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Heeze · Netherlands

Tribeca

A two-Michelin-starred fine dining restaurant in Heeze where chef Jan Sobecki cooks French gastronomy with global accents, anchored in vegetables harvested daily from the kitchen's own garden.

The essentials, at a glance

◐
Impact score
2 - Engaged
→
Documented practices
Local sourcing
Seasonal cooking
Plant-forward menu

Style
Fine dining
Cuisine
French
Fusion
International
Good to know
Terrace
Garden
Recognised by
We're Smart Green Guide·1 radish

The delicious details

Restaurant Tribeca occupies a stately villa on the edge of Heeze, where chef Jan Sobecki runs a French-rooted kitchen with international accents earned across years in New York and Paris. Two Michelin stars and Gault and Millau's Chef of the Year 2023 mark the kitchen's standing.

The dining room sits alongside a ten-seat kitchen counter where guests watch the brigade up close, with a terrace opening onto a garden in summer. Sobecki cooks to a 'harvested in the morning, on the plate in the evening' rhythm: many of the herbs and heirloom vegetables that shape each plate come from a kitchen garden run with grower Constance van Dijk in Heeze.

Menu
What's on the table, and what's left off

The kitchen offers six-course and twelve-course tasting menus built on French technique with international influences. Vegetables and herbs from the restaurant's own Heeze garden anchor many dishes; proteins include langoustine, North Sea crab, scallop, fallow deer, and pigeon. A vegetarian menu is available on request.

Cuisine
French
Fusion
International
Dietary options
Vegetarian options
Allergies handling
Notice At booking

Notify the restaurant at booking; the kitchen accommodates allergies and intolerances on a per-booking basis.

Impact score
How this restaurant rates
2 - Engaged

Restaurant Tribeca grounds its kitchen in a daily harvest rhythm. Heirloom vegetables and herbs are grown at the kitchen's own garden in Heeze, cultivated in partnership with grower Constance van Dijk, and harvested each morning for that evening's service.

Seasonal cooking is a guiding principle: the menu follows what the garden and regional growers can offer at any moment, with regular rotation including the kitchen's annual Decennium Edition programme.

The impact dimensions
Local & direct sourcing✓
Seasonal cooking✓
Sustainable animal products
Plant-forward menu✓

Kitchen garden partnership with named grower Constance van Dijk supplies daily-harvested vegetables; pigeon sourced from Anjou.

Kitchen garden partnership with named grower Constance van Dijk supplies heirloom vegetables and herbs, harvested daily. The restaurant's positioning around a 'harvested in the morning, on the plate in the evening' rhythm is corroborated in independent reviews (WBP Stars, World's 50 Best Discovery).

Pigeon from Anjou is the only named protein source with documented regional origin. The upper end of the menu draws on substantial international ingredients (wagyu beef, Australian winter truffle, Oscietra caviar) with no named local equivalent.

Strongest sourcewbpstars.com ↗

Menu follows seasonal availability, with vegetables from the kitchen garden and named seasonal programmes including the annual Decennium Edition.

Seasonal cooking is positioned as a founding principle: the kitchen states that 'nature determines what is on the menu' and operates on a daily-harvest rhythm from the on-site garden. Independent sources (WBP Stars, World's 50 Best Discovery) corroborate the hyper-seasonal positioning.

The restaurant publishes seasonal special programmes including the 'Decennium Edition' that takes effect from 1 June each year. Most dishes named on the current menu (deer, scallop, langoustine, parsnip, quince) are season-aligned.

Strongest sourcewbpstars.com ↗

Pigeon sourced from Anjou; no sustainability certifications documented for other proteins.

The menu features premium animal proteins including yellowfin tuna, North Sea crab, scallop, langoustine, fallow deer, pigeon from Anjou, sweetbread, sea bass, and wagyu beef. None carry a named sustainability credential: no MSC or ASC certification, no Beter Leven label, no organic claim, no named welfare standard.

Strongest sourceRestaurant submission

Vegetables play a supporting role in a protein-centred menu; vegetarian options available on request.

The dining-room menu is structured around animal proteins (deer, scallop, langoustine, North Sea crab, pigeon, sweetbread, yellowfin tuna), with vegetables prominent at the amuse and dessert end. Vegetables are not centred in the mains.

A vegetarian menu is available on request rather than as a standard offering. No vegan menu is mentioned.

Strongest sourceWe're Smart Green Guide ↗
Sourcing signals
✓
Own-grown produce
✓
Direct named-farm sourcing

The 'Tribeca garden at Constance van Dijk' in Heeze grows heirloom vegetables and herbs, with a daily-harvest rhythm corroborated in independent sources.

Named grower Constance van Dijk supplies vegetables through the garden partnership; pigeon sourced from Anjou region.

Visit & practical info
Address, price, and more
Address
Jan Deckersstraat 7, 5591 HN Heeze, Heeze, Netherlands
Open in Google Maps ↗
Price
€€€€
Format
Kitchen counter, tasting menus, book ahead
Hours
MondayClosed
TuesdayClosed
Wednesday12:00–16:30, 18:30–00:00
Thursday12:00–16:30, 18:30–00:00
Friday12:30–16:30, 18:30–00:00
Saturday12:00–16:30, 18:30–00:00
SundayClosed
Style
Fine dining
Good to know
Terrace
Garden
Web
restaurant-tribeca.com
Reviewed by My Treats
Last reviewed 12 May 2026
Reserve
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How we score
The My Treats impact scale

Every restaurant is assessed against SEERO, our six-dimension sustainability framework — covering sourcing, seasonality, waste, animal products, social impact, and plant-forward cooking. Each finding is weighted by how strongly it is corroborated. The combined result is translated into a planet rating from 1 to 5.

The five levels

SEERO is an acronym for Starting, Engaged, Endorsed, Recognised, Outstanding:

Starting First verified signals of sustainable practice.
Engaged Credible practice across two dimensions.
This place
Endorsed Meaningful practice across three or more dimensions.
Recognised Strong practice across four or more dimensions, with independent corroboration.
Outstanding Top-tier practice, confirmed by recognised third-party audit.

How a level is reached. Each level needs two things together: a minimum number of dimensions covered, and a minimum overall strength of evidence across them. A dimension only counts once its evidence is specific and substantiated — a passing mention doesn't qualify. Meeting only one of the two keeps a restaurant a level lower.

Ratings of four or five planets require human validation and, at the top tier, an external audit. Scores are based on publicly available evidence and restaurant submissions at the time of assessment.

Full methodology→
Impact dimension
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How this dimension works
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How evidence is weighted
Self-declared Stated by the restaurant on its website, menu or in a submission. Plausible, but not yet independently corroborated.
Researched Found through independent research; one credible third-party source backs the claim.
Vouched Corroborated across more than one independent source. Some gaps may remain.
Audited Fully corroborated across independent sources or by a recognised third-party certification.
What the sourcing checkmarks mean
✓ Full check — independently verified: corroborated across more than one source, or audited / third-party certified (vouched or audited).
✓ Light check — self-declared or from a single source. Not yet independently verified.
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