Restaurant in Strasbourg, France
Umami
450Pearl PointsTwo Michelin stars. Book it early.

About Umami
Umami holds two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) and a 4.7 Google rating across 343 reviews — making it Strasbourg's strongest case for a serious modern tasting-menu dinner at the €€€ price point. Chef William Shen's kitchen rewards return visits as much as first ones. Book four to six weeks out minimum; tables at this level move fast.
Verdict
Book Umami. This is Strasbourg's most compelling case for a modern tasting-menu dinner at the €€€ price point, and two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) confirm what the 4.7 Google rating across 343 reviews already suggests: William Shen's kitchen is consistent, serious, and worth the commitment. If you can get a table, secure it — then start thinking about your second visit before the first one is over.
The Room and What You're Walking Into
Umami sits at 8 Rue des Dentelles in Strasbourg's historic centre, a short walk from the cathedral quarter. The address — Rue des Dentelles, the street of lacework , sets a visual register that the dining room apparently honours: the kind of precise, intricate environment where the plate presentation is clearly the primary visual event. For an explorer-minded diner, this matters. You are not arriving at a rustic Alsatian table or a grand brasserie. You are walking into a room where the cooking is the spectacle, and the design exists to frame it without competing.
Chef William Shen's approach is classified as Modern Cuisine, which at this level means a format built around a tasting menu: a sequence of courses that unfolds over the course of an evening, each one a small argument for a particular technique or combination. If you are comparing formats, Umami is closer in spirit to a restaurant like Maison Lameloise in Chagny than to a traditional Alsatian house. The point is precision and progression, not regional comfort.
Multi-Visit Strategy: How to Approach Umami Across Two or Three Trips
This is the kind of restaurant that rewards return visits, and thinking about it that way changes how you should book. A first visit is about orientation: understanding Shen's current vocabulary, the pacing of the menu, how the kitchen handles the transition between courses. Go without a strong agenda. Order the full tasting menu if there is one, take the wine pairing if your budget allows at the €€€ tier, and pay attention to the moments where the kitchen takes a risk. Those are the moments worth returning for.
A second visit is where the depth becomes apparent. Knowing the room's rhythm, you can make more deliberate choices about seating, timing, and how you want the evening to move. Restaurants at this level , consistently starred, with a high review volume suggesting genuine regulars , often rotate their menus seasonally, which means a return visit six months later can feel like an almost entirely different experience. Strasbourg's culinary calendar follows Alsatian agricultural rhythms: spring brings lighter, more herbaceous directions; autumn shifts toward richer, earthier territory. Both are worth experiencing at Umami if the kitchen is working with seasonal produce, as Michelin-starred modern cuisine restaurants at this tier typically do.
A third visit, if you get there, is about comparison and consolidation. By this point, you have enough context to understand whether the kitchen is evolving or refining, and which dishes or sequences represent Shen's most confident work. For food and wine enthusiasts who treat Strasbourg as a regular destination , or who are building an Alsace itinerary alongside visits to the region's wine villages , Umami becomes a useful anchor point, the kind of restaurant you return to rather than simply check off. This puts it in a different category from most of the city's other €€€ options.
Booking: Do Not Leave This Late
Booking difficulty at Umami is rated Hard. Two consecutive Michelin stars and a strong review base in a city with a serious dining culture means tables move quickly. Plan to book a minimum of four to six weeks out for a weekend table, and ideally further out if you are targeting a specific date around a visit to Strasbourg. Midweek is your leading route to a shorter lead time, but do not assume it. The 2025 Michelin star confirmation will have refreshed demand, so expect competition for reservations through at least the first half of the year. If you are travelling to Strasbourg specifically for this meal, lock the table before you book accommodation , then look at our full Strasbourg hotels guide to find somewhere nearby worth staying.
Positioning and Price
At €€€, Umami sits in the mid-to-upper range for Strasbourg without reaching the €€€€ territory of competitors like 1741 or Au Crocodile. For a two-star-calibre kitchen , Shen has held the star in consecutive years, which is the harder test , this represents strong value relative to equivalent restaurants in Paris or Lyon. For context, a Michelin-starred modern tasting menu in Paris at this level would typically run significantly higher in total spend. Strasbourg's positioning as a mid-sized French city keeps the price anchored even as the ambition climbs. If you are already planning a visit to Alsace and considering whether to allocate a serious dinner budget here or at a destination restaurant further afield, Umami makes a credible argument for staying local. For reference, restaurants like Arpège in Paris or Mirazur in Menton operate at a different price ceiling entirely.
Broader Strasbourg Context
Strasbourg punches above its size for serious dining. It is a city with genuine culinary depth, a strong wine culture given its proximity to Alsace's grand cru vineyards, and enough variety across price points to structure a full food-focused trip. Umami sits at the concentrated, ambitious end of that spectrum. For a broader view of what the city offers, see our full Strasbourg restaurants guide. If you are building an evening around the meal , aperitifs before, a digestif after , our Strasbourg bars guide has options in the same neighbourhood. And if the meal inspires a deeper interest in Alsatian wine, our Strasbourg wineries guide covers the region's producers worth visiting. For casual dinners before or after your Umami booking, Gavroche, La Brasserie des Haras, and Les Funambules are all worth knowing. Blue Flamingo offers a different register entirely if you want contrast.
