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Restaurants in Paris
Everywhere you look in Paris, someone is doing his or her best to ruin your waistline. Boulangeries (bakeries) with buttery croissants and decadent pastries lurk on every street corner, open-air markets tempt the senses, and terrific restaurants with intriguing menus sprout up on every block. In France, food is ...
Everywhere you look in Paris, someone is doing his or her best to ruin your waistline. Boulangeries (bakeries) with buttery croissants and decadent pastries lurk on every street corner, open-air markets tempt the senses, and terrific restaurants with intriguing menus sprout up on every block.
In France, food is not a pastime; it’s an art. Eating and drinking is a topic of serious discussion, the subject of radio shows, newspaper columns, and even feature films. It’s not surprising that Paris, navel of the French universe, should boast some of the best food on the planet. Fortunately, you don’t have to have a king-size budget to dine like royalty. But you do have to choose wisely. Once upon a time, you could wander into just about any restaurant in Paris and sit down to a good meal; today, this is no longer the case. Try not to notice all the fast food and don’t even think about eating in one of the ubiquitous Chinese restaurants that serve a bland version of this marvelous Asian cuisine reheated in microwaves.
Fortunately, the guardians of good food are fighting back. Sick of the pressure and fuss of the temples of haute cuisine, a clutch of famous chefs (like Christian Constant and Yves de Camdeborde) kickstarted the “bistronomy” movement, opening dressed-down bistros that serve dressed-up versions of traditional workers’ cuisine at relatively reasonable prices. In general, these restaurants are affordable and hip, and serve excellent food. One outgrowth of this movement is the obsession with “noble” ingredients, such as high-quality, regional produce or products, often from a specific small-scale farm or artisan, sometimes organic.
You’ll also find a puzzling interest in American food. Gourmet hamburgers are ubiquitous on bistro menus, and you’ll find bagels and smoked salmon at “le brunch,” a newfangled meal (for the French) that is currently all the rage.
The coffeeshop movement has finally hit Paris too, and not just Starbucks (though you will, alas, find plenty of those). I’m talking American-style coffeeshops offering free Wi-Fi, and menus full of lattes and “le carrot cake.” It’s an inevitable part of globalization, and a welcome trend for both the city’s freelance workers and visitors looking for familiar food and an Internet connection. Plus, the city still has plenty of Belle Epoque beauties to feast your eyes on and fill your stomachs in.
Our listings offers a sampling of Paris’ gourmet delights; we’ve listed the best cafes, tearooms, and other places to find sinful sweets. Since Covid-19, most of these restaurants also offer click ‘n’ collect or takeout options, so if you ever feel like eating in, check out individual websites for details.
PRACTICAL MATTERS
Eating Hours & Annual Closings
In Paris, unless you see a sign that says SERVICE CONTINU, meals are usually restricted to set hours. This is one of the reasons it’s a good idea to reserve, if you can (the other is that dining rooms tend to be small). Don’t expect to wander in someplace for a bowl of soup at 4pm. Lunch is generally served between noon and 2pm (sometimes 2:30pm), and dinner is from 7 to 10:30pm (sometimes 11pm). Many restaurants close on Sundays and/or Mondays, though some have started serving Sunday brunch, generally from 11am to 3pm. Cafes and restaurants with a bar tend to stay open between mealtimes, serving drinks and coffee; if you are starving, you can usually order a light sandwich or a croque-monsieur (a French take on a grilled ham and cheese sandwich). Some brasseries serve late into the night.
Many restaurants close in August (normally for the first 2 weeks), and some shut down between Christmas and New Year’s; see listings for details.
Tip: If you didn’t reserve and you want to avoid waiting in line, try to arrive at the very beginning of the service, noon or around 7:30pm. Most French people eat later than that, so you’ll have a better chance if you avoid the rush.
After-Hours Dining
Not many restaurants stay open until the wee hours of the Parisian night, but a few stalwarts are around Les Halles. Le Tambour, 41 rue de Montmartre, 2nd arrond. (01-42-33-06-90; Métro: Les Halles), serves reliable dishes like steak-frites (main courses 16€–20€) daily noon to 5:30am in a dining room filled with kitschy Paris memorabilia. Nearby, Au Pied de Cochon, 6 rue Coquillière, 1st arrond. (www.pieddecochon.com; 01-40-13-77-00; Métro: Les Halles), is a brasserie open 24/7 that specializes in pork and more pork (main courses 22€–50€). Au Pied de Cochon also has some good seafood dishes, and a restorative onion soup is ideal at 4am after a night on the town. For a late-night beef fix, head to La Tour de Montlhéry–Chez Denise (usually open until 5am), where the steak is as juicy as it is huge.
