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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Maison François

    400pts

    Serious French brasserie. Book it.

    Maison François, Restaurant in London

    About Maison François

    Maison François is the most sensible French brasserie booking in St James's: classical Gallic cooking, a wine list that earned Star Wine List's number-one ranking in 2023, and pricing that respects the food rather than the postcode. Easy to book, genuinely warm in service, and one of the few London restaurants that works equally well for a solo lunch or a table of six.

    Is Maison François worth booking in London?

    Yes — and it fills a gap that few St James's restaurants bother with. If you want a proper French brasserie that runs from breakfast through to dinner, executes Gallic classics with real care, and doesn't charge Mayfair prices for the privilege, Maison François is the answer. The neighbourhood is stacked with expense-account restaurants and tasting-menu rooms, which makes this neo-traditional brasserie on Duke Street feel like a deliberate correction. Book it.

    What Maison François is actually like

    The room earns its reputation before you've ordered anything. A double-height ceiling gives the space a genuine brasserie scale — airy and slightly grand without the stiffness that kills spontaneity in a lot of St James's dining rooms. Tables are reasonably spaced, which matters here: this is a place for conversation, whether you're catching up with someone over leeks vinaigrette at lunch or settling in for a longer dinner. The energy sits at smart-casual; there's evident care in the service, but the tone is warm rather than formal. Feedback from diners consistently points to service that treats everyone equally , one guest eating moules frites at £15 reported being treated as if they'd ordered the most expensive thing on the menu. That consistency is not something you can fake at scale, and it's one of the clearest signals that the operation is well run.

    The menu is a catalogue of French classics done seriously: oeuf en gelée, leeks vinaigrette, pâté en croûte, poulet rôti, entrecôte de boeuf au poivre, hake with sauce bouillabaisse, côte de veau. This is not a kitchen trying to reinterpret French cooking through a contemporary lens , it's committed to the originals, and that commitment shows in the execution. The côte de veau arrives precisely cooked, fat beautifully caramelised. Comté gougères and jambon noir de Bigorre with celeriac rémoulade are the kind of thing you find yourself ordering again on a return visit. The dessert trolley , macarons, tarte aux pommes, Paris-Brest, mousse au chocolat , is a genuine event rather than an afterthought.

    Downstairs, Frank's wine bar provides a moodily lit counterpoint to the main dining room: lower-ceilinged, more intimate, better suited to a long bottle of Burgundy than a three-course dinner. The wine list upstairs is lengthy and genuinely broad , France leads, but there's serious coverage across the rest of Europe and the New World. Star Wine List ranked it number one in 2023, which gives you a sense of how seriously they take the cellar for a restaurant at this price point.

    Prices are fair for the postcode. Duke Street is a short walk from Fortnum and Mason and sits in one of London's most expensive dining corridors , which makes Maison François' pricing feel refreshingly proportionate. This is a neighbourhood anchor in the truest sense: somewhere St James's actually needed, not just another room chasing the same expense-account clientele as everywhere else on the block. For our full London restaurants guide, see London restaurants on Pearl.

    Booking and practical details

    Booking here is direct , this is not a hard reservation in the way that some of London's tasting-menu rooms can be. The brasserie format and full-day opening (breakfast through dinner) means there's more flexibility in when you can get a table. That said, dinner on weekends will fill up, so booking a week or two ahead is sensible rather than essential. If you're in the area and haven't booked, it's worth calling or checking availability on the day, particularly for lunch or early dinner on a weekday. The format works well for solo diners at the counter or bar, for pairs at a standard table, and for small groups of four to six who want a proper sit-down meal without the rigidity of a set menu. Frank's in the basement is worth knowing about for drinks before or after , or as a destination in its own right if you want wine without the full dining commitment.

    How It Compares

    Against London's ££££ French and European rooms, Maison François plays in a different register , deliberately so. Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library and Restaurant Gordon Ramsay both offer Modern French cooking at the tasting-menu end of the market: higher spend, more ceremony, significantly harder to book. If that's what you're after , a full occasion with multi-course progression , those rooms deliver it. But if you want to eat classic French food at a table you can actually hold a conversation across, Maison François is the more practical choice and, for most diners, the more enjoyable one.

    CORE by Clare Smyth and The Ledbury are both worth booking if your priority is technical ambition at the highest level of Modern British or European cooking. Both require more advance planning and a larger spend. Dinner by Heston Blumenthal occupies a similar crowd-pleasing position to Maison François in terms of accessibility and name recognition, but leans into theatrical Modern British rather than French classicism. For classic French brasserie cooking at a fair price with serious wine, Maison François is the clearest answer in central London right now.

    Pearl Picks , if you're planning further

    Compare Maison François

    Value Check: Maison François and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Maison FrançoisEasy
    CORE by Clare Smyth££££Unknown
    Restaurant Gordon Ramsay££££Unknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library££££Unknown
    The Ledbury££££Unknown
    Dinner by Heston Blumenthal££££Unknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Maison François and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Maison François good for solo dining?

    Yes — the open kitchen counter and brasserie-format seating make solo visits comfortable rather than awkward. The warm service noted by multiple contributors means you won't feel overlooked eating alone. Frank's, the basement wine bar, is also a solid option if you want a lower-key perch with a glass and something light.

    Can Maison François accommodate groups?

    The double-height main room handles groups reasonably well, and the brasserie scale means a table of four to six shouldn't feel cramped. Frank's downstairs works for smaller groups wanting a wine-bar atmosphere. For large private hire or groups of eight-plus, check directly with the restaurant — the format suits shared plates and a classic carte, which helps with group ordering.

    What should I wear to Maison François?

    The dress code is smart-casual: St James's location, so sharper than jeans and a t-shirt, but nowhere near black-tie. The venue's own description is 'smart-casual with comfortable seats' and a relaxed atmosphere — think pressed trousers or a dress rather than a suit. Frank's downstairs skews slightly more casual still.

    What are alternatives to Maison François in London?

    For a tighter, more chef-driven French experience with Michelin credentials, The Ledbury is the obvious step up in ambition and price. If you want something in a similar brasserie register but with a different European slant, Brasserie Zédel near Piccadilly offers a comparable classics-focused menu at lower price points. Maison François sits in between: better cooking than a tourist brasserie, without the formality or cost of a tasting-menu room.

    Is Maison François good for a special occasion?

    Yes, within the right expectations. This is a celebration dinner, not a milestone fine-dining event — the trolley of tarts, Paris-Brest and macarons at the end is genuinely festive, and the service has a strong track record of treating all guests well regardless of spend. If the occasion calls for a tasting menu and a sommelier pairing, look at The Ledbury or Restaurant Gordon Ramsay instead. For a birthday dinner with a proper roast chicken and a good Burgundy, Maison François earns its place.

    How far ahead should I book Maison François?

    A week to ten days is generally enough for a weekday dinner; Friday and Saturday evenings in St James's fill faster, so two to three weeks is safer for prime slots. This is not a hard reservation on the level of London's tasting-menu rooms. Frank's downstairs operates as a walk-in wine bar, which gives you a fallback if the main dining room is full.

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