Courtesy Nicolas Lobbestael
CNN  — 

It’s just landed the number one spot at the World’s 50 Best Restaurant Awards, beating out the likes of Denmark’s Noma and Bangkok’s Gaggan.

But what’s it actually like to eat at the much-lauded Mirazur?

Situated in the elegant seaside town of Menton in the French Riviera, the clue is in its name.

Mirazur roughly translates as “look at the blue,” suggesting a vantage point over the water.

And it certainly has one, reached by a winding incline of a road.

Whether driving or walking past, you could easily miss it, as the chic white 1930s rotunda building is almost hidden from the road behind palm trees.

Mirazur sits at the foot of some pretty dramatic mountains, surrounded by their own gardens with dozens of types of fruits, vegetables, herbs, citrus trees and more that end up on your table, in some cases just minutes after being dug up or picked from a branch.

There are also chickens providing eggs and hives for honey, while some lucky diners get invited by chef Mauro Colagreco to tour the gardens and taste some of the produce first hand, enjoying the heady aromas including wild rosemary, jasmine and their orange orchard.

An open kitchen sits on the lowest of Mirazur’s three floors, alongside a lounge and a reception which proudly shows off their accolades. During my earlier visit in December 2018, that meant two Michelin stars and third place on the 2018 World’s 50 Best list.

A third Michelin star was added in January.

This marked the first time in the history of the Michelin Guide in France that a non-French chef – Colagreco is Argentinian – had won the culinary holy grail of three stars. They’ll also need to change the number by the 50 Best ranking.

World class dining

Chris Dwyer
Mirazur offers incredible food in an elegant setting.

Up one level sits the star of the show, the dining room.

Even in gloomy December there are breathtaking panoramic views taking in the Mediterranean, the mountains, the town of Menton and the multi-million dollar yachts in its harbor.

One can only imagine the effect on a light-filled summer’s day, with the blue of the sky rivaling the blue of the water, reaffirming why Mirazur is so named.

Beautiful circular wooden tables are generously spaced apart and free of linen or tablecloths, with some round squash and a white vase of flowers the only decoration.

Wood is the hero through much of the restaurant’s design, in tune with Mirazur’s embrace of the natural world.

My fellow diners included French, British, Australian, Italian and Mandarin Chinese accents over lunch, while Colagreco’s team are similarly multinational, with 14 nationalities represented in 50 staff across the kitchen and front-of-house service teams.

They’re a wonderful personification of that mix of genuine warmth and utter professionalism.

As a solo dinner, they took extra time to talk to me, explaining dishes and at one point bringing over a beautiful hefty tome written by Colagreco, called simply Mirazur, which celebrates the dozens of farmers, fishermen and producers that supply the restaurant.

And the kitchen needs them. According to Colagreco, they don’t work with just four seasons, but 365.

This means the menu changes every single day, as a result, Colagreco’s regular diners who come three times a week have never had to eat the same dish.

You essentially leave yourself in the hands of the staff, choose how many courses you’d like, reveal any dislikes or dietary requirements and let them do the rest.

There are thankfully, at least for food writers, a handful of dishes which remain more or less constant.

Poetic license

Chris Dwyer
The sharing bread comes complete with a poem by Pablo Neruda.

Their “sharing bread” is one of them, a round loaf in six pieces that is served in a wooden bowl.

It comes with a dish of vibrant yellow olive oil infused with lemon juice – lemon is undeniably Colagreco’s signature ingredient – along with ginger.

It’s also accompanied by a poem from Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, written on a translucent piece of paper, that’s dedicated to bread.

Red beetroot with caviar cream is also one of Colagreco’s signatures.

The enormous vegetable is first presented to diners at the table, then cooked in a salt crust before wafer-thin slices are served in a sauce studded with black pearls of caviar. It’s a sensational creation of textural and flavor interplay, decadent without being heavy.

