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    Restaurant in Annecy, France

    Minami

    225Pearl Points

    Osaka-trained soba in the French Alps.

    Minami, Restaurant in Annecy

    About Minami

    Minami is Annecy's only serious Japanese soba option, led by a Tsuji Culinary Institute-trained chef at a €€ price point. Signature dishes include soba with grilled conger eel and Kyoto-imported herring. With a 4.7 Google rating across 447 reviews, it is the practical choice for Japanese cuisine in a city dominated by French fine dining — and a smart addition to any Annecy trip that already has French meals covered.

    The Verdict

    Minami is one of the few places in Annecy where you can eat Japanese soba noodles prepared by a chef trained at the Tsuji Culinary Institute in Osaka. At a €€ price point, it sits well below the Michelin-tracked French fine dining circuit in this city, and it delivers something that circuit cannot: a focused, technically grounded noodle menu with a clear point of view. If Japanese cuisine is what you are after, Minami is your leading option in Annecy by default, and given its 4.7 Google rating across 447 reviews, the consistency of execution is not in question.

    About Minami

    Soba is the entire reason to come here. Chef Nam Chang-soo trained at the Tsuji Culinary Institute in Osaka, one of the most demanding culinary schools in Japan, and he applies that foundation specifically to buckwheat noodles rather than spreading it across a broad Japanese menu. That kind of disciplined focus is rare in a mid-sized French Alpine city, and it is the core reason this restaurant earns attention from food-oriented travelers passing through Annecy.

    The soba dishes at Minami are rooted in Japanese tradition but carry a personal stamp from Nam. Two dishes in particular have built a following among regulars: a soba noodle soup topped with soy sauce-braised and grilled conger eel, and a version made with soy sauce-braised herring imported directly from Kyoto. The herring import detail matters because it signals that Nam is sourcing ingredients to Japanese specifications rather than substituting with local alternatives, which would be an easier and cheaper path in this context. For a traveler whose frame of reference includes serious soba restaurants in Tokyo, such as Myojaku or the Japanese dining tradition represented by venues like Azabu Kadowaki, Minami will read as a genuine attempt rather than a tourist approximation.

    Annecy itself is a city where French cuisine dominates at every price level. At the upper end, restaurants like L'Esquisse and Le Clos des Sens represent serious investment-level dining, while places like ANTO and La Rotonde des Trésoms cover the modern French middle ground. Minami exists outside this spectrum entirely. It is not competing with those restaurants; it is filling a gap they cannot fill. That positioning, combined with a €€ price range, makes it one of the more practical decisions in the city for a traveler who has already scheduled French meals elsewhere in the trip.

    The address at 19 Fbg Sainte-Claire places Minami in the Faubourg Sainte-Claire area, a walkable part of central Annecy close to the old town. That convenience matters for trip planning. You are not arranging transport to a destination restaurant; you are slotting it into an evening already built around the city center. For context on the broader Annecy dining picture, see our full Annecy restaurants guide. If you are organizing a broader stay, our Annecy hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city.

    Private Dining and Groups at Minami

    No private dining room is confirmed in the available data, so if a dedicated group space is your primary requirement, you will need to contact the restaurant directly before booking. What the data does support is a high satisfaction rate across a meaningful number of reviews (447 at 4.7 stars), which suggests the restaurant handles varied dining configurations competently. The €€ price range also makes Minami a practical choice for groups managing a shared budget, particularly when compared with the €€€€ spend required at the Michelin-level French restaurants in the same city.

    For groups focused on a shared food experience rather than a private room, the soba-led menu has a natural advantage: the format is cohesive, there is a clear signature to orient the table around, and the mid-range pricing allows for ordering multiple dishes without significant financial strain. Groups coming specifically for the conger eel soba or the Kyoto herring version will find a ready conversation piece. For groups with mixed cuisine preferences, the narrow Japanese focus is worth flagging before you commit the table.

    France's broader fine dining circuit, from Mirazur in Menton to Flocons de Sel in nearby Megève, offers elaborate private dining infrastructure at a significant premium. Minami is not trying to compete on that axis. What it offers groups is accessible pricing, a focused menu with real craft behind it, and a central location that removes logistical friction. If your group is already planning a high-spend evening at somewhere like Maison Benoît Vidal, Minami works well as the informal complement meal earlier in the trip.

    Know Before You Go

    Practical Details

    • Address: 19 Fbg Sainte-Claire, 74000 Annecy, France
    • Price range: €€ (mid-range)
    • Cuisine: Japanese, soba-focused
    • Chef: Nam Chang-soo (Tsuji Culinary Institute, Osaka)
    • Google rating: 4.7 out of 5 (447 reviews)
    • Booking difficulty: Easy
    • Reservations: Recommended; contact the restaurant directly as no online booking link is available in our data
    • Hours: Not confirmed — verify before visiting
    • Phone: Not listed — check Google Maps for current contact details
    • Dietary queries: Contact the restaurant directly before your visit

    How It Compares

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Minami accommodate groups?

