Restaurant in Gent, Belgium
LOF
210ptsMichelin-recognized French cooking at a fair price.

About LOF
LOF at the Ghent Pillows Hotel holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and a 4.6 Google rating, making it one of the more reliable mid-tier fine dining options in Gent at the €€€ price point. The kitchen runs on precise French technique with selective Asian accents and outstanding seasonal produce. Weekend lunch is the format to book first.
Who Should Book LOF — and When
If you want French-influenced modern cuisine in Gent without climbing to the €€€€ tier, LOF at the Ghent Pillows Hotel on Hoogstraat is the right call. It holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and a Google rating of 4.6 from 459 reviews, which puts it in the same conversation as Publiek for mid-tier fine dining in this city. Book it for a weekend lunch when the hotel's Louis XIV-inflected dining room feels less formal than an evening service, and when the kitchen's produce-led menu has room to breathe. First-timers arriving for a Saturday or Sunday meal get the leading version of what LOF does: precise, ingredient-forward cooking with occasional Asian inflections, in a room that signals occasion without demanding it.
The Portrait
LOF sits inside the Ghent Pillows Hotel, a property with a pronounced Louis XIV aesthetic. The restaurant itself takes that opulence down a register — the setting is composed rather than theatrical, which works in its favour for a meal that centres on ingredient quality rather than performance. For a first-timer, the key thing to understand is that this is a hotel restaurant operating well above the typical hotel-restaurant ceiling. The Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 is a meaningful signal: it denotes food worth eating in its own right, not simply a convenient option for guests who don't want to leave the building.
The cooking sits in the tradition of precise French technique applied to outstanding seasonal produce, with Asian accents used sparingly and purposefully. Michelin's own notes reference monkfish cooked on the bone to protect its texture, paired with a cream of carrots, a lapsang souchong tea stock, and an emulsion of olives and carrot juice. That combination , the smoky depth of lapsang alongside the sweetness of carrot and the brininess of olive , tells you what this kitchen is doing: finding counterpoints that make an ingredient taste more fully like itself. It is French in its structural logic, but the reach for lapsang and the precision of the carrot juice emulsion suggest a chef reading wider than the classical canon.
For a first visit, pay attention to how the kitchen handles fish. The monkfish preparation, if available, is the clearest illustration of the kitchen's philosophy: nothing is added without a reason, and the reason is always to sharpen what's already there. Expect similar restraint across the menu. This is not a kitchen that piles on garnishes to justify a price point. The €€€ pricing reflects the quality of the produce and the technical competence behind it, not a lengthy tasting format with theatrical tableside elements.
The Brunch and Weekend Angle
LOF's weekend service is the format to prioritise. Hotel dining rooms in Belgium at this level tend to show their leading work at lunch, when the kitchen is less stretched and the produce is at its freshest. A Saturday or Sunday lunch here gives you the full experience at a pace that suits the food: unhurried, with time to work through the menu rather than feeling processed through a dinner service. If you are coming from outside Gent, this is a natural anchor point for a day in the city. The Hoogstraat address puts you in the heart of the old town. Combine a LOF lunch with time in the Patershol neighbourhood or a visit to the Gravensteen and you have a full day without logistical strain. For more on eating and exploring the city, see our full Gent restaurants guide, our full Gent bars guide, and our full Gent experiences guide.
Context in the Belgian Fine Dining Picture
LOF operates at a tier below the headline names in Belgian fine dining , venues like Hof van Cleve in Kruishoutem, Boury in Roeselare, or Zilte in Antwerp , but that is not a criticism. The Michelin Plate positions it as a serious kitchen, and the €€€ price range makes it accessible without requiring a special-occasion budget. For comparable work in Brussels, Bozar Restaurant occupies a similar position: hotel-adjacent, technically grounded, priced for repeat visits rather than annual pilgrimages. If the produce-led French approach here appeals but you want to see how the format scales internationally, Maison Lameloise in Chagny is the obvious reference point for classical French cooking that uses similar structural principles at a higher intensity.
Practical Details
Reservations: Booking is rated Easy , a few days' notice is typically sufficient, though weekend lunch slots at a Michelin Plate venue in a popular city will move faster in high season; aim for at least a week ahead if your dates are fixed. Budget: €€€, placing it below the city's €€€€ tier (Vrijmoed, Oak Gent) and broadly in line with Publiek. Address: Hoogstraat 36, 9000 Gent , central, walkable from the main tourist circuit. Dress: Smart casual is the safe call for a Michelin Plate hotel restaurant; nothing more formal is required. Hours and phone: Not publicly listed in our current data , confirm directly with the Ghent Pillows Hotel before travel.