Chris Dwyer/CNN
World's top restaurants: The annual World's 50 Best Restaurant Awards has revealed the best places for fine dining in 2019. At 25 is Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, known for its take on biroche, featuring pike. Click through the gallery to see which other places feature on the list.
Quintonil
24. Quintonil -- Mexico City, Mexico: This vegetable and herb-focused restaurant nabbed the number 24 spot on the list.
Bryan Smith/ZUMA Wire/Alamy
23. Cosme -- New York, USA: This Mexican restaurant in New York City is one of the city's hottest spots.
Sergio Coimbra
22. Narisawa --Tokyo, Japan: Narisawa holds onto the number 22 spot. Chef Yoshihiro Narisawa mixes French and Japanese influences for a winning formula.
Courtesy Frantzen
21. Frantzen -- Stockholm, Sweden: The first Swedish restaurant to gain three Michelin stars, this Stockholm restaurant came in at number 21.
Moises Torne
20. Tickets -- Barcelona, Spain: This innovative restaurant is also known for its fun interior.
Courtesy Twin Gardens
19. Twins Gardens -- Moscow, Russia: This Moscow restaurant is the brainchild of, you guessed it, two twin chefs.
Odette
18: Odette -- Singapore: Helmed by Chef Julien Royer and named for his grandmother, Odette, this Singapore spot is located in Singapore's National Gallery.
Steirereck
17. Steirereck -- Vienna, Austria: This Viennese restaurant offers Austrian cuisine with a modern twist.
Pierre Monetta
16. Alain Ducasse Au Plaza Athenee -- Paris, France: Located in the Plaza Athenee hotel in Paris, the Alain Ducasse Au Plaza Athenee is a dazzling display of chrome and crystal -- and then there's the food.
courtesy lindsey tramuta
15: Septime -- Paris, France: Septime's seasonal menu is a Parisian favorite.
Qin Xie/CNN
14. Azurmendi -- Larrabetzu, Spain: This three Michelin-starred restaurant in Bilbao in the Basque Country has a rooftop vegetable garden where diners can see the home-grown produce for themselves.
Courtesy White Rabbit
13. White Rabbit -- Moscow, Russia: This "Alice in Wonderland" inspired restaurant presents a new spin on traditional Russian cuisine.
Pujol
12. Pujol -- Mexico City, Mexico: Celebrity chef-owner Enrique Olvera opened this restaurant in 2000 and it's gone from strength to strength. The signature dish is the Mole Madre -- reheated for over 1,200 days. Pujol was also crowned the best restaurant in North America,
Shinichiro Fujii
11. Den -- Tokyo, Japan: The seasonal eight-course menu at Den comes complete with fun presentation. The restaurant also won the Art of Hospitality Award 2019.
courtesy Maido
10. Maido -- Lima, Peru: At Maido, expect Peruvian meets Japanese cuisine and a whole new taste.
Alamy
9. Disfrutar -- Barcelona, Spain: Expect avant-garde cuisine at Disfrutar in Spain.
Pauline Le Goff
8. Arpège -- Paris, France: Retaining its number eight spot is this famed Parisian venue, opened by Alain Passard in 1986.
José Luis López de Zubiría / Mugaritz
7. Mugaritz -- San Sebastian, Spain: Ever had techno-emotional Spanish cuisine? That's what you get to enjoy at Mugaritz.
Central
6. Central -- Lima, Peru: At number six is Central, home of chef Virgilio Martínez Véliz. The restaurant was also crowned best in South America.
Courtesy City Foodsters/Creative Commons/Flickr
5. Geranium -- Copenhagen, Denmark: At number five is this Scandi spot in Copenhagen, which has a 20 course "Universe" menu.
Allwecandid
4. Gaggan -- Bangkok, Thailand: The aim of this restaurant is to "reinvigorate" Indian cuisine. The dining spot also won best restaurant in Asia.
Asador Etxebarri
3: Asador Etxebarri -- Biscay, Spain: Expect exciting dishes cooked over a wood-fired barbecue at this Spanish joint.
Courtesy Noma
2. Noma -- Copenhagen, Denmark: The newest iteration of Noma came in second in the 2019 list. It's the famous Danish restaurant reimagined with a new location and a new menu.
Courtesy Noma
Second place: Noma, which reopened in February 2018 following a year hiatus, was expected by some to grab the number one spot.
Courtesy Eduardo Torres
1. Mirazur -- Menton, France: The world's best restaurant 2019 was named as Mirazur in the South of France.
Courtesy Nicolas Lobbestael
Number 1: Mirazur's Chef Patron is Italo-Argentinian chef Mauro Colagreco. He opened the restaurant in a 1930s-era modernist building, which has amazing views, as well as award-winning food.

My lunch also included a delicate squid dish that had been blanched and cut very finely, before being served with a refined bagna càuda sauce, in other words with garlic and anchovies.

There was also an exceptional pigeon dish with a sauce made with coffee.

Amid multiple sweet offerings, chocolate from Peru was crafted beautifully with local olive oil and rosemary powder into a smooth dessert, a union between South American and the Mediterranean ingredients that’s typical of much of Colagreco’s work.

The cheese trolley, an additional charge to most of the menus, is a sight to behold and sorely tempting even after a very substantial lunch.

Unsurprisingly, French and Italian cheeses are the heroes, given Mirazur’s location right on the France-Italy border.

Gastronomic brilliance

Chris Dwyer
This pigeon dish made with a coffee-based sauce has featured on the ever-changing menu.

All this gastronomic innovation and brilliance doesn’t come cheap, however.

My lunch with one glass of champagne and two of wine set me back almost 200 euros or $230.

While it’s a serious amount of money for a meal, I felt the experience and memories were well worth the investment.

To better understand what drives Mirazur, I spoke to Ricardo Chaneton, the highly-regarded chef at Petrus at Hong Kong’s Island Shangri-La hotel who spent almost seven years working under Colagreco.

At the World’s 50 Best Restaurant Awards ceremony in Singapore, the first thing Colagreco did was ask Chaneton up on stage to join them, calling him one of the “family.”

Chaneton explained the special experience of working at Mirazur.

“Mauro is open-minded, he’s friendly, a human being with a big heart. I love him so much,” he said.

“He’s authentic, straightforward. When he feels something he shows it and we’ve shared many, many things and experiences.”

“Having no menu is what makes it so fun, no meal is ever the same. If you have a recipe, you always risk just going back to what you did last year, last summer.

“But not at Mirazur. You move forward. Mauro likes people who say ‘why not?’ He would always ask me, he’d never say ‘we’re doing this’ – because he knows that the more you hear from others, the more you learn.”

This sort of open-minded thinking has clearly contributed to Mirazur’s success, and reservations are now booking three months ahead.

One final word of warning for those that luck out with a booking.

My five-minute taxi ride to the station after lunch cost an eye-watering 23 euros. So it might be worth taking walking this 30-minute journey on the way back.