To Tip or Not to Tip?
In France, waiting tables is a time-honored profession, one that comes with paid vacation and retirement benefits. That said, no one gets rich being a French waitperson. Tipping is not required or even expected, but it is a nice thing to do, especially if you’ve been at the table for several hours or enjoyed good service. While the price you see on the menu includes tax and service, if you feel so inclined, leave a small tip (about .50€ for drinks, a euro or two after meals in mid-range cafes or restaurants). Of course, no one will mind if you leave more.
Reservations
Most restaurants in Paris are small, so if you have your heart set on eating at one in particular, reserving ahead, even if it is the same day, is essential. If you are looking to dine at one of Paris’s hip neo-bistros or famous gourmet temples, you may have to reserve weeks in advance. Ask your hotel receptionist to help if you can’t manage the telephone or try reserving online through www.thefork.com (which also offers discounts). Otherwise, you can often reserve on the restaurant’s site via email.
Useful Websites for Foodies
* The Fork (www.thefork.com) allows you to reserve restaurants online for free and supplies a list of restaurant promotions—sometimes up to 50 percent off (check restrictions before you book).
* Le Fooding (www.lefooding.com) compiles a list of the city’s most innovative restaurants, including establishments that make up the bistronomy movement (gourmet comfort food). French, with some English translations.
* David Lebovitz (www.davidlebovitz.com) is a pastry chef and cookbook author with a rocking website that discusses everything from restaurants and recipes to shopping and travel tips.
Good Healthy Meals to Go or to Stay
Over the past few years, many sandwich bars have popped up all over town:
* Cojean (21 locations; www.cojean.fr . These airy, modern boutiques serve fresh, healthy food, including innovative salads, quiches, sandwiches, and fresh-squeezed juices. Many veggie options. You can eat on-site at comfortable tables. Most locations open until 4 or 5pm.
* Exki (16 locations; www.exki.com. This Belgian chain (pronounced ex-key, like the French word for “exquisite”) offers a terrific array of healthy sandwiches, soups, and desserts (including vegetarian choices). They use lots of organic, free-trade ingredients and have a low ecological footprint. Most locations open until 6pm.
* Boco (2 locations; www.boco.fr . This one is almost too good to be true: organic takeout by Michelin-starred chefs for under 15€. Hot food, cold food, light meals, and desserts until 8 or 10pm. Main dishes cost 7€ to 10€.
Eating Vegetarian in Paris
Though the French still love their meat, times are a-changing and an increasingly large number of Parisian restaurants now cater to vegetarians, offering at least a couple of appropriate dishes on the menu. Even basic cafes will usually serve salades composées, meal-size salads that often come in meat-free versions. If you eat fish, most restaurants offer at least one or two pescatarian selections too. And, of course, Paris does have vegetarian restaurants. We’ve listed a few (Bob’s Juice Bar; Le Potager du Marais Noglu; and Jardin des Pâtes, but space limitations for this book make it hard to go into depth. For more options, visit the Happy Cow, a veggie online network with extensive listings for Paris.
Choosing a Restaurant
Below is a selective list of restaurants, wine bars, and tearooms that serve the type of excellent food you came specifically to Paris to try. But seeing as how the city has thousands of restaurants, you’re bound to wander into something wonderful and unexpected on your own. Finding a good restaurant is extremely subjective, taking into account any number of variables and a good dose of what the French call le feeling.
That said, I recommend you take some precautions if you go beyond the suggestions in this guide. Unfortunately, Paris has many restaurants geared solely to tourists that shovel out food that is at best, unmemorable, and at worst, indigestible. Shun places that advertise English menus and look instead for places that are full of happy customers speaking French. And don’t avoid places with lines out front (that’s a good sign). Final strategy: Follow your nose. If there are delicious smells issuing from the kitchen, it’s likely the food will be good (restaurants lacking in appetizing aromas may be relying on pre-packaged foods and microwaves).
Rude Waiters: Myth or Reality?
When people ask me about the legendary rudeness of Parisian waitstaff, I have to fight the urge to do the French shrug. It really depends. It is undeniable that Parisian customer service can be frosty, but here’s how I see it: With Parisians, you are guilty until proven innocent. If you can weather the initial chilly blast and show them you are not easily flustered, they’ll usually warm up—and they will be charming your socks off. Also, don’t mistake cultural differences for rudeness. The ultimate faux pas in Paris is rushing you off your table, so if the waiters take forever to bring you your check, they’re not being rude, they’re saying “feel free to stay a little longer.”
