Head-to-Head · Portland

Le Pigeon vs Canard

Gabriel Rucker's two adjoining Burnside rooms. Book Le Pigeon for a $140 French tasting, drop into Canard for the walk-in wine bar.

Le Pigeon
East Burnside · French tasting counter · Gabriel Rucker, multi James Beard award · Food 9 / Room 8 / Value 7
Le Pigeon full review →
vs
Canard
East Burnside · French wine bar · Gabriel Rucker & Andy Fortgang · Food 8 / Room 8 / Value 9
Canard full review →

The Verdict

These are two rooms from the same chef, sharing a wall on East Burnside, and the choice is the kind of night you want. Le Pigeon is Gabriel Rucker's flagship, an intimate brick dining room with a chef's counter and a $140 French tasting that made his name and won him multiple James Beard awards. Canard, which Rucker and wine director Andy Fortgang opened next door in 2018, is the wine bar: duck stack pancakes, the foie gras steam burger, natural wine and a walk-in counter. Book Le Pigeon for an occasion; drop into Canard when you want the same hand at half the commitment.

The split is tasting versus grazing. Le Pigeon runs a set menu, omnivore or vegetarian, built around Rucker's French-forward cooking and best eaten at the counter. Canard is order-as-you-go: the duck stack, steam burger, foie gras and a glass of something low-intervention, eaten elbow-to-elbow at the bar. One is a planned dinner, the other the best walk-in in town. See both on the Portland dining guide.

Scores, Side by Side

ScoreLe PigeonCanard
Food9 / 108 / 10
Atmosphere8 / 108 / 10
Value7 / 109 / 10

Which One for Which Occasion

OccasionEditorial Pick
A special dinnerLe PigeonThe $140 tasting at the chef's counter is the more ceremonial, chef-led meal.
A walk-in or last-minute nightCanardBar and counter seats are kept open for walk-ins, so no reservation is required.
Wine and small platesCanardAndy Fortgang's natural-leaning list and grazing menu are built for exactly this.
A first dateCanardThe looser, cheaper wine bar keeps conversation easy without committing to a long tasting.
Watching the spendCanardA few plates and a glass can land near $30, against $140 for the Le Pigeon tasting.

Price Comparison

The gap is wide for two rooms on the same block. Le Pigeon serves a fixed tasting, omnivore or vegetarian, at about $140 a person before wine, with no a la carte in the evening. Canard is order-as-you-go: the duck stack, the steam burger, foie gras and glasses of wine let you spend anywhere from a $30 snack to a full dinner. Le Pigeon is the splurge; Canard is the flexible night. Weigh them against the best French restaurants worldwide and the world's best natural-wine bars.

How to Book

Le Pigeon takes reservations on OpenTable, and the small dining room and chef's counter fill quickly, so book ahead, especially for the counter at 738 East Burnside. Read the Le Pigeon review before you go.

Canard, at 734 East Burnside next door, is built for walk-ins, with bar and counter seats kept open and a faster turn, though it can wait on a busy weekend. Read the Canard review first.

For occasion fit beyond this pairing, weigh Portland tables for a first date and to impress clients. For more Portland match-ups, see Kann vs Le Pigeon and Nimblefish vs Kann, and browse the compare index.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Le Pigeon or Canard?
They are two halves of one block. Le Pigeon is Gabriel Rucker's flagship, an intimate brick room and chef's counter serving a $140 French tasting, the more serious dinner. Canard, opened next door in 2018, is the wine bar built for grazing: duck stack pancakes, steam burgers and natural wine, with a walk-in counter and no set menu. Book Le Pigeon for an occasion, drop into Canard for a looser, cheaper night.
How much do Le Pigeon and Canard cost?
They sit far apart. Le Pigeon serves a fixed tasting menu, an omnivore or vegetarian version, at about $140 a person before wine, with no a la carte option in the evening. Canard is order-as-you-go: small plates, the famous duck stack and steam burger, and glasses of wine let you spend anywhere from a quick $30 snack to a full dinner. Canard is the flexible, lower spend by a wide margin.
Are Le Pigeon and Canard next to each other?
Yes, they share a wall. Le Pigeon is at 738 East Burnside Street and Canard at 734 East Burnside, both from chef Gabriel Rucker and wine director Andy Fortgang, so you can have an aperitif and snacks at one and dinner at the other in a single evening. It is the easiest two-room crawl in Portland, with the tasting at Le Pigeon and the wine bar at Canard a few steps apart.
Do you need a reservation for Le Pigeon or Canard?
Le Pigeon does, Canard mostly does not. Le Pigeon takes reservations on OpenTable and the small dining room and chef's counter fill quickly, so book ahead, especially for the counter. Canard is built for walk-ins, with bar and counter seats kept open and a faster turn, though it can wait on a busy weekend night. The simplest plan is to reserve Le Pigeon and treat Canard as the flexible bookend.