Rue Saint-Boniface runs through the heart of Matonge, the most vividly mixed quarter of Ixelles, and gives its name to a restaurant that has been serving the same idea since 1987: the cooking of a Lyonnais bouchon, transplanted whole and unapologetic to Brussels. No reinvention, no seasonal concept, no tasting-menu ambition — just French regional cooking done with the conviction of a kitchen that decided long ago what it believes in.
The menu reads like a roll call of dishes most restaurants have stopped defending. Foie gras terrine made in-house. Calf's head with sauce gribiche — a dish that separates the curious from the timid, and rewards the curious extravagantly. Cassoulet in the colder months, and a tarte tatin that arrives properly caramelised, not merely warmed. There are Southwest French and Basque accents throughout, the kitchen leaning towards Gascony when the produce argues for it.
The room matches the food: close tables, warm light, walls that have accumulated decades of posters and mirrors rather than a designer's mood board. Service is direct in the bouchon manner — quick with a recommendation, unbothered by ceremony, and genuinely pleased when a diner orders the offal. It is one of the easiest rooms in Brussels in which to eat alone; the staff treat a solo cover as a compliment rather than a complication.
The Michelin Bib Gourmand recognises what the neighbourhood has known for nearly four decades: this is heart-warming cooking at honest prices, in a city where honest prices are increasingly the rarer achievement. Saint Boniface does not chase the moment. It outlasts it.