Let’s Do Lunch
Many restaurants in Paris serve a set-price menu at lunch that is considerably cheaper than the same food served at dinnertime. It is not unusual to find a two- or three-course lunch prix-fixe, called alternately a formule, or a menu for 17€ to 28€. The only downside is that your choice of dishes will usually be limited on the formule. Note: Set-price lunches are usually only served Monday through Friday.
The Top Tearooms
It may surprise you to know that despite their famous cafe culture, many French people are closet tea fanatics. Thus, it is only fitting that some of the world’s loveliest tearooms are in Paris.
Japantown, Paris-Style
You are wandering around the streets near the Opéra, when you take a sharp turn onto the rue Ste-Anne. Suddenly, everything is in Japanese, with noodle shops everywhere! Plunge into a bowl at one of these restaurants:
* Udon Jubey, 39 rue Ste-Anne, 1st arrond. (01-40-15-92-54; Métro: Pyramides), makes some of the best udon in town; slurp at the counter or grab one of the limited number of tables.
* Higuma, 32 bis rue Ste-Anne, 1st arrond. (01-47-03-38-59; Métro: Pyramides), features an open kitchen, ramen soups, and a long line out the front door.
* Aki Boulangerie, 16 rue Ste-Anne, 1st arrond. (01-40-15-63-38), is a bakery-tearoom run by the same management as the restaurant (described above). Excellent Japanese teas and savory goodies, as well as terrific Franco-Japanese pastries, such as adzuki bean tarts and matcha tea éclairs.
Chinatown, Paris-Style
Paris actually has two Chinatowns: the more established one, among the ugly apartment towers between avenues d’Ivry and Choisy in the 13th arrondissement (about a 5-min. walk from Place d’Italie), and another newer one in Belleville in the 20th. Neither Chinatown is strictly Chinese—the population also includes communities from Vietnam, Cambodia, and other Asian countries. The 13th’s Chinatown has dozens of good restaurants. A couple of my favorites for Chinese food are Imperial Choisy, 32 av. de Choisy, 13th arrond. (01-45-86-42-40), and across the street, Likafo, 39 av. de Choisy, 13th arrond. (01-45-84-20-45), for great shrimp ravioli soup.
Beaupassage: The Left Bank Food Arcade
Though Paris is peppered with market streets and old-word passages (18th-century precursors to today’s shopping malls), Beaupassage in the chic 7th arrondissement is the city’s first ever arcade entirely dedicated to the glories of food. Opened in 2018 on the site of a former convent and a car showroom, it marries ultramodern design and contemporary art installations with restaurants and food shops run by the city’s top chefs. Though the 7th is as chic as can be, and the chefs have 17 Michelin stars among them, you’ll actually find food for all budgets—breadmakis (maki-style club sandwiches, rolled and cut into big slices) from 6.50€ in Thierry Marx’s Boulangerie; a 29€ lunch menu at the Allénothèque (the bistro award-winning chef Yannick Alleno runs with his wife); and a 19€ fixed-price seafood menu at Mersea (famed for its fish and chips). Capping things off are a butcher, a cheese shop, an organic supermarket, and a gym. Beaupassage is at 53–57 rue du Grenelle, 7th arrond. (https://www.facebook.com/beaupassageparis; daily 7am–midnight.)
Price Categories
Expensive: Main dishes 35€ and up
Moderate: Main dishes 20€–34€
Inexpensive: Main dishes under 20€
Bookstore
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Available as paperback
and as e-book.
