Up in the mountains, picking the wrong restaurant can ruin a brilliant day of skiing or mountain biking. The problem isn't a lack of options — it's a lack of strategy. Here's how we locals actually organise our lunches.
In the morning, we think skiing. At noon, we think sun. At 2pm, we think digestif.
🎯 The 4 Golden Rules of a Great Mountain Lunch
Local truth: at 1:30pm in February or August, even the good restaurants become a chore.
🧭 How to Choose Based on Your Day
🎿 If you're skiing
Stick to restaurants accessible directly from the pistes — you don't want to waste time getting there. Timing matters: a lunch that's too heavy or too late can write off the afternoon.
What a good day looks like: off at 8:30am, Pléney, a few runs, Les Chevrelles at noon sharp, table in full sun, charcuterie board and a glass of white, back on the slopes at 1:30pm with three hours still ahead of you.
Simple rule: a good ski lunch should give you energy, not put you to sleep.
🚴 If you're mountain biking
In summer, heat and effort slow your digestion. Avoid rich dishes if you've got climbing ahead of you, and make sure you stay hydrated.
The good version: Encrenaz in the morning, L'Ancolie at 12:30 in the shade of an old larch, potato fritters, elderflower cordial, an hour's pause. The bad version: fondue at Le Petit Lindaret at 1pm, back in the saddle at 2:15pm. We won't tell you what happens next.
Ground truth: after a tartiflette, every climb feels longer than it is.
🚶 If you're on foot
You have more freedom. Use it to find a panoramic terrace and actually take your time. Restaurants reachable by lift remain the most practical — pedestrian tickets are usually available.
🏔️ The Selection: 5 Places, 5 Atmospheres
Les Chevrelles (Les Gets – Mont Caly)
Probably the most iconic terrace in the area. Perched on Mont Caly, it delivers a raw and breathtaking face-to-face with the Mont Blanc massif.
Speciality: Local charcuterie boards and generous Savoyard dishes.
L'Ancolie (Below Col d'Encrenaz)
This is the address for those in the know. Tucked inside a traditional timber chalet, you come here for pure calm and authenticity — far from the bustle of the resort.
Tip: Perfect after climbing the Col d'Encrenaz by bike.
Le Vaffieu (Top of Pléney gondola)
Logistical perfection. Right at the top of the Pléney gondola, it's where mixed groups naturally converge — those who've been skiing or riding, and those who've come up on foot.
Atmosphere: Always lively, efficient and sociable. It's the social hub of the whole ski area — the place everyone ends up at some point.
Le Petit Lindaret (The Goat Village)
In summer, eating lunch surrounded by free-roaming goats in this historic hamlet is a rite of passage. It's the perfect setting for traditional, grandmother-style Savoyard cooking.
La Païka (Les Gets – Perrières sector)
For those who want more of a holiday feel — music, sun and exceptional charcoal-grilled food (the dessert buffet is a serious threat to willpower).
🌙 The Unmissable Experience: L'Instant Yourte
L'Instant Yourte (Les Gets)
If you only do one mountain experience during your stay, this is probably the one.
L'Instant Yourte isn't a restaurant in the conventional sense. It's a full evening: a torchlit snowshoe hike of around 45 minutes, followed by a convivial dinner inside a yurt tucked away in the wilderness.
Laurent, a mountain guide, leads the group through the forest in an atmosphere that borders on the surreal. Arriving at the warm yurt, with a generous Savoyard fondue and local produce, creates a moment completely outside of ordinary time.
- When: evenings only (Tuesday to Thursday in winter)
- Atmosphere: sociable, family-friendly, immersive
- For: couples, families, groups of friends
- Price: €60 adults / €30 children (under 16) — snowshoes provided
- Meet: La Sarre car park (6:45pm)
- Important: booking essential (limited places) — Laurent +33 6 01 93 80 89
🌤️ Summer vs Winter: Two Very Different Experiences
❄️ In winter
The sun runs the show. A perfect terrace at noon can turn glacial within half an hour. Timing is tight, and the aim is usually to get back on the slopes quickly.
In winter, the sun dictates everything.
☀️ In summer
You take more time. Meals are longer, the atmosphere more relaxed, and the terrace becomes the centrepiece of the whole experience.
In summer, you linger — and eat more slowly.
From the Morz'Inn terrace, you can tell pretty quickly whether the sun is still on the Pléney or already behind the ridge. That's usually the moment we decide when to head out.
🧠 What Locals Look for Before Sitting Down
You don't choose a mountain restaurant by reading the menu — you choose it by reading the terrace.
- Orientation: sun now ≠ sun in 30 minutes. If Mont Blanc is in full sun at 11am, your terrace may well be in shade by 1:30pm. Look at the angle of the ridge, not the sky.
- The table against the wall: up here, a stone or timber wall absorbs heat all morning. A table backed against the chalet is consistently 3–4°C warmer than one in the middle of the terrace — especially in February.
- The sign that service is about to be slow: full terrace, glasses empty for 20 minutes, no waiter in sight. That's not a room of people contentedly relaxing — that's a kitchen in the weeds. Leave.
- Wind: at altitude, even a light breeze chills fast. A north wind on an exposed terrace at 1,600m is unbearable even in direct sun. Locals always sit with their back to the prevailing wind.
- Bad weather days: don't look for a terrace — look for somewhere with large windows and good natural light. And come later (1pm–1:30pm): you burn through the grey morning, dodge the rush, and sometimes catch a clearing by the end of lunch.
- Table turnover: a full restaurant that moves well beats a half-empty one that doesn't.
❌ Classic Mistakes to Avoid
The real problem is never the restaurant. It's always the timing.
- Sitting down without asking: up here, the seating plan is a precisely calibrated game of Tetris. Always ask first.
- Not booking: even for two, a quick phone call changes everything.
- Eating too much before a black run: digesting at 1,800m on a mogul field is an experience you really don't want.
- Forgetting the last gondola: especially if you've crossed over towards Switzerland or Châtel. The taxi back stings about as much as the Pléney black run.
- Aiming for 1:30pm: that's the worst slot — kitchen under pressure, service overwhelmed, sun already moving.
❓ Quick FAQ
Need to digest with a view of the summits?
After a good mountain lunch, nothing beats the calm of Morz'Inn. Our apartments all have private terraces — perfect for extending the moment with a coffee (or an honest post-fondue nap).
Check availability