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    Restaurant in Annecy, France

    L'Esquisse

    525Pearl Points

    One Michelin star, small room, book early.

    L'Esquisse, Restaurant in Annecy

    About L'Esquisse

    L'Esquisse holds a Michelin star (2024) and earns a 4.7 Google rating across nearly 500 reviews — strong signals for a small, intimate room on Rue Royale in Annecy's old town. Chef Dattrino's seasonal cooking is produce-driven and flavour-forward. Book three to four weeks out for a weekend slot; Saturday lunch is the pick for visitors combining a serious meal with time in the old town.

    Is L'Esquisse worth booking for lunch in Annecy?

    Yes — and lunch is arguably the sharper choice. L'Esquisse holds a Michelin star (2024) and sits at the €€€€ price tier, but the midday service at 12:15 PM gives you the full kitchen at what is typically a more composed pace than the dinner rush. If you are in Annecy for a single serious meal and want cooking grounded in seasonal Alpine produce without the formality of a three-hour dinner, book the Saturday lunch slot before you do anything else.

    The Room and the Setting

    L'Esquisse occupies a discreet address at 21 Rue Royale in Annecy's old town. The façade gives little away, which is part of the point: this is a restaurant that rewards those who sought it out rather than one that courts passing trade. Inside, the room runs to plenty of tables for two — the upstairs configuration is the one to request, both for the visual sense of space and the slight remove from the ground-floor movement. The deliberate informality of the setting is counterbalanced by service that is timed and attentive rather than casual. If you have been once before and defaulted to the ground floor, going back with a request for upstairs is the practical upgrade to make.

    The Cooking

    Chef Stéphane Dattrino trained under Laurent Petit at Le Clos des Sens, one of Annecy's reference addresses for creative fine dining. His own kitchen takes a different register: the dishes are colourful and flavour-forward, built around seasonal produce , local plants, herbs, and ingredients sourced with care for provenance. The Michelin recognition cites line-caught hake from Saint-Jean-de-Luz with endive compote, and crispy calf sweetbreads with a salsify medley as representative plates. These are not shy compositions. The flavour construction is direct, and the seasonal palette shifts as the year moves , which is the argument for returning, and for treating a first visit as calibration rather than conclusion.

    For a returning guest, the practical question is whether the menu has rotated since your last visit. Given the seasonal sourcing emphasis, it almost certainly has. If your first visit leaned on fish, the offal-adjacent preparations , sweetbreads, salsify , represent a different register worth exploring on a second booking. The kitchen clearly handles both with equal confidence.

    Timing: When to Go

    L'Esquisse is closed Monday and Sunday, and operates a tight service window: lunch sittings begin at 12:15 PM, dinner at 7:30 PM, with last orders at 1:00 PM and 9:00 PM respectively. That is a narrow booking grid, which is one reason availability disappears quickly. Saturday lunch is the most desirable slot for visitors combining a meal with time in Annecy's old town , you eat well, exit by early afternoon, and still have the lake and the market quarter ahead of you. Mid-week lunch (Tuesday through Friday) is the better bet for solo diners or couples who want a quieter room and a lower-pressure booking window. Avoid aiming for a walk-in: with a Michelin star and a 4.7 Google rating across 481 reviews, the room fills consistently and there is no buffer for spontaneous arrivals.

    Seasonally, the Alpine region shifts its larder markedly between spring, summer, and autumn , Annecy's restaurant scene, and L'Esquisse specifically, reflects that. A visit in late spring or early autumn will catch the kitchen working with produce at a different peak than a July or August booking, when the old town is at its most crowded and tables are at their most competitive. If you have the flexibility, April through June or September through October tends to mean better availability and a menu that is showing its range. For broader context on dining in the region, see our full Annecy restaurants guide.

    Booking

    Book hard and book early. The combination of a small room, tightly bracketed service hours, and Michelin-star demand makes L'Esquisse one of Annecy's harder reservations to land. Aim for a minimum of three to four weeks ahead for a weekend slot; mid-week lunch openings sometimes appear closer in, but do not rely on it. No booking method is confirmed in our data, so check the restaurant's current reservation channel directly. Phone number is not publicly listed in our records. Address for walk-up enquiries: 21 Rue Royale, 74000 Annecy.

    Quick reference: Tue–Sat, lunch 12:15 PM (last orders 1:00 PM), dinner 7:30 PM (last orders 9:00 PM). Closed Monday and Sunday. Price tier: €€€€. Michelin 1 Star (2024). Google: 4.7 / 5 (481 reviews).

    Practical Details

    L'Esquisse sits in Annecy's old town, walkable from the lake quarter and from most central accommodation. For where to stay, our full Annecy hotels guide covers the options across price tiers. If you are building a wider Annecy itinerary, our bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the surrounding programme. For other Annecy restaurants at adjacent quality levels, ANTO and Black Bass are both worth knowing. Choral and Cozna round out the more recent additions to the Annecy scene worth tracking.