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Japanese
Aki
The specialty here is okonomiyaki, a sort of grilled omelet topped with meat or seafood and a yummy sauce. Watch the cooks create yours on a griddle in the open kitchen before diving into your meal. You can also order excellent udon or soba noodles. Get here early or be prepared to…$ -
Tearoom
Angelina
This Belle Epoque beauty under the arcades on the rue de Rivoli was once frequented by Proust and Coco Chanel, among other notables. Famous for its hot chocolate and its chestnut-y Mont Blanc pastry, this is also a great (if not touristy) spot for a chic breakfast or lunch. Be…$$ -
Modern French
Arpège
Chef Alain Passard made waves when he decided to put vegetables, not meat, in the spotlight at his acclaimed restaurant. You can still find meat on the menu, but it takes a back seat to carrots, turnips, sweet peas, or whatever other lovely plant life is in season. This pristine…$$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Astier
This vintage restaurant has kept up its polished wood and checked napkins as well as its classic menu. Marinated herring, garlicky snails, braised pork in mustard sauce, rib steak with anchovy toasts, pike quenelles (a sort of elegant dumpling), and tarte tatin (caramelized apple…$$ -
Basque
Au Bascou
Basque cuisine, like the province, is not entirely French. Using lots of tomatoes, onions, and sweet Espelette pepper, Basque dishes have a decidedly different tang to them. But while the name of this restaurant refers to Basque country, the menu covers the entire southwest.…$$ -
Traditional French
Au Petit Bar
Tucked on a small street right behind the illustrious Rue de Rivoli, this old-fashioned mom-and-pop restaurant has somehow survived the onslaught of chic that has inundated the neighborhood. Mom and Pop really are in the kitchen, while their son is behind the bar bantering with the…$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Au Petit Marguery
This place has everything you always wanted in a French bistro: antique tile floors, banquettes, vested waiters, and a dark rose color scheme. The menu also reflects the traditions of yesteryear, with an emphasis on game dishes in autumn and fresh produce in summer. Appetizers…$$ -
Bistro
Aux Bons Crus
Back in the 1960s France was peppered with Routiers, roadside restaurants that catered to truck drivers and holidaymakers on their way from the cities to the coast or countryside. As the ancestor of the service station, Routiers were known for serving cheap, homemade food, hearty…$ -
Traditional French
Benoit
This historic restaurant had hosted a century’s worth of Parisian notables when renowned chef Alain Ducasse took the helm in 2005. Mirrors, zinc, and tiles still line the venerable dining room, while the menu features beautifully executed bistro classics. Escargots (snails) in garlic…$$$ -
Italian
Biglove Caffé
Jars of preserved fruit line the walls, and hams hang from the ceiling—yes, you’re still in Paris, but this place sure feels like Napoli. It tastes like it, too. For brunch, patrons tuck into pancakes with bufflonne ricotta and passion fruit, or eggs Benedict with 24-month-matured…$ -
Creperie/Gluten-Free
Bisou Crêperie
Cozy and low-key down the Passage des Panoramas, this is a delightful spot for a meal that is both affordable and delicious. It’s also rather original as far as creperies go, straying from the standard complète (ham, cheese, and egg; though a variation of it is on the menu, mixing…$ -
Vegetarian
Bob’s Juice Bar
Hipsters are tripping all over themselves to try “smoossies” (that is, smoothies) and juices these days, and some of the best can be found at this terrific vegetarian restaurant, which has become the place to sample muffins, bagels, soups, and other delicious vegetarian goodies. The…$ -
Vietnamese
Bonjour Vietnam
This postage stamp of a restaurant serves deliciously authentic Vietnamese dishes like bò bún, a heap of rice vermicelli, sliced beef, and crispy spring rolls in a tangy sauce, or a steaming bowl of pho, beef broth with vegetables and noodles, topped with fresh basil, mint, and bean…$ -
Bistro/Traditional French
Bouillon Julien
Resplendent in original 1906 moldings, mosaics, and a stained-glass ceiling, Bouillon Julien (in the up-and-coming 10th arrond.) is a place where postcard-perfect decor matches scrumptious dishes that remind you of the good old days, even if you’re not that old. You might find…$ -
Traditional French
Bouillon Pigalle
The word bouillon refers to the workers’ restaurants, found all over Paris back in the 19th century. The idea was to offer good food at modest prices, a concept that still speaks to working Parisians more than 100 years later, if the line out the door of this 300-seat joint is any…$ -
Bakery/Sandwiches/French
Boulangerie Joséphine
This terrific bakery near the Arc de Triomphe does double duty as a lunch spot, with a nice outdoor terrace and a pretty upstairs dining room that fills quickly with local office workers and business people. You can buy sandwiches and salads (and desserts, of course) to go or sit…$ -
French-Asian Street Food
Boutique yam’Tcha
Book a table at renowned chef Adeleine Grattard’s Michelin-starred restaurant yam’Tcha and you’ll certainly have a fabulous meal (121 rue St-Honore, 1st arrond.; 01-40-26-08-07; tasting menus 70€–150€; reservations 2 months in advance): Grattard works miracles with elevated…$ -
Modern Brasserie
Brasserie du Louvre–Bocuse
Lyonnais cooking legend Paul Bocuse (nicknamed the “Pope of Gastronomy”) passed away in 2018, but his legacy lives on in this vintage-chic brasserie on the ground floor of the Hôtel du Louvre. Tuck into wonderfully executed versions of his signature regional dishes, like hot…$$ -
Bistro
Brasserie Martin
If you don’t reