La Mère Brazier
Eugénie Brazier's 1921 temple, two stars under Mathieu Viannay
Lyon's grand peninsula between two rivers, where Michelin-starred tables, historic bouchons and a new bistronomie share the same elegant streets.
The Presqu'île is the long tongue of land between the Rhône and the Saône, and it functions as Lyon's grand drawing room — Haussmannian façades, the wide sweep of Place Bellecour, and the restored Grand Hôtel-Dieu now anchoring its southern reach. Dining here runs the full register: Mathieu Viannay's twice-Michelin-starred La Mère Brazier keeps the lineage of Lyon's matriarch cooks alive on rue Royale, while the bouchon Café des Fédérations still ladles out tablier de sapeur and quenelle at communal red-checked tables. Between those poles sit the new guard — modern bistronomie, a tight cocktail address, a specialty-coffee counter under the Hôtel-Dieu's vaults — so a single afternoon can carry you from saucisson to a flat white without leaving the peninsula. It is the part of Lyon where the city performs its appetite most openly.
5 lugares
Eugénie Brazier's 1921 temple, two stars under Mathieu Viannay
Matthieu Girardon's modern cooking and a 1,000-bottle Burgundy cellar
Maxime Laurenson's terroir tasting menu, back to nature
Bastian Ruga's blind tasting journey, a new 2026 Michelin star
The 1872 bouchon every Lyonnais sends you to first
1 lugar