    In the broader French Alpine fine dining context, L'Esquisse sits in a strong regional cluster. Flocons de Sel in Megève is the benchmark for mountain-rooted luxury cooking in the region. For those travelling wider through France, Mirazur in Menton, Arpège in Paris, Troisgros in Ouches, Bras in Laguiole, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or represent the wider map of destination cooking L'Esquisse sits alongside. Beyond France, Frantzén in Stockholm and Maison Lameloise in Chagny occupy a comparable tier of single-chef, produce-driven starred cooking.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can L'Esquisse accommodate groups?

    Small groups of two are the format this room is built for — the Michelin-noted description specifically flags the tables for two, with upstairs seating recommended. Larger parties will find the room tight and the tightly bracketed service windows (lunch from 12:15 PM, dinner from 7:30 PM) unforgiving for groups that run late. If you're coming as four or more, check the venue's official channels to confirm availability before assuming it works.

    How far ahead should I book L'Esquisse?

    Book at least three to four weeks out, more for weekend dinner slots. L'Esquisse holds a 2024 Michelin star, operates a small room in Annecy's old town, and runs compressed service windows — last orders at 1 PM for lunch, 9 PM for dinner. That combination means availability disappears fast, particularly on Friday and Saturday evenings. Monday and Sunday are closed, so the booking window across the week is narrower than it looks.

    Is L'Esquisse good for solo dining?

    Possible, but not the venue's natural format. The room is set up for pairs, and the €€€€ price tier makes solo dining a significant spend for one cover. If solo fine dining in Annecy is the goal, a counter seat at a less couple-oriented address may be a more comfortable fit. That said, the relaxed service style noted by Michelin means a solo guest is unlikely to feel out of place.

    Is L'Esquisse worth the price?

    At €€€€ with a 2024 Michelin star, L'Esquisse sits in the tier where the cooking needs to justify the spend — and Stéphane Dattrino's background under Laurent Petit at Le Clos des Sens gives the kitchen genuine credibility. The focus on seasonal produce, local plants and herbs, and line-caught fish supports the price point better than most old-town Annecy addresses at this level. Lunch is the sharper value play given the tighter price-to-format ratio at midday sittings.

    Is L'Esquisse good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with one caveat: book a table upstairs and secure a Friday or Saturday dinner slot well in advance. The Michelin star (2024), the deliberate calm of the room, and cooking built around top-quality seasonal produce make this a strong choice for a significant dinner in Annecy. It is more intimate than La Rotonde des Trésoms and more personally focused than a hotel dining room, which suits occasions where the meal itself is the event.

    Location

    21 Rue Royale, 74000 Annecy, France

    Compare L'Esquisse

    Is L'Esquisse Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    L'Esquisse€€€€Hard
    Le Clos des Sens€€€€Unknown
    La Rotonde des Trésoms€€€€Unknown
    ANTO€€Unknown
    Brasserie Brunet€€Unknown
    Black Bass€€€Unknown

    A quick look at how L'Esquisse measures up.

    Also Consider

    L'Esquisse and Le Clos des Sens are both at the €€€€ tier, but they read differently as bookings. Le Clos des Sens is where Dattrino trained and carries a more established fine-dining weight — it is the choice if you want the full ceremony and a longer tasting format. L'Esquisse is the better fit if you want starred cooking in a room that feels intentionally informal. For a first serious meal in Annecy, Le Clos des Sens is the safer prestige choice; L'Esquisse is the more interesting return visit or the pick for someone who already knows what they are getting into at this level.

    La Rotonde des Trésoms at €€€€ adds a lake-view setting to the equation, which changes the calculus for certain occasions — if the visual experience of the room matters as much as the plate, Trésoms has an argument. L'Esquisse wins on cooking focus. At a step down in price, Black Bass at €€€ is the value pick for modern cuisine in Annecy — worth considering if the €€€€ tier is a stretch or if you want a less demanding booking window. ANTO at €€ drops further in formality and price, covering the casual modern end of the market for days when a Michelin-tier commitment does not fit the plan.

    For traditional Annecy cooking at accessible prices, Brasserie Brunet at €€ is the default — reliable, unfussy, and easy to book. None of these alternatives replicate what L'Esquisse does at its price point: a Michelin-starred, chef-driven room with strong seasonal sourcing in an intimate old-town setting. The practical trade-off is booking difficulty. L'Esquisse is the hardest to land of this peer group; ANTO and Brasserie Brunet are the easiest. Plan accordingly.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    12:15 PM-1 PM 7:30 PM-9 PM
    Wednesday
    12:15 PM-1 PM 7:30 PM-9 PM
    Thursday
    12:15 PM-1 PM 7:30 PM-9 PM
    Friday
    12:15 PM-1 PM 7:30 PM-9 PM
    Saturday
    12:15 PM-1 PM 7:30 PM-9 PM
    Sunday
    closed

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