Restaurant in Ostwald, France
Miro
210ptsMichelin-recognised fusion at mid-range prices.

About Miro
Miro earns its Michelin Plate (2024) and 4.7-star Google rating with a fusion menu that genuinely spans South American, Japanese, and French cooking. At the €€ price point on the banks of the River Ill in Ostwald, it is the most interesting kitchen in the area. The lunch set menu is the smartest entry point for a first visit.
Miro, Ostwald: Worth Booking
Miro is worth booking, particularly if you are after something genuinely different from the Alsatian classics that dominate the region. Holding a Michelin Plate (2024) and rated 4.7 across 666 Google reviews, this €€ fusion restaurant on the banks of the River Ill delivers a menu that pulls from South American, Japanese, and French cooking without feeling like a concept in search of a point. For a first-timer in Ostwald, it reads as the most interesting table in the immediate area.
What to Expect at Miro
The setting does real work here. Miro sits in grounds beside the River Ill, and the atmosphere leans calm and unhurried rather than formal or hushed. If you are arriving expecting the buttoned-up energy of a classical Alsatian dining room, adjust your expectations: Miro has an easy, convivial mood that suits an evening meal at your own pace. The ambient sound level is low enough to hold a proper conversation, which makes it a stronger pick for date nights or small-group dinners than for large, loud celebrations.
The menu is where the kitchen earns its recognition. The Michelin Plate signals cooking that is technically sound and genuinely pleasurable, and the specific dishes mentioned in Miro's recognition data give you a clear picture: Thai-style sea bass ceviche and an Argentinian beef entrecote finished over burning embers. These are not fusion-for-fusion's-sake choices. They are the result of a chef with documented fluency across South American, Japanese, and French cooking traditions, and the execution reflects that grounding. The ceviche brings brightness and acidity; the beef over embers delivers smoke and char in a way that direct French preparations rarely attempt.
For first-timers, the most important piece of practical advice is this: look hard at the lunch set menu. Michelin's own note flags it as a steal, which in €€ territory at a Plate-level restaurant means you are likely getting serious cooking at a price point that removes any hesitation about trying the kitchen for the first time. If your schedule allows a midday visit, lead with that option.
The Takeout and Delivery Question
Miro is not a restaurant built around off-premise dining, and that matters. The two standout preparations in the record, a bright citrus-forward ceviche and an ember-finished entrecote, are both formats that depend heavily on immediacy and the right environment. Ceviche loses texture fast. Beef finished over embers needs to rest and be served at the right temperature to carry its full effect. Neither of these dishes is well-suited to a delivery container or a 20-minute transit window. If your goal is to experience what Miro does well, you need to eat it in the room. The riverside setting and the relaxed atmosphere are also part of the value proposition here, and that does not survive a takeout order. There is no evidence in the venue data that Miro operates a delivery or takeout service, and even if it did, it would not be the right way to judge this kitchen.
Booking and Logistics
Booking at Miro is rated as direct. With a 4.7 rating across 666 reviews and Michelin recognition, the restaurant has a clear following, but at the €€ price point in a suburban Alsatian commune rather than central Strasbourg, demand is unlikely to require more than a few days of forward planning on most nights. The lunch set menu may require less lead time than weekend dinner. Hours and a direct booking method are not confirmed in our data, so check via the restaurant's current online listings before making plans.
For context on what Miro sits alongside in the broader French fine dining conversation: restaurants like Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern and Arpège in Paris represent the classical and avant-garde anchors of French restaurant culture. Miro is doing something different from both, and that specificity is the point. For fusion cooking with comparable cross-cultural ambition elsewhere in Europe, Jae in Düsseldorf and Soseki in Winter Park offer useful reference points, though both operate in very different market contexts.
If you are building a trip around Alsatian dining more broadly, see our full Ostwald restaurants guide for the wider picture, and check the Ostwald hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide if you are planning a longer stay. The wineries guide is also worth a look given the Alsace wine context.
For reference among France's most-decorated regional tables, Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Troisgros in Ouches, Bras in Laguiole, Les Prés d'Eugénie in Eugénie-les-Bains, Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or, Georges Blanc in Vonnas, Auberge du Vieux Puits in Fontjoncouse, and La Table du Castellet in Le Castellet all represent what sustained ambition looks like across French regions. Miro is not competing at that tier by price or recognition level, but within the €€ range and within Ostwald specifically, it is the most interesting cooking available.
Pearl Practical Snapshot
| Detail | Miro | Typical €€€€ Paris Peer |
|---|---|---|
| Price range | €€ | €€€€ |
| Michelin recognition | Plate (2024) | 1–3 Stars |
| Google rating | 4.7 (666 reviews) | Varies |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Hard to very hard |
| Setting | Riverside grounds, Ostwald | Urban, central Paris |
| Leading for | Lunch set menu, couples, small groups | Special occasions, expense accounts |
| Takeout suitability | Low | Low |
Compare Miro
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Miro | €€ | — |
| Plénitude | €€€€ | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Miro and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Miro?
A week's notice is usually sufficient given the mid-range price point and Ostwald's size, but the Michelin Plate recognition means weekends fill faster. Book at least 10 days out for Friday or Saturday evening, and aim for the lunch sitting if you want the most flexibility — the set lunch menu is the strongest value proposition on the card.
What are alternatives to Miro in Ostwald?
Miro is one of the few fusion-forward options in the area; most nearby restaurants lean hard into Alsatian tradition. If you want to stay close to Ostwald, the comparison set narrows quickly — Miro's Michelin Plate and €€ pricing put it ahead of generic brasseries in the area. For a step up in ambition, Strasbourg's centre is close enough to consider, but you will pay significantly more.
What should I order at Miro?
The two preparations the Michelin record highlights are the Thai-style sea bass ceviche and the Argentinian beef entrecôte finished over burning embers — these are the clearest expressions of the chef's travel-driven cooking style. The lunch set menu is explicitly flagged as a steal, so if you are visiting midday, lead with that rather than ordering à la carte.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Miro?
The lunch set menu is the documented value play here, described in the Michelin record as a steal at the €€ price range. No specific tasting menu format is confirmed in available data, so verify the current dinner format when booking — but at this price tier, the risk of overpaying is low compared with similarly credentialled restaurants.
What should a first-timer know about Miro?
Come expecting fusion, not Alsatian classics — the kitchen draws on South American, Japanese, and French technique, and dishes like the Thai-style ceviche sit alongside grilled Argentine beef. The setting is on the banks of the River Ill, so the atmosphere runs calm and unhurried rather than buzzy. The €€ price point means it is an accessible first visit without a heavy commitment.
Is Miro good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations: this is a Michelin Plate restaurant with a relaxed riverside setting and mid-range pricing, which makes it a stronger fit for a low-pressure celebratory dinner than a formal milestone. If you need a grander stage or a longer tasting format, you would need to travel into Strasbourg — but for a genuinely good meal that will not feel routine, Miro delivers the case.
Recognized By
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