To be filed under the perfect overnight adventure from Paris: Le Doyenné is a destination restaurant and farm—with guest rooms—on the grounds of Château de Saint-Vrain. It’s a culinary lab for Australian chefs Shaun Kelly and James Henry, both of whom have made a splash in their adopted country: Kelly served as head chef at the Australian Embassy in Paris; Henry created the “furiously sceney” Paris bistro Bones.
Located 25 miles south of Paris, Château de Saint-Vrain was the Comtesse du Barry’s country seat; the Borghese family next moved in, followed by the Montemarts who have been in residence for the last two centuries. The chef-owners, along with the Mortemarts, have restored and converted Le Doyenné, the old barn on the property, into a glass-walled dining room overlooking their potager, which is run by Kelly as a model of not only sustainable but regenerative agricultural practices. And they’re added 11 lovely guest rooms, enabling some lucky diners to amble from garden to table to bed.
New York’s wunderkind chef Flynn McGarry recently made a pilgrimage and we immediately wanted to follow.
The Farm and Restaurant
Here’s how Kelly explains their approach to gardening: “we chose to eschew the modern practice of tilling in favor of gentle decomposition through the use of compost and mulch, capturing carbon and preserving the microbial life that had been nurtured for centuries. To date, hundreds of fruit trees and shrubs have been planted as well as hundreds of varieties of heirloom vegetables and herbs.” Photograph by Evan Sung.