Ratings
- Google: 4.6 / 5 (459 reviews)
- Michelin: Plate (2024)
FAQ
How far ahead should I book LOF?
- Booking difficulty is rated Easy, but don't take that to mean walk-in friendly. For a weekend lunch, aim to book at least a week ahead, especially during Gent's busier visitor periods in spring and summer. Weekday dinners are likely more available at shorter notice.
Does LOF handle dietary restrictions?
- No specific dietary information is listed in our current data. Given that this is a hotel restaurant operating at Michelin Plate level, the kitchen is likely equipped to accommodate common dietary needs , but contact the Ghent Pillows Hotel directly before your visit to confirm, rather than assuming flexibility on the day.
What should I order at LOF?
- The kitchen's strength, as signalled by Michelin's own notes, is in fish cookery and produce-driven combinations that use Asian ingredients as precise supporting elements rather than dominant flavours. If monkfish is on the menu, that is the clearest window into what this kitchen does well. Beyond that, look for dishes where a single main ingredient is sharpened by two or three carefully chosen accompaniments rather than buried under them.
Can I eat at the bar at LOF?
- No bar-seating data is available for LOF. As a hotel restaurant, the dining format is likely table-based. For a more casual counter or bar-dining experience in Gent, DOOR73 or Nonam are worth checking. See also our full Gent bars guide for options across different formats.
What should a first-timer know about LOF?
- LOF is a hotel restaurant that operates above the hotel-restaurant norm. The Michelin Plate (2024) and 4.6 Google rating are reliable signals that the food justifies a standalone trip rather than being a fallback for hotel guests. Come expecting precise, ingredient-led French cooking with occasional Asian inflections, a composed room rather than a buzzy one, and a price point (€€€) that delivers genuine quality without requiring a full fine-dining budget. Weekend lunch is the format to prioritise. If you are also exploring the city's broader dining scene, cross-reference with our full Gent restaurants guide and check our full Gent hotels guide if you are staying overnight.
Compare LOF
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| LOF | The Ghent Pillows Hotel sports a regal Louis XIV vibe, whose plush opulence also extends to the LOF restaurant, albeit in a less extravagant vein. A mouthwatering range of outstanding produce sets the sophisticated culinary scene with the odd Asian twist. The chef might cook monkfish on the bone to preserve the taste and juicy flesh, while a delicately sweet cream of carrots, a stock of lapsang souchong tea and a velvety emulsion of olives and carrot juice further underscore this subtle fish. Heaven for lovers of spot-on, up-to-the-minute French fare.; Michelin Plate (2024) | €€€ | — |
| Vrijmoed | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Oak Gent | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Souvenir | Michelin 1 Star | €€€ | — |
| Bar Bask | €€€ | — | |
| Publiek | Michelin 1 Star | €€€ | — |
A quick look at how LOF measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book LOF?
A few days' notice is usually enough — LOF is rated Easy to book. That said, weekend lunch at a Michelin Plate venue in central Gent can fill faster than the general rating suggests, so if you have a specific Saturday slot in mind, book a week out to be safe.
Does LOF handle dietary restrictions?
LOF's kitchen works with French-influenced modern cuisine and has demonstrated flexibility with ingredients — the Michelin Plate profile highlights precise, technique-driven cooking rather than a fixed formula. Contact the Ghent Pillows Hotel directly at Hoogstraat 36 before your reservation to flag any specific dietary requirements; hotel restaurants at this level generally accommodate requests when given advance notice.
What should I order at LOF?
LOF's Michelin Plate recognition specifically calls out fish cookery — monkfish on the bone with a lapsang souchong tea stock and olive emulsion is cited as a kitchen signature. The menu incorporates occasional Asian accents into an otherwise French-led approach, so dishes with that cross-technique element tend to show the kitchen's point of difference most clearly.
Can I eat at the bar at LOF?
LOF sits inside the Ghent Pillows Hotel on Hoogstraat, and the restaurant's setup follows that of a hotel dining room rather than a standalone bar-led concept. Bar seating availability isn't confirmed in current records — your safest move is to check the venue's official channels when reserving if counter or bar dining is a priority.
What should a first-timer know about LOF?
LOF sits at the €€€ price point with a Michelin Plate (2024), which puts it below the headline Belgian fine dining tier but well above casual hotel dining. The kitchen leans French with occasional Asian technique, and the room carries a muted version of the Pillows Hotel's Louis XIV aesthetic. It's the right call if you want precision cooking in Gent without the commitment of a full tasting-menu evening.
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