Haute Cuisine, News | August 8, 2025

This Restaurant Might Just Be the Most Glamorous in the World

Haute Cuisine, News | August 8, 2025
Laura Schreffler
By Laura Schreffler, Editor-in-Chief

Salle Louis XV

Photo Credit: Pmonetta

The Most Glamorous Restaurant in the World? In Monte-Carlo, All Signs Point to Le Louis XV.

There are restaurants that get written about. And then there are restaurants that are whispered about — the ones where paparazzi stake out the entrance, hoping to catch the moment a Formula 1 driver, billionaire heiress, or film legend slips through the doors unnoticed. At Le Louis XV – Alain Ducasse in Monte-Carlo, that scene plays out nightly.

Alain Ducasse. Le Louis XV. Monte Carlo

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

Set inside the gilded Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo, with chandeliers that drip like diamond necklaces and ceilings frescoed to rival a Renaissance chapel, Le Louis XV doesn’t just flirt with glamour — it defines it. For more than three decades, it’s been one of the world’s most legendary dining rooms: the first hotel restaurant to earn three Michelin stars, the launchpad of Alain Ducasse’s empire, and an ever-revolving catwalk of discreet global glitterati. But what truly sets it apart isn’t who dines there. It’s why they keep coming back.

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

When Alain Ducasse took over the kitchen in 1987, he was just 33 — and the Hôtel de Paris gave him a challenge no one had ever attempted: win three Michelin stars within four years. He did it in less than three. And in doing so, he didn’t just make history — he changed it.

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

Le Louis XV became a temple to Riviera haute cuisine. Ducasse’s vision was clear from the start: let the ingredients do the talking. Vegetables from the hills above Nice. Seafood fresh from the Ligurian coast. Olive oil that tastes like sunshine. And an emphasis on Mediterranean purity that broke with the heavy, butter-laden French classics of the past.

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

That ethos continues today under executive chef Emmanuel Pilon, who worked closely with Ducasse at Plaza Athénée in Paris before taking the reins in Monaco. Pilon has a way of cooking that feels simultaneously precise and poetic — refining Ducasse’s vision while giving it new life.

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

His menus are rooted in the region but executed with clarity and grace. A dish of gamberoni from San Remo with citrus and gold caviar, artichokes and truffles in a delicate broth, and a vegetable mille-feuille that feels like a meditation on texture.

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

That being said, even after nearly 40 years, Alain Ducasse’s fingerprints are everywhere. In the balance of the wine list, in the silence that follows the first course., in the obsessive attention to detail — from the hand-cut porcelain to the still-warm bread perfumed with citrus zest. He may not be in the kitchen nightly, but his philosophy endures: that luxury should be understated, that seasonality matters more than showmanship, and that a truly extraordinary meal can change how you see the world.

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

Or, as it happens, how the world sees you, because of course, most don’t just come to Le Louis XV for the food alone — though it would be worth the trip even if you did. The room itself is operatic. Marble, mirrors, brocade, and gold. Service that floats, not walks. Champagne (a 2017 Guiborat De Caures a Mont-Aigu, to be specific) poured without a whisper of a splash. Subtly perfect pairings of Provencal wines — a Domaine Capelude Les Colbres and a Clos De L’ours Le Chemin , precisely. A cheese cart that deserves its own Instagram account.

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

And then there’s the scene. You might spot a royal from the Gulf States seated at a corner banquette. An actor who just wrapped a premiere at Cannes. Or a Grand Prix champion winding down with a glass of Château d’Yquem after a week of adrenaline and interviews. But no one makes a fuss — because here, being seen isn’t about spectacle. It’s about belonging.

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

So is Le Louis XV the most glamorous restaurant in the world? If you definite it the way the greats do — through legacy, precision, beauty, discretion, and soul — then there’s nowhere else quite like it. It’s not just a restaurant, after all. More so, it’s a chapter in culinary history. A mirror to Monaco’s mystique, and an enduring reminder that elegance, when done right, never needs to shout.

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

Le Louis XV is located inside L’Hôtel de Paris at Pl. du Casino, 98000 Monaco

Photo Credit: Matteo Carassale

Read more on chef Alain Ducasse HERE 

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