Head-to-Head · Brussels

Café des Spores vs La Buvette

Two Saint-Gilles siblings one street apart: Cafe des Spores is the fungi table, La Buvette the surprise tasting. Book Spores for mushrooms.

Café des Spores
Saint-Gilles · Fungi-focused · Chaussee d'Alsemberg · Food 8 / Room 8 / Value 8
Cafe des Spores full review →
vs
La Buvette
Saint-Gilles · Bistronomy · Michelin Guide · Food 8 / Room 8 / Value 8
La Buvette full review →

The Verdict

Cafe des Spores is the single-obsession table. Every menu at the Chaussee d'Alsemberg room is built around fungi in all their forms, from oyster mushroom to truffle, chanterelle and porcini, with the chef cooking behind a counter at the far end of the narrow room. The format runs two to five courses, the garlic-stuffed mushrooms are the dish that converts the unconvinced, and you spend roughly forty-five to seventy euros a head with wine. It is a concept restaurant that has turned one ingredient into a credible philosophy. It scores 8 for food, 8 for the room and 8 for value.

La Buvette is the surprise tasting. A few doors up the same Saint-Gilles street, chef Nicolas Scheidt, from Alsace, runs a single no-choices set menu in a converted Art Deco butcher's shop, the original tiled walls and steel hooks left in place rather than hidden. There is no a la carte: six courses for about forty-nine euros or nine for about sixty-four, changing with the season and built on local, organic produce. La Buvette sits in the Michelin Guide and reads as bistronomy at its most personal. It scores 8 for food, 8 for the room and 8 for value.

The split is one ingredient versus one set menu. Cafe des Spores is the fungi obsession, the table for a diner curious about a single product taken to its limit; La Buvette is the surprise tasting, the table for someone who wants to hand the kitchen the keys. Same street, same spirit, two different ways to give up control.

Scores, Side by Side

ScoreCafé des SporesLa Buvette
Food8 / 108 / 10
Atmosphere8 / 108 / 10
Value8 / 108 / 10

Which One for Which Occasion

OccasionEditorial Pick
A curiosity-led dinnerCafe des SporesA whole menu built on mushrooms rewards the diner who wants a single ingredient pushed to its limit.
A no-choices tastingLa BuvetteNicolas Scheidt's surprise set menu suits a diner happy to hand the kitchen full control of the night.
An intimate dateLa BuvetteThe tiny converted butcher's shop and the single set menu make for a close, conversation-easy evening for two.
Best value tastingCafe des SporesRoughly forty-five to seventy euros with wine for a full fungi menu is strong value for the ambition on the plate.
A vegetable-forward mealCafe des SporesWith fungi on every plate from start to finish, it is the obvious Brussels table for a produce-led dinner.

Price and How to Book

The split is one ingredient versus one set menu. Cafe des Spores builds every plate on fungi from a counter on the Chaussee d'Alsemberg; the full read is in the Cafe des Spores review. La Buvette, a few doors up the same street, runs Nicolas Scheidt's surprise tasting in a former butcher's shop; the detail is in the La Buvette review. Both anchor our Brussels dining guide.

For cuisine context, weigh both against the world's best modern European restaurants. For occasion fit, see our picks for a first date and solo dining. More match-ups sit on the compare index, including Providence vs Melisse and Greetje vs Rijks.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Cafe des Spores or La Buvette?
They are sibling restaurants on the same Saint-Gilles street with different ideas. Cafe des Spores builds every menu around fungi, the table for a diner who wants one ingredient explored in full. La Buvette is Nicolas Scheidt's no-choices surprise tasting in a former butcher's shop, the table for someone who wants the kitchen to decide. Book Spores for mushrooms, La Buvette for the set menu. Both feature in our Brussels dining guide.
How much do Cafe des Spores and La Buvette cost?
Both are mid-range by fine-dining standards. Cafe des Spores runs roughly forty-five to seventy euros a head with wine for its two-to-five-course fungi menu. La Buvette charges about forty-nine euros for six courses or sixty-four for nine, with no a la carte option. Either is an easy-to-justify first-date spend, with Cafe des Spores the slightly more flexible bill.
How hard is it to book Cafe des Spores or La Buvette?
Both are small rooms, so reservations are essential. Cafe des Spores serves Tuesday through Saturday evenings and its intimate size means tables go quickly on weekends. La Buvette is the tighter seat, since the converted butcher's shop holds few covers and the single set menu draws steady demand. For either, book ahead and plan around the wider Brussels dining guide.
What should I order at Cafe des Spores and La Buvette?
At Cafe des Spores there is no real choice to make, since the menu is fungi from start to finish, but the garlic-stuffed mushrooms are the dish that wins over skeptics. At La Buvette there is no choosing at all, as Nicolas Scheidt runs one surprise set menu, so the move is to trust the kitchen and pick a wine pairing. See the wider field in our best modern European restaurants.