Counter Service
14 SeatsEach guest sees the craft in motion—final seasoning, warm plating, brushwork, slicing, and finishing oils.
A dark, intimate dining room where French technique meets Japanese restraint. Every course is quiet in appearance, precise in structure, and unforgettable in memory.
NOIR & SEL is shaped by restraint. We prefer fewer elements, sharper technique, and a dining room that feels composed rather than loud. The result is editorial, intimate, and exact.
Our cuisine is not fusion for spectacle. It is alignment: French structural foundations, Japanese precision, and a service ritual built on soft pacing. The room is designed to lower noise, hold warmth, and direct attention toward the plate.
Every detail is edited: temperature, light, plating pace, pairing rhythm, and the acoustic softness of the counter. Nothing here shouts. Everything is intentional.
Each guest sees the craft in motion—final seasoning, warm plating, brushwork, slicing, and finishing oils.
Pairings move with the menu, not against it—bright lift for the sea, structure for the ember, elegance for the finale.
The menu is rewritten from the market and coast. We keep the line tight so each ingredient can speak clearly.
Explore the week’s movements. Adjust category and price range. Clicking a dish copies it into your clipboard and adds it to your reservation notes.
Our ember work is built around white binchōtan charcoal—clean, stable, and precise. It allows us to hold texture, concentrate aroma, and preserve the original character of the ingredient.
Binchōtan reaches extreme heat while remaining stable and clean, making it ideal for premium proteins and delicate fats.
We aim for the correct tension between crust and interior—not heavy char for appearance, but true balance.
Mineral finishing salts are used not just for salinity, but for cadence, brittleness, and aromatic lift.
Rather than forcing one direction, we build pairings in two voices: old-world structure and Japanese purity. Guests may follow either arc—or both.
Mineral, tense, and quietly expansive. Chosen for shellfish, beurre blanc, and saline finishing notes.
Chardonnay · Chablis / Côte de BeauneLifted aromatics, clean body, and subtle sweetness. Ideal with raw fish, citrus, and bitter herb oils.
Cold serve · polished riceFor smoke, mushroom, and deeper reductions we move toward structured, savory, almost architectural bottles.
Jura / mature stylesMove the cursor across the gallery for subtle 3D motion. Click a frame to open the editorial modal.
Small editorials from the dining room: what we are buying, changing, refining, and pairing this month.
Its brightness is not only acidity; it is a reset. We use it to reopen the palate after deeper reductions and fire.
Less bitterness, less smoke residue, and more honest surface aroma. Heat becomes structure rather than decoration.
The right bottle adds length, shape, and lift. The wrong one simply tastes floral and disappears too fast.
Everything feels edited. The room, the menu, the timing—nothing competes for attention. It’s one of the most composed meals in Paris.
The transition from raw sea courses to charcoal depth was flawless. Service was calm, exact, and beautifully restrained.
Requests are answered within hours. Tell us if you’re celebrating, pairing, or working around allergies—the kitchen reads everything.