Restaurant in Baudour, Belgium
Le Faitout
250ptsTwo Bib Gourmands. Honest price. Book it.

About Le Faitout
Le Faitout holds the Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2024 and 2025, making it Baudour's clearest case for quality cooking at a moderate price. Chef Louis-Philippe Vigilant runs a traditional cuisine kitchen with a 4.3 Google rating across over 1,200 reviews. At the €€ price point, this is one of the most credentialled-value meals in the Hainaut region — easy to book and worth the detour.
A Michelin Bib Gourmand two years running — and seats are harder to plan around than you'd think
Le Faitout has held the Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025, which is the clearest signal available that this is where Baudour's value-for-money case is made. The Bib Gourmand designation exists specifically to flag good cooking at moderate prices, and back-to-back recognition means the kitchen is consistent, not lucky. At the €€ price point, this is one of the more credible reasons to make a detour into the Hainaut province. If you are building a Belgium dining itinerary and want serious cooking without the €€€€ outlay of Boury in Roeselare or Zilte in Antwerp, Le Faitout belongs on your shortlist.
The room
Le Faitout sits on Place de la Résistance in Saint-Ghislain, a square that carries the kind of civic weight common to Walloon town centres — stone-fronted buildings, a sense of proportion, and a scale that keeps things human rather than monumental. A restaurant on a square like this tends to have a defined interior: contained, anchored, with the weight of the building doing some of the atmospheric work. The dining room at Le Faitout reads as the kind of space where the seating arrangement matters more than any single decorative gesture , close enough to feel convivial, considered enough to allow a proper conversation. For two people, this format works well. For a table of four, it should feel comfortable without requiring the kind of choreography that larger, more theatrical dining rooms demand. The address has the character of a neighbourhood restaurant that has been taken seriously, which is exactly the profile a Bib Gourmand tends to reward.
The cooking and what drives it
Chef Louis-Philippe Vigilant runs a traditional cuisine kitchen, which in a Belgian context means technique-led cooking rooted in classical French-Walloon foundations , braised dishes, stocks built from scratch, proteins treated with patience rather than novelty. This is not a creative-modern menu chasing trends. It is the kind of cooking that earns repeat business because it does the fundamentals well and because the value proposition holds up over multiple visits. Two consecutive Bib Gourmands confirm the kitchen has not slipped into complacency.
The wine program at a restaurant of this profile deserves attention from anyone making the trip. Traditional cuisine kitchens at the €€ level in Belgium tend to source wine lists that mirror the food philosophy: regional logic, classic appellations, bottles chosen to work with the cooking rather than to perform independently. For the explorer-minded diner, the pairing opportunity here is the kind that gets overlooked at flashier addresses , a carafe of something from the Loire or a Burgundy village wine alongside a properly made braise is a more satisfying combination than many more expensive evenings. The Bib Gourmand framework actively rewards this kind of coherence between food and wine at accessible price points. If you are travelling from Brussels or coming through the region on a broader Belgium wine-and-food circuit, Le Faitout sits alongside addresses like L'air du Temps in Liernu and Cave à Vin & à Manger in Narbonne as a venue where the wine list is likely built with intention rather than obligation.
For comparable traditional cuisine experiences in other countries, Auberge Grand'Maison in Mûr-de-Bretagne offers a useful reference point , a similarly rooted, classically framed kitchen where wine and food are treated as a single conversation.
Who should book
Le Faitout is the right call for food and wine travellers who want a credentialled, honest meal at a price that does not require justification. The Google rating of 4.3 across 1,275 reviews is the kind of score that reflects sustained quality rather than a single viral moment , high volume, high score, no obvious cliff edges in the data. That profile suits solo diners, couples, and small groups of three or four who want a proper sit-down meal in the Hainaut region without committing to a tasting-menu format or a triple-digit bill per head.
It is less suited to large parties expecting a private dining event, or to anyone for whom a Michelin star (rather than a Bib Gourmand) is the primary decision criterion. For star-level cooking in Belgium, Hof van Cleve in Kruishoutem or Willem Hiele in Oudenburg are the more relevant reference points. For classic Belgian fine dining in Brussels, Bozar Restaurant and d'Eugénie à Emilie cover the classic French end of the spectrum at a higher price tier.
If you are in the region and want to eat well without a long booking lead time or a significant financial commitment, Le Faitout is a direct yes.
Practical details at a glance
Know Before You Go
- Address: Place de la Résistance 1, 7331 Saint-Ghislain, Belgium
- Price range: €€ , moderate; expect good value relative to the award credentials
- Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 and 2025
- Google rating: 4.3 / 5 (1,275 reviews)
- Cuisine: Traditional Cuisine , classical, technique-led cooking
- Chef: Louis-Philippe Vigilant
- Booking difficulty: Easy , no evidence of a long waiting list
- Leading for: Couples, solo diners, small groups of up to four
- Dress code: Not specified , smart casual is a safe assumption at this award level
- Hours: Not listed , confirm directly before visiting
- Phone / website: Not listed , check current listings for contact details
More to explore in the region
Compare Le Faitout
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Le Faitout | Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | €€ | — |
| Boury | Michelin 3 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Comme chez Soi | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Castor | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Cuchara | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| De Jonkman | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Le Faitout worth the price?
Yes, clearly. A Michelin Bib Gourmand awarded in both 2024 and 2025 is Michelin's own endorsement of good cooking at a fair price, and at €€ per head, Le Faitout is one of the more honest value propositions in Wallonia. You are not paying a premium for setting or prestige — you are paying for technique-led traditional cooking, and the price reflects that accurately.
Is Le Faitout good for solo dining?
Chef Louis-Philippe Vigilant runs a traditional cuisine kitchen, which typically means counter or table seating that works for solo diners without awkwardness. At €€, the financial commitment is low enough to make a solo visit a straightforward call. Hours are not published, so confirm your booking window directly before planning a solo trip from out of town.
Can Le Faitout accommodate groups?
The venue data does not confirm private dining or group capacity, so check the venue's official channels before bringing a party larger than four. Le Faitout sits on Place de la Résistance in Saint-Ghislain — a civic square setting that suggests a modestly sized room rather than a banquet-format space. For a large group celebration, check availability early.
What should a first-timer know about Le Faitout?
Lead with the Bib Gourmand credentials: this is a Michelin-recognised kitchen at a €€ price point, which is the core reason to come. It is in Baudour, a small Walloon town, so plan transport in advance — this is not a walk-in-from-the-hotel situation. Hours are not published online, so call or email ahead to confirm service times before making the trip.
What are alternatives to Le Faitout in Baudour?
Baudour itself has a thin dining scene, so the practical comparison is regional. For a step up in format and price within Belgium, Boury (Roeselare) and Comme chez Soi (Brussels) are the credentialled benchmarks. For closer value-tier options in Hainaut province, Castor and Cuchara are worth checking. Le Faitout's Bib Gourmand distinction makes it the strongest value-for-money case in its immediate area.
Is Le Faitout good for a special occasion?
It works well for a low-key celebration where the food matters more than the theatre. The Michelin Bib Gourmand gives it enough credibility to mark an occasion without the high-ticket pressure of a starred room. If you need a more formal setting or a longer tasting format, Comme chez Soi in Brussels is the regional reference point for milestone dining.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Le Faitout?
Menu format and specific pricing are not confirmed in available data, so verify directly with the restaurant. What is confirmed: the kitchen holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for two consecutive years under chef Louis-Philippe Vigilant, which means the cooking justifies the ticket at the €€ price range. If a tasting format is offered, the credentials suggest it will be worth the spend.
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