The Bottom Line
Umami earns its stars and earns a return visit. At €€€, with two consecutive Michelin recognitions and a review profile that suggests genuine repeat custom, this is the restaurant in Strasbourg that food-focused travellers should be building their itinerary around , not visiting as an afterthought. Book early, plan to return, and treat the first visit as the beginning of a longer conversation with the kitchen.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Umami? Yes, at the €€€ price point and with two consecutive Michelin stars, the tasting menu format here delivers value that would cost considerably more in Paris or Lyon. If you are comfortable committing to a multi-course progression rather than ordering à la carte, this is the format the kitchen is built around and where it performs leading.
- Is Umami worth the price? Yes. Two Michelin stars held across consecutive years at a €€€ price tier , not €€€€ , puts Umami in a strong value position relative to comparable modern cuisine restaurants in France. You are getting serious cooking at a price point that remains accessible for a special-occasion dinner.
- Is Umami good for a special occasion? It is well-suited to it. A Michelin-starred tasting menu in a precisely designed room makes a clear statement, and the 4.7 rating across 343 reviews suggests the kitchen delivers consistently enough to trust with an important evening. Book well in advance , this is not a restaurant you can rely on for last-minute special occasions.
- Does Umami handle dietary restrictions? No specific information is available in our data on Umami's dietary restriction policy. For a Michelin-starred restaurant operating at this level, it is standard practice to accommodate restrictions when notified at booking , contact the restaurant directly when making your reservation to confirm.
- Can Umami accommodate groups? Seat count and private dining data are not available in our records. Given the €€€ price tier and the focused, precision-driven format, this is likely a restaurant better suited to small parties of two to four than to large groups. Contact Umami directly to ask about group arrangements and any minimum spend requirements.
- Can I eat at the bar at Umami? No bar-seating information is available in our data. Modern Cuisine restaurants at this price and award level in France do not typically offer informal bar dining in the way a brasserie might. If a counter or bar option exists, it would be worth confirming directly with the restaurant when booking.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Umami handle dietary restrictions?
Umami's database record does not specify a formal dietary accommodation policy. For a tasting-menu format at a two-Michelin-star level, most kitchens at this tier handle dietary needs when notified at booking — check the venue's official channels when reserving to confirm. Do not arrive and assume flexibility on the night.
Can Umami accommodate groups?
No group capacity details are confirmed in available records. At a one-star, €€€ restaurant operating a tasting-menu format, large groups are typically constrained by table configuration. If you are planning for more than four, contact Umami well in advance — and book early regardless, given the Hard booking difficulty rating.
Can I eat at the bar at Umami?
Bar or counter seating is not documented for Umami. This is a tasting-menu-oriented modern cuisine restaurant, so the dining format is likely structured around set sittings rather than drop-in bar access. Verify directly with the restaurant before planning an informal visit.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Umami?
Yes, for the right diner. Two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) under Chef William Shen confirm consistent kitchen performance, and at €€€ the pricing sits below Strasbourg's top tier (1741 and Au Crocodile operate higher). If a structured tasting format is not your preference, Umami is not the right fit — but if you are comfortable with that format, the star track record justifies the spend.
Is Umami worth the price?
At €€€, Umami is positioned as mid-to-upper for Strasbourg without crossing into the €€€€ range of competitors like 1741 or Au Crocodile. Two back-to-back Michelin stars from 2024 to 2025 indicate the kitchen is earning its price point, not coasting on it. For what two-star recognition costs elsewhere in France, this is a reasonable entry price.
Is Umami good for a special occasion?
Yes. Two consecutive Michelin stars (2024, 2025), a considered address on Rue des Dentelles near Strasbourg's cathedral quarter, and a €€€ price point that feels deliberate rather than excessive make this a strong choice for a significant dinner. Book well ahead — tables are Hard to secure, and last-minute availability is unlikely.
Location
8 Rue des Dentelles, 67000 Strasbourg, France
Compare Umami
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Umami | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Michelin 1 Star (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024) | Hard | — |
| Au Crocodile | French - Alsatian, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Ondine | Seafood, Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Unknown | — | |
| Colbert | French Brasserie, Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Unknown | — | |
| 1741 | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| de:ja | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Umami and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Au Crocodile — French - Alsatian, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Ondine — Seafood, Modern Cuisine, €€€
- Colbert — French Brasserie, Modern Cuisine, €€€
- 1741 — Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- de:ja — Creative, €€€€
Umami at €€€ is the most accessible entry point into Strasbourg's Michelin-starred tier. If your primary question is value, it wins that comparison clearly against 1741, de:ja, and Au Crocodile — all of which operate at €€€€. Those restaurants may offer a grander setting or more elaborate production, but Umami's two consecutive stars demonstrate that the kitchen is operating at a comparable level of ambition without the higher price tag. If budget is a constraint and you want genuine Michelin-level modern cuisine, Umami is the call.
For diners choosing between Umami and the €€€€ tier: 1741 and Au Crocodile both occupy a more formal register, with Au Crocodile offering the deepest Alsatian culinary heritage of any restaurant in the city. If your interest is rooted in regional cuisine and you want the grandest possible expression of it, Au Crocodile is the better choice. If you want modern cuisine that travels beyond its geography, Umami or de:ja are more relevant. De:ja skews more creative and experimental; Umami reads as the more grounded, consistent option with its stronger review base.
At the €€€ level, Ondine and Colbert are the direct price-tier peers. Ondine's seafood focus makes it the right pick if fish and shellfish are the priority; Colbert operates as a French brasserie, which is a fundamentally different format — more accessible, less structured, better for groups or informal evenings. Neither carries Michelin recognition, which makes Umami the clear recommendation for any diner whose primary goal is culinary depth at this price level.
Recognized By
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