L'Ô à la Bouche
4 Rue Badr, Marrakesh 44000
Price
€€€
Alcohol
Yes
Cuisine Type
French
Experience
Romantic, Family-friendly, Culinary Excellence
Perfect For
Dinner
Overview
L'Ô à la Bouche sits on a quiet street in Guéliz, the modern quarter of Marrakech, in a sixty-seat dining room designed by interior architect Marie Lloret. The colour palette draws from the vegetable garden: pumpkin yellow, artichoke green, aubergine purple, all softened by large bay windows that let the neighbourhood in. There is a clear view onto the kitchen, which is part of the point. This is a place built around watching a chef who knows what he is doing. That chef is Hervé Paulus, an Alsatian who cooked at La Maison Arabe and the Es Saadi before opening his own table here. His menu is French bistronomique in the truest sense: a hand-cut beef tartare with frites, sweetbreads with morels, duck foie gras with confit turnips, tournedos Rossini, snail tortellini. The cooking is precise without being fussy, built on close relationships with local suppliers and a card that shifts with the seasons and the daily catch. Denis Vincent runs the dining room with the easy authority of someone who treats regulars and first-timers with equal warmth. What sets L'Ô à la Bouche apart in Marrakech is how genuinely it commits to the French bistro format. The wine list favours well-chosen French bottles, the portions are generous, and the room fills completely most evenings. It is the kind of restaurant where the cooking speaks quietly and clearly, and you leave wanting to come back.




















