Head-to-Head

Kann vs Le Pigeon

Kann for Gregory Gourdet's live-fire Haitian cooking; Le Pigeon for Gabriel Rucker's foie-gras-and-pigeon French counter.

Kann
Portland · Haitian / Live-Fire · $$$
Food 9 · Ambience 8 · Value 7
View full review →
vs
Le Pigeon
Portland · French · $$$
Food 8 · Ambience 8 · Value 8
View full review →

The Verdict

Kann for Gregory Gourdet's live-fire Haitian cooking; Le Pigeon for Gabriel Rucker's foie-gras-and-pigeon French counter.

Kann is Gregory Gourdet's Haitian restaurant on Portland's central east side, where nearly everything passes over a wood fire and the kitchen runs without gluten by design. It opened in 2022 and won the James Beard Award for Best New Restaurant in 2023; Gourdet took Best Chef: Pacific Northwest the year after. It scores a 9 on the cooking in our review. Le Pigeon is Gabriel Rucker's French room on East Burnside in Buckman, open since 2006, built on two seven-course tasting menus at $140 and an iconic foie gras profiteroles. It is the value pick of the two at an 8.

The split is headline against institution. Kann is the decorated room of the moment; Le Pigeon is the twenty-year counter that keeps winning.

Spend tells the same story. Le Pigeon's $140 tasting is the fixed, predictable bill and earns the value edge; Kann's a la carte wood-fire plates are easier to run up, so it lands a 7.

Which One for Which Occasion

OccasionEditorial Pick
First DateLe Pigeonthe small counter and fixed tasting make an easy, intimate first date.
Close a DealKannthe Beard-winning name is the credential that impresses across a table.
BirthdayKannthe live-fire room and shared plates suit a celebration.
Impress ClientsKannBest New Restaurant 2023 does the heavy lifting.
ProposalLe Pigeonthe candlelit counter is the more romantic milestone seat.
Solo DiningLe Pigeonthe chef's counter is the natural seat for one.
Team DinnerKannthe wood-fire menu shares better for a group.

The Numbers

Our scoring puts Kann at 9 / 8 / 7 (food / ambience / value) and Le Pigeon at 8 / 8 / 8. Kann wins the cooking on the back of the Beard win; Le Pigeon wins value with its fixed tasting and ties the room. The honest read is that Kann is the destination dinner and Le Pigeon is the dependable counter, so weight the dimension that matters most and follow it.

How to Book

Kann is the tougher table: the Beard win and a compact dining room keep weekend prime times tight, so book two to four weeks out. Le Pigeon's small Buckman room is also limited but turns more predictably on its fixed tasting, so a week's notice often lands a counter seat. Both take reservations directly online; check the practical-info card on each linked review above for the current platform and policy.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Kann or Le Pigeon?
Kann is the more decorated room of the moment: Gregory Gourdet's live-fire Haitian restaurant won the James Beard Award for Best New Restaurant in 2023, and it scores a 9 on our cooking grid. Le Pigeon is Gabriel Rucker's twenty-year-old French counter, a multiple James Beard winner that scores an 8 and edges ahead on value with its $140 tasting. Choose Kann for the headline Haitian cooking, Le Pigeon for the intimate French counter.
How much do Kann and Le Pigeon cost?
Le Pigeon is the clearer-priced of the two: two seven-course tasting menus at $140 a head, with a chef's counter overlooking the kitchen. Kann runs a la carte off the wood fire, so a full dinner with shared plates climbs into the same range or higher once you add drinks. Le Pigeon scores an 8 for value on the fixed price; Kann lands a 7 because the bill is easier to run up.
Does Kann or Le Pigeon have a Michelin star?
Neither holds a Michelin star, because Michelin does not yet cover the Pacific Northwest. Their credentials are James Beard ones instead: Kann won Best New Restaurant in 2023 and Gourdet took Best Chef: Pacific Northwest in 2024, while Rucker's Le Pigeon has collected James Beard awards since 2011. For Portland, those are the awards that carry weight, and both rooms sit near the top of the city.
Which is harder to book, Kann or Le Pigeon?
Kann is the tougher table, since the Beard win and a compact dining room keep weekend prime times tight, so book two to four weeks out. Le Pigeon's small Buckman room is also limited but turns more predictably on its fixed tasting, so a week's notice often lands a counter seat. Both take reservations directly online; check the practical-info card on each linked review for the current platform and policy.