• CONTACT US if you have any problems registering for the forums.

Bonnieux and St. Remy in May

aspalek

New Member
Hi, My husband and I will be in Bonnieux and St. Remy in early for 4 nights each next month. Chose both towns based on mentions on this site, thank you! Can't wait to see which i like better (if i even want to choose).
Would love to get some dining recommendations for either area. I found a couple of recs in Bonnieux but according to Google maps, one is now closed (L'arome?).
Any suggestions would be welcome - we will have a rental car and will be of course driving around to check out the nearby towns and markets.
Thank you!
 
We visited Provence in October 2023, staying 9 nights each in Aix and St Remy. Here are our restaurant recommendations for St Remy (make reservations ahead of time):
1. Restaurant La Table d'Yvan - so good we ate there twice! In a hotel a bit outside of town, pre-fixe dinner that changes daily. See website for daily menu, published a week at a time. Reservations a must.
2. Restaurant Maison Marshall - delicious dinner, friendly helpful service
3. Gus Restaurant - Delicious seafood, either as dinner or order whatever you want. Very tiny. Make a reservation.
3. L'Aile ou la Cuisse - best part of the meal was dessert - you get to choose from an assortment
4. Bistrot des Alpilles - nice pre-fixe menu or order a la carte. Busy place
5. La Rose des Sables - Good Moroccan restaurant, hidden in a corner of a parking lot.

Lots of opportunities for day trips from St Remy. We went to Arles, Avignon, Pont du Gard, Cassis and La Camargue. Don't miss Carrieres de Lumieres (reserve ahead of time).
ENJOY!
 
We visited Provence in October 2023, staying 9 nights each in Aix and St Remy. Here are our restaurant recommendations for St Remy (make reservations ahead of time):
1. Restaurant La Table d'Yvan - so good we ate there twice! In a hotel a bit outside of town, pre-fixe dinner that changes daily. See website for daily menu, published a week at a time. Reservations a must.
2. Restaurant Maison Marshall - delicious dinner, friendly helpful service
3. Gus Restaurant - Delicious seafood, either as dinner or order whatever you want. Very tiny. Make a reservation.
3. L'Aile ou la Cuisse - best part of the meal was dessert - you get to choose from an assortment
4. Bistrot des Alpilles - nice pre-fixe menu or order a la carte. Busy place
5. La Rose des Sables - Good Moroccan restaurant, hidden in a corner of a parking lot.

Lots of opportunities for day trips from St Remy. We went to Arles, Avignon, Pont du Gard, Cassis and La Camargue. Don't miss Carrieres de Lumieres (reserve ahead of time).
ENJOY!
Thanks so much for these, they sound great. I have heard about carrieres des lumieres, I will check into booking that!
 
Both villages are lovely.
I would make Bonnieux a base and make St Rémy a day trip. Reasons:
1. Bonnieux has a range of good eateries, from a good pizza (la Flambée) to gastronomy (Ju, plus others), plus a great butcher who mqkes a killer roast chicken, plus an insane ice cream glacier (Tinel). St Rémy's eateries are not bad but do not have this concentration of excellence.
2. Bonnieux is in the middle of a clustr of beautiful villages (Goult, St Saturnin les Apt, Saignon, Venasque, Lacoste, Ménerbe…).
3. St Rémy is not far.
4. And personally I hate pack-unpack.
Or you can consider 6 days Bonnieux and 2 days St Rémy, so that you can have 2 days to explore St Rémy's old town, Glanum, Van Gogh's sanatorium, and Arles.
I have visited Pont du Gard several times through the years, and have been very disappointed since there's been a visitors' center. It is Pondugardland.
If you like ancient Roman sites, and there are quite a few splendid ones in and near Arles (the Cryptoportique, Alyscamps in addition to all the famous Roman sites of Arles) and the overwhelming Barbegal. And Arles is another place that is blessed with a concentration of good eateries.
You will have a fabulous time.
 
Thank you! I'm already hungry for that roast chicken! I'm not sure I can change my dates at this point since our trip is soon. Saving all your advice though. Do plan on visiting as many Roman site as possible. I saw Pont du Gard in a college trip in the 80s and thought it was amazing but sounds like the atmosphere is very changed. Too bad!
 
There is a way to see the Pont du Gard without driving in and paying and it is more fun.

My favorite approach to the Pont du Gard is to park in Vers-Pont-du-Gard and take the hiking trail from there, along the remains of the aqueduct (Pont de la Lone), to the Pont du Gard.

 
Last edited:
Hi, My husband and I will be in Bonnieux and St. Remy in early for 4 nights each next month. Chose both towns based on mentions on this site, thank you! Can't wait to see which i like better (if i even want to choose).
Would love to get some dining recommendations for either area. I found a couple of recs in Bonnieux but according to Google maps, one is now closed (L'arome?).
Any suggestions would be welcome - we will have a rental car and will be of course driving around to check out the nearby towns and markets.
Thank you!
Hi! Both towns are lovely try Le Fournil in Bonnieux and L'Auberge de Saint-Rémy in St. Remy for a memorable dining experience; both offer great local cuisine and charm!
 
Thank you! I'm already hungry for that roast chicken! I'm not sure I can change my dates at this point since our trip is soon. Saving all your advice though. Do plan on visiting as many Roman site as possible. I saw Pont du Gard in a college trip in the 80s and thought it was amazing but sounds like the atmosphere is very changed. Too bad!
"'m not sure I can change my dates at this point"
Don't worry. I was just fussing about planning an A or an A+ trip. :)
I suggested once to two veteran slowtravelers - not young young - to rent a canoe from Pont du Gard'sneighboring village Collias, to approach the Pont du Gard that way, (and pack a roast chicken picnic). They loved it. But I'm not sure the weather would permit it for you.
I think you must have ssen Pont du Gard in its better days.
 
I'm here in Bonnieux now. We've been spending time in Bonnieux for over 20 years and have a 2nd home here. There have been lots of changes in the restaurants in the years since COVID.

Le Fournil is now closed and L'Arome was sold a year ago. In the space occupied by L'Arome (right by our home), there's now a gastronomic restaurant, "Ju," which was just awarded one Michelin star. I've had dinner there twice, and we just had lunch a few days ago.. lunch is well-worth considering. The owner has now bought the old Fournil space and will be opening a more casual Bistro.

Some of our other favorites: La Flambee for home-cooking and wood-fired-oven pizzas. Le Terrail, for a casual cafe meal... excellent food. Le Tinel for crepes and ice cream. Down in the plain, La Gare de Bonnieux (across from the old train station).

We love this village. You could stay here for your entire time and day--trip over to St. Remy, about one hour's drive.

Kathy
 

How to Find Information

Search using the search button in the upper right. Search all forums or current forum by keyword or member. Advanced search gives you more options.

Filter forum threads using the filter pulldown above the threads. Filter by prefix, member, date. Or click on a thread title prefix to see all threads with that prefix.

Sponsors

Booking.com Hotels in Europe
AutoEurope.com Car Rentals

Recommended Guides, Apps and Books

52 Things to See and Do in Basilicata by Valerie Fortney
Italian Ancestral Journeys by Bryan Schneider
Italian Food & Life Rules by Ann Reavis
Italian Food Decoder App by Dana Facaros, Michael Pauls
French Food Decoder App by Dana Facaros, Michael Pauls
She Left No Note, Lake Iseo Italy Mystery 1 by J L Crellina
Tuscan Traveler, Living in Italy by Ann Reavis

Back
Top