    No private dining room is confirmed, so large groups looking for a dedicated space should check the venue's official channels before booking. At €€ pricing, Minami is a low-stakes choice for small groups of 2–4 who are happy sharing a table in the main dining room. If a private event space is your primary requirement, Le Clos des Sens or L'Esquisse are more likely to have that infrastructure.

    Is Minami good for solo dining?

    Yes. A soba-focused spot at the €€ price point is well-suited to solo visits — the format is counter-friendly and the menu centers on individual bowls rather than sharing plates. Chef Nam Chang-soo's training at the Tsuji Culinary Institute in Osaka gives the cooking a focused identity that rewards paying close attention, which solo diners tend to do better than groups.

    What should I order at Minami?

    Go for the soba noodle soups. The two customer-noted options are soy sauce-braised and grilled conger eel soba, and a version with soy sauce-braised herring imported from Kyoto. Both reflect Chef Nam's Tsuji Culinary Institute training and his approach of keeping traditional buckwheat noodle technique intact while adding his own interpretation. Start there before exploring anything else on the menu.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Minami?

    No tasting menu format is confirmed in the available data for Minami. The restaurant's identity is built around individual soba dishes rather than a structured multi-course progression. If a tasting menu format is what you want in Annecy, Le Clos des Sens or L'Esquisse are the more appropriate choices. Minami is a specialist noodle restaurant at €€, not a tasting menu destination.

    Does Minami handle dietary restrictions?

    Specific dietary accommodation policies are not documented for Minami. Given that soba is the kitchen's core product, diners with gluten sensitivities should note that buckwheat noodles are sometimes processed alongside wheat — check the venue's official channels at 19 Fbg Sainte-Claire to confirm. Chef Nam's Osaka training means the menu will likely carry soy and fish-based ingredients throughout.

    Location

    19 Fbg Sainte-Claire, 74000 Annecy, France

    Compare Minami

    How Minami Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    MinamiJapanese€€The star of the show at Minami is Japanese-style soba noodles. Trained at the prestigious Tsuji Culinary Institute in Osaka, Japan, Chef Nam Chang-soo is no stranger to the world of Japanese cuisine, but he professes that soba is his one true love. While respecting the time-honored traditions of Japanese-style buckwheat noodles, Nam adds his own spin to the soba dishes he serves. Customer favorites include soba noodle soup topped with soy sauce-braised and grilled conger eel as well as another variety with soy sauce-braised herring imported from Kyoto.; The star of the show at Minami is Japanese-style soba noodles. Trained at the prestigious Tsuji Culinary Institute in Osaka, Japan, Chef Nam Chang-soo is no stranger to the world of Japanese cuisine, but he professes that soba is his one true love. While respecting the time-honored traditions of Japanese-style buckwheat noodles, Nam adds his own spin to the soba dishes he serves. Customer favorites include soba noodle soup topped with soy sauce-braised and grilled conger eel as well as another variety with soy sauce-braised herring imported from Kyoto.Easy
    L'EsquisseModern Cuisine€€€€Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Le Clos des SensCreative€€€€Michelin 3 StarUnknown
    ANTOModern Cuisine€€Unknown
    Black BassModern Cuisine€€€Unknown
    Brasserie BrunetTraditional Cuisine€€Unknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Minami and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    At €€, Minami occupies a different tier entirely from Annecy's most-discussed dining options. L'Esquisse and Le Clos des Sens are both €€€€ propositions with Michelin recognition and the kind of multi-course French cooking that requires advance reservation planning and a serious budget. If that is your target for one evening, Minami is the sensible choice for a second meal on the same trip, not a substitute for it. The cuisine categories do not overlap, so you are not choosing between them so much as scheduling around them.

    For mid-range dining, the more direct comparison is ANTO, also at €€ and also easier to book than the Michelin tier. ANTO stays in the modern French register that dominates Annecy, so if you want something that diverges from that track, Minami wins on differentiation alone. Black Bass at €€€ and Brasserie Brunet at €€ both remain in French territory. Minami's 4.7 rating across 447 reviews compares favorably against the mid-range field and gives you more review-based confidence than you get from lower-volume venues.

    The booking equation also favors Minami for spontaneous or last-minute visits. The restaurant is rated easy to book, unlike the city's higher-end spots where weeks of lead time are often required. If you are deciding where to eat tonight in Annecy and Japanese soba sounds more compelling than another French bistro, Minami is the straightforward answer at this price level.

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