Head-to-Head · Houston

Le Jardinier vs Brasserie 19

Both cook French in Houston; Le Jardinier holds the Michelin star, Brasserie 19 the wine list — book the brasserie for value.

Le Jardinier
Houston · French · One Michelin star · Food 9 / Room 10 / Value 7
Le Jardinier full review →
vs
Brasserie 19
Houston · French Brasserie · No star · Food 8.5 / Room 9 / Value 8
Brasserie 19 full review →

The Verdict

Le Jardinier is the special-occasion one. Alain Verzeroli, a longtime protege of Joel Robuchon, cooks plant-forward French at 5500 Main Street, inside the Museum of Fine Arts Houston in the Museum District. The kitchen earned one Michelin star in Texas's first guide in 2024 and held it in 2025, the first museum restaurant in the state to manage it. The tasting runs about 135 dollars before wine, a lighter lunch about 60 dollars, and the room scores a 10 for atmosphere.

Brasserie 19 is the easy one. Charles Clark has run this River Oaks bistro at 1962 West Gray Street since the Clark Cooper partnership split in 2022, and the name comes from the 77019 zip code around it. The menu is classic brasserie: escargots, steak frites, a raw bar and one of the deepest wine lists in the city, served a la carte at three-dollar-sign prices. Leather banquettes and a packed Saturday lunch give it the room Le Jardinier's quiet does not.

Scores, Side by Side

ScoreLe JardinierBrasserie 19
Food9 / 108.5 / 10
Atmosphere10 / 109 / 10
Value7 / 108 / 10

Which One for Which Occasion

OccasionEditorial Pick
Milestone dinnerLe JardinierThe Michelin star, the MFAH setting and the tasting menu make an anniversary feel like one.
First dateBrasserie 19Leather banquettes, a buzzy room and an a la carte menu keep a first meeting relaxed.
Impress clientsLe JardinierA starred dining room inside a museum signals seriousness without a word.
Best valueBrasserie 19Escargots and steak frites a la carte cost a fraction of a tasting-menu evening.
Weekend lunchBrasserie 19The Saturday-lunch room in River Oaks is the social anchor of the neighborhood.

Price Comparison

Le Jardinier is the bigger spend. Its tasting menu sits near 135 dollars per person before wine, with a lighter lunch around 60 dollars, and the four-dollar-sign tier reflects the museum room and the kitchen behind it. Brasserie 19 is a la carte at three dollar signs, so a couple can order escargots, steak frites and a bottle for less than two Le Jardinier tastings. On value, Brasserie 19 wins; on ceiling, Le Jardinier does. Weigh both against the wider field in our guide to the best French restaurants worldwide and the broader fine-dining guide.

How to Book

Le Jardinier takes reservations through its own site and OpenTable, and the starred dinner fills first on weekends, so book a couple of weeks out and consider the quieter lunch. Brasserie 19 books easily on OpenTable most nights, though Friday and Saturday in River Oaks go faster; walk-ins land at the bar. Start the wider map from the Houston dining guide.

For occasion fit beyond this pairing, weigh them against our guides to the best first-date restaurants, solo-dining restaurants, deal-closing restaurants and rooms to impress clients. For another Houston French match-up see Ici Bistro vs Le Jazz, and browse the full set on the compare index.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Le Jardinier or Brasserie 19?
It depends on the night. Le Jardinier is the fine-dining choice: Alain Verzeroli's Michelin one-star plant-forward French inside the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, with a tasting near 135 dollars and a near-flawless room. Brasserie 19 is Charles Clark's River Oaks bistro, where escargots, steak frites and a deep wine list run a la carte at brasserie prices. Book Le Jardinier for a special occasion, Brasserie 19 for an easy, lively dinner.
Is Le Jardinier or Brasserie 19 more expensive?
Le Jardinier is the pricier room. Its tasting menu runs about 135 dollars per person before wine, with a lighter lunch near 60 dollars, and it sits at the four-dollar-sign tier. Brasserie 19 is a la carte at the three-dollar-sign level, so two can eat escargots and steak frites for less than one Le Jardinier tasting once you skip the pairing. Brasserie 19 wins clearly on value.
Does Le Jardinier have a Michelin star?
Yes. Le Jardinier earned one Michelin star in the inaugural Texas guide in 2024 and held it in 2025, making the Museum of Fine Arts Houston dining room the first Michelin-starred museum restaurant in Texas. Chef Alain Verzeroli, a longtime Joel Robuchon protege, runs the kitchen. Brasserie 19 is not Michelin-starred; it is a neighborhood brasserie rather than a tasting-menu destination.
Which is better for a date, Le Jardinier or Brasserie 19?
Both work, for different dates. Le Jardinier's calm Museum District dining room and refined French cooking suit a milestone or a quiet, dressed-up evening. Brasserie 19's leather banquettes, buzz and approachable menu suit a relaxed first date where conversation matters more than ceremony. For a date you want to feel special, choose Le Jardinier; for one you want to feel easy, choose Brasserie 19.