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    Restaurant in Sabran, France

    Le Cèdre de Montcaud

    450pts

    Six tables, one menu, book far ahead.

    Le Cèdre de Montcaud, Restaurant in Sabran

    About Le Cèdre de Montcaud

    Le Cèdre de Montcaud holds a 2025 Michelin star and operates a surprise set menu for just six or seven tables in a Virginia creeper-covered courtyard at Château de Montcaud, Sabran. Chef Matthieu Hervé's cooking runs technically precise and sauce-forward at €€€€ pricing. Book well in advance — this is the strongest Michelin-credentialed option in the Gard, but seats are tight and demand is high.

    Who Should Book Le Cèdre de Montcaud — and When

    Le Cèdre de Montcaud earns its 2025 Michelin star in a setting that rewards the kind of traveller who plans around the table rather than treating dinner as an afterthought. If you are staying at Château de Montcaud or exploring the Gard département, this is the restaurant to build a night around. It is a poor fit for large groups or anyone wanting flexibility — with only six or seven tables in the courtyard, every seat matters and booking difficulty is high. For solo diners or couples on a southern France itinerary, it belongs on the shortlist alongside Mirazur in Menton and La Table du Castellet in Le Castellet as a destination dining anchor for the region.

    The Portrait

    The restaurant sits within Château de Montcaud, a 19th-century property in Sabran, a village in the Gard that most visitors to Provence drive past without stopping. That obscurity is exactly the point. Chef Matthieu Hervé , whose background spans international kitchens , runs a surprise set menu format that changes with what is available. The Michelin inspectors note blue crab, jellied langoustine consommé, John Dory with romesco and rock fish soup, and a fillet of veal in a herb crust with chanterelle cream and hay espuma. These are not permanent fixtures, but they signal the register: technically demanding, sauce-forward, and rooted in produce from the surrounding south of France.

    The courtyard is covered with Virginia creeper , in late spring and summer that canopy creates a setting that is genuinely distinct from a conventional dining room. Six or seven tables means your neighbour is close but the pace is unhurried, with service that has room to breathe. For the food-and-wine traveller who has already done Bras in Laguiole or Maison Lameloise in Chagny, Le Cèdre offers something those venues cannot: genuine remoteness combined with one-star precision.

    A note on timing. The courtyard setting makes warm-weather evenings the obvious choice , late spring through early autumn, when the Virginia creeper is in leaf and evening temperatures in the Gard sit comfortably above 20°C after dark. Dining here in summer means you are often eating as the light fades, which shifts the atmosphere considerably from a conventional enclosed restaurant. This is not a late-night destination in the urban sense; the village of Sabran quiets early. The value of arriving at this table later in the evening is the shift from sunlit courtyard to candlelit enclosure , a different room, effectively, from the one you sat down in. If you are driving from Avignon or Nîmes, factor in a return journey on rural roads: post-dinner logistics require planning.

    For context within France's broader fine dining map, Le Cèdre sits in similar territory to Les Prés d'Eugénie in Eugénie-les-Bains or Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern: château or estate-anchored, single-star precision in a deeply rural setting, priced at €€€€ but without the volume or infrastructure of a multi-star Paris operation. The comparison that matters most for the practical decision is not Paris but the southern France circuit , and on that circuit, Le Cèdre currently offers the strongest Michelin-credentialed option in its immediate geography.

    The surprise set menu format removes the decision fatigue of à la carte but also removes choice. If dietary restrictions or strong aversions are a factor, contact the restaurant in advance , the format cannot absorb last-minute changes at a six-table operation. The €€€€ price tier places this at the higher end for the Gard, though it remains below the entry point for comparable Paris addresses. Google reviewers rate it 4.7 from 408 reviews, a signal that the experience is consistent rather than occasionally transcendent.

