coaching inn done properly — book dinner.

About La Nouvelle Auberge
La Nouvelle Auberge holds a Michelin star (2024) in a former Alsatian coaching inn at the edge of the Munster Valley. Chef Bernard Leray, trained under Bernard Loiseau, applies classical French technique to local Alsatian produce at €€€ pricing — well below the cost of comparable cooking in Paris. Book the first-floor fine dining room; the 90-minute lunch windows and limited dinner slots (Thursday to Saturday only) fill fast.
Come Back for the First Floor
If you visited La Nouvelle Auberge once and ate downstairs in the bistro, you have only seen half of what this address offers. The ground-floor brasserie is good — a reliable regional lunch with Alsatian character — but the fine dining room on the first floor, with its exposed timber framing and Michelin star earned in 2024, is where the decision to return pays off. Bernard Leray's cooking on that upper level operates in a different register entirely, and if you have not yet booked a table up there, that is the reservation to make.
La Nouvelle Auberge sits on the national route at the edge of the Munster Valley, about as far from a destination-restaurant complex as you can get at this quality level. The building is a former coaching inn , you can read that in the proportions of the ground floor, the worn solidity of the structure , and it has been maintained with evident care rather than renovated into anonymity. What you see when you arrive is a working Alsatian inn that happens to house cooking of serious ambition. That contrast is the point. The room does not perform luxury at you; it simply gets out of the way and lets the food do the work.
Leray trained under Bernard Loiseau, one of the defining classical French kitchens of the late twentieth century, before relocating from his native Brittany to Alsace. That background is visible in his technique , precise, controlled, built on classical foundations , but the ingredient choices are local. The Michelin entry names a medallion of pike-perch with salsify, endives, and a black truffle broth as an illustration of his approach: Alsatian produce handled with Burgundian seriousness. Dishes at this level of construction do not happen by accident. The painstaking element in the Michelin description is the operative word. This is not casual bistro food with a star attached; it is a considered tasting format dressed in an informal room, which is exactly why it over-delivers for its price tier.
That price tier matters for the decision. At €€€ , not €€€€ , La Nouvelle Auberge positions itself well below the Parisian starred benchmark. For context, a table at Plénitude or Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V will cost you materially more, and you will be navigating a far larger, more formal room. Here, the scale is intimate, the formality is moderate, and the cooking is working at a comparable technical level. For Michelin-one-star value in rural Alsace, it is a strong case. The comparison that makes more sense geographically is Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, which carries three stars and a much longer legacy , if you want to benchmark the regional ceiling, that is your reference point. La Nouvelle Auberge is the answer for when you want serious Alsatian cooking without the three-star occasion overhead.
The hours demand attention before you plan anything. The restaurant is closed Monday and Tuesday. Lunch service runs Wednesday through Sunday, 12 PM to 1:30 PM , a tight ninety-minute window. Dinner is available Thursday through Saturday only, 7 PM to 8:30 PM. Sunday is lunch only. If you are combining this with a stay in the Munster Valley or a drive through the Route des Vins, the Thursday-to-Saturday window gives you the most flexibility for both services. Plan around it, because the schedule does not have much give.
The Google rating of 4.7 across 594 reviews is a meaningful signal at this restaurant's scale. Rural Alsatian inns at this price point do not accumulate that volume of positive reviews without consistent execution over time. It suggests the kitchen is not coasting on the star.
For broader context on what else the area offers, see our full Wihr-au-Val restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide. If you are routing a longer trip through France's starred countryside, Maison Lameloise in Chagny and Auberge du Vieux Puits in Fontjoncouse offer comparable auberge-format fine dining worth stacking into the same itinerary. Further afield, Flocons de Sel in Megève and Bras in Laguiole represent the same strand of technically serious regional cooking in an unfussy physical setting. For three-star scale on a French rural circuit, Troisgros in Ouches, Mirazur in Menton, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or are the benchmarks. For Paris-based fine dining on a separate trip, Arpège, Pierre Gagnaire, and Kei cover the contemporary French spectrum. Les Prés d'Eugénie in Eugénie-les-Bains, Georges Blanc in Vonnas, and La Table du Castellet round out the French regional starred picture. For an international frame on what serious modern cuisine looks like in an inn-format setting, Frantzén in Stockholm is the reference.
Practical Details
Reservations: Book as far in advance as possible , dinner slots (Thursday to Saturday, 7–8:30 PM) are the harder get given the limited service windows. The tight 90-minute lunch seating means turnover is low and tables go quickly. Budget: €€€ , meaningfully below Parisian one-star pricing for comparable technique. Dress: Smart casual is appropriate given the setting; the room is elegant but the inn character keeps it from being stiff. Hours: Closed Monday and Tuesday. Lunch Wednesday to Sunday, 12–1:30 PM. Dinner Thursday to Saturday, 7–8:30 PM. Getting there: Wihr-au-Val is in the Munster Valley in Alsace; access by car is the practical option from Colmar (roughly 15 km west on the D417). Address: 9 Route Nationale, 68230 Wihr-au-Val, France.
Ratings
- Michelin: 1 Star (2024)
- Google: 4.7 / 5 (594 reviews)
FAQ
What should I order at La Nouvelle Auberge?
The Michelin guide highlights a medallion of pike-perch with salsify, endives, and a black truffle broth as representative of Leray's approach , locally sourced Alsatian produce handled with classical French precision. That dish illustrates the kitchen's direction: refined technique applied to regional ingredients. Beyond that specific reference, the menu changes with the seasons and the kitchen's current focus, so go with the full tasting progression on the first floor rather than trying to cherry-pick. The upstairs fine dining menu is the reason to be there; the downstairs bistro is a solid fallback for a lighter midweek lunch.
