Oceania Cruises has partnered with the Maîtres Cuisiniers de France to debut a reservation-only dining experience unlike anything else at sea.
If you’ve ever sat down to a truly exceptional French dinner, the kind where every course feels like a considered decision and the wine is not an afterthought, you’ll understand what Oceania Cruises is going for with La Table par Maîtres Cuisiniers de France.
The luxury cruise line has unveiled what it’s calling the most exclusive fine dining venue at sea: an intimate, reservation-only restaurant debuting aboard its next-generation ship, Oceania Sonata, when it launches in 2027. The room seats just 18 guests. Every detail, from the rotating menu to the understated elegance of the space itself, has been crafted in partnership with the Maîtres Cuisiniers de France, an internationally revered institution dedicated to preserving the heritage of French gastronomy. La Table is the first restaurant at sea ever to earn the organisation’s endorsement, a distinction that speaks to just how seriously Oceania takes the food on its ships.
That seriousness has a human side, too. Oceania Cruises is the only cruise line whose culinary programme is led by two Master Chefs of France: Executive Culinary Directors Chef Alexis Quaretti and Chef Eric Barale. The menus they’ve built for La Table read like a greatest-hits of French technique, from delicate Granny Smith apple and langoustine tartlets to escargot-stuffed Dover sole finished with rosace vegetables and a white wine sauce. A spider crab potato roll crowned with Sturia Oscietra caviar rounds out what Quaretti describes as a deeply personal project. “It reflects the values that Chef Barale and I share,” he said, “regard for technique, appreciation of flavour, and an unwavering commitment to excellence.” The menu will rotate continuously, with a changing roster of invited Master Chefs of France contributing new dishes over time.
La Table will also serve as the setting for Oceania’s acclaimed Dom Pérignon Experience, a six-course tasting menu paired with three exceptional Champagne vintages. It’s the kind of evening that warrants its own packing list.
La Table is one of ten culinary venues planned for Oceania Sonata, which will also feature the line’s iconic Grand Dining Room, its refined French restaurant Jacques, pan-Asian Red Ginger, classic steakhouse Polo Grill, Italian favourite Toscana, and the newly introduced Nikkei Kitchen. For a ship that hasn’t launched yet, Sonata’s dining programme is already one of the more exciting things happening in luxury travel.
Oceania Sonata is the first of five Sonata Class ships on order, with deliveries scheduled through 2037.