    The on-site Bistro de Montcaud provides the casual alternative if a full tasting menu is not the priority on a given night , worth knowing if you are staying at the château for multiple nights. For a fuller picture of what Sabran offers, see our full Sabran restaurants guide, our Sabran hotels guide, our Sabran bars guide, our Sabran wineries guide, and our Sabran experiences guide.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2025)
    • Google Rating: 4.7 / 5 (408 reviews)
    • Price: €€€€
    • Cuisine: Modern Cuisine , surprise set menu format
    • Chef: Matthieu Hervé

    Booking & Practical Details

    Booking difficulty is high. With only six or seven tables, Le Cèdre fills quickly, particularly for warm-weather weekend evenings. Book as far ahead as possible , several weeks minimum if your dates are fixed. The surprise menu format means you need to communicate dietary requirements at time of booking, not on arrival. The address is Château de Montcaud, 30200 Sabran. Dress expectations at a Michelin-starred château restaurant in France run smart-casual to formal; err towards the former.

    Practical Comparison

    VenueLocationStarsPriceBooking DifficultyFormat
    Le Cèdre de MontcaudSabran, Gard1 Michelin (2025)€€€€HardSurprise set menu
    MirazurMenton3 Michelin€€€€Very HardSet menu
    BrasLaguiole3 Michelin€€€€HardSet menu
    La Table du CastelletLe Castellet2 Michelin€€€€ModerateSet menu
    Flocons de SelMegève3 Michelin€€€€HardSet menu

    Pearl Picks: If You Like Le Cèdre de Montcaud

    Compare Le Cèdre de Montcaud

    Booking Options Near Le Cèdre de Montcaud
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Le Cèdre de MontcaudModern Cuisine€€€€Hard
    PlénitudeContemporary French€€€€Unknown
    Pierre GagnaireFrench, Creative€€€€Unknown
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenCreative€€€€Unknown
    KeiContemporary French, Modern Cuisine€€€€Unknown
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VFrench, Modern Cuisine€€€€Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Le Cèdre de Montcaud?

    Yes, if a surprise set menu format suits you. The Michelin-starred kitchen under Matthieu Hervé runs a single evolving menu — dishes cited by Michelin inspectors include jellied langoustine consommé and herb-crusted veal with chanterelle cream, each built around precise saucing. At €€€€ pricing with only six or seven tables, the experience is deliberately intimate rather than operationally grand. If you prefer choosing from a carte, this is the wrong format.

    What are alternatives to Le Cèdre de Montcaud in Sabran?

    There are no other Michelin-starred restaurants in Sabran itself, so the nearest comparable fine dining is in Avignon or Nîmes, each roughly 40–50 minutes away. Within the Gard and lower Rhône corridor, options at this price tier are thin — which makes Le Cèdre the default destination for serious cooking in the area. If you want starred dining with more table availability and a full à la carte, Avignon is a more practical base.

    What should I wear to Le Cèdre de Montcaud?

    The venue data does not specify a dress code, but a Michelin-starred château courtyard setting at €€€€ pricing signals smart dress as a reasonable baseline. Think neat, considered clothing rather than formal black tie — the courtyard setting under Virginia creeper is intimate rather than grand-ballroom formal. When in doubt, err toward a level above your usual smart casual.

    Is Le Cèdre de Montcaud good for a special occasion?

    It is well-suited to it. Six or seven tables in a Virginia creeper-covered courtyard, a single surprise menu, and a 2025 Michelin star add up to a dinner that feels considered rather than generic. The small scale means service attention is high — the risk is that the fixed menu format removes the flexibility some guests want for celebration meals. Confirm ahead whether dietary needs can be accommodated.

    Is Le Cèdre de Montcaud worth the price?

    At €€€€, yes — provided the format fits your group. Michelin awarded the star in 2025 based on a menu that shows real technical ambition: langoustine consommé, romesco-sauced John Dory, hay espuma. For comparable investment in Paris you would be at a multi-star table competing for attention; here, one of six or seven tables in a quiet Gard courtyard gets you a different ratio of quality to crowd. The value case weakens if you are driving a significant distance solely for dinner rather than combining it with a château stay.

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