Can I eat at the bar at La Nouvelle Auberge?
There is no confirmed bar counter or bar-seating option in the available data for La Nouvelle Auberge. The venue operates as a two-level inn , a regional bistro on the ground floor and a fine dining room on the first floor. For informal seating options in the broader Wihr-au-Val area, see our Wihr-au-Val bars guide.
Is La Nouvelle Auberge good for solo dining?
Yes, at the €€€ price point and with a room of moderate scale, solo dining at a Michelin-starred auberge in this format is more comfortable here than at larger Parisian starred establishments where solo seats can feel exposed. The inn character keeps the atmosphere from being stiff. That said, confirm a counter or small table is available when booking , seat count is not published, so availability for singles at peak dinner service (Thursday to Saturday) requires advance notice. Lunch on a weekday may be the easier solo slot.
Is lunch or dinner better at La Nouvelle Auberge?
Dinner, if you can get it. The evening service on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday gives the full first-floor fine dining experience at a pace that a 90-minute lunch window cannot match. Lunch (12–1:30 PM, Wednesday to Sunday) is worth doing if your schedule requires it , and the ground-floor bistro at lunch is a genuinely good-value regional option , but the upstairs dinner format is what the Michelin star is attached to. If you are making a dedicated trip to Wihr-au-Val, build around a Thursday-to-Saturday dinner and consider an overnight in the valley.
What are alternatives to La Nouvelle Auberge in Wihr-au-Val?
Wihr-au-Val is a small village and La Nouvelle Auberge is its anchor fine dining address. For alternatives in the immediate Munster Valley, your options are limited and the quality step-down is significant. The nearest meaningful comparison in Alsatian starred cooking is Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, which operates at three-star level and a higher price tier , the right choice if you want to spend more for a longer legacy and grander room. For the broader region, see our full Wihr-au-Val restaurants guide. If you are flexible on geography and looking for comparable auberge-format starred cooking elsewhere in France, Maison Lameloise in Chagny and Auberge du Vieux Puits in Fontjoncouse are the closest structural parallels.
Compare La Nouvelle Auberge
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| La Nouvelle Auberge | Modern Cuisine | On the edge of the Munster Valley, La Nouvelle Auberge ("New Inn") is a lovingly maintained former coaching inn. The regional-style bistro on the ground floor serves up delicious lunch options during the week. The fine dining restaurant occupies a lovely space on the first floor with exposed timberwork. Bernard Leray, who hails from Rennes in Brittany, has taken to Alsace like a duck to water. After honing his skills at Bernard Loiseau, Leray puts a delicate new spin on local produce, each dish demonstrates his painstaking work and consummate technique – medallion of pike-perch, medley of salsify and endives, creamy broth with black truffle.; Michelin 1 Star (2024) | Hard | — |
| Plénitude | Contemporary French | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at La Nouvelle Auberge?
The Michelin guide points directly to the medallion of pike-perch with salsify, endives, and a creamy black truffle broth as the dish that defines Bernard Leray's approach. Leray trained at Bernard Loiseau before relocating to Alsace, and his cooking sits at the intersection of classical technique and regional produce. If that dish is on the menu when you visit, order it — it's the clearest signal of what the first-floor restaurant is doing differently from every other €€€ address in the valley.
Can I eat at the bar at La Nouvelle Auberge?
There is no bar counter or bar-seating option confirmed at La Nouvelle Auberge. The venue runs as a two-level operation: a regional bistro on the ground floor for lunch service (Wednesday through Sunday, 12–1:30 PM), and a Michelin-starred fine dining room on the first floor for evening service Thursday through Saturday. If you want a casual drop-in option, the ground-floor bistro is your best entry point — no reservation difficulty and no €€€ commitment.
Is La Nouvelle Auberge good for solo dining?
Yes, more so than most one-star addresses at this price point. A former coaching inn converted to a two-floor restaurant runs at a moderate scale, which tends to be less isolating for solo diners than a large formal dining room. At €€€, the investment is meaningful, but a solo lunch on the first floor is a reasonable use of the format. Dinner service (Thursday to Saturday) fills faster, so solo diners should book lunch if flexibility matters.
Is lunch or dinner better at La Nouvelle Auberge?
Dinner, if you can secure a slot. Evening service runs Thursday through Saturday from 7–8:30 PM, giving the first-floor fine dining room the right pace for a Michelin-starred meal. Lunch windows are tight at 90 minutes (12–1:30 PM) and available Wednesday through Sunday, which suits the bistro downstairs more naturally. If dinner is fully booked, a first-floor lunch still delivers Leray's cooking — but the timeline is compressed.
What are alternatives to La Nouvelle Auberge in Wihr-au-Val?
Wihr-au-Val is a small village and La Nouvelle Auberge is its only fine dining address. For alternatives in the Munster Valley, you are looking at a short drive into the wider Haut-Rhin for comparable Alsatian cooking at a similar or lower price point. If the Michelin credential is the draw, the broader Alsace region has a concentration of one-star addresses worth mapping before you commit. La Nouvelle Auberge is the argument for staying in the valley rather than driving to Colmar or Strasbourg.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- closed
- Wednesday
- 12 PM-1:30 PM
- Thursday
- 12 PM-1:30 PM 7 PM-8:30 PM
- Friday
- 12 PM-1:30 PM 7 PM-8:30 PM
- Saturday
- 12 PM-1:30 PM 7 PM-8:30 PM
- Sunday
- 12 PM-1:30 PM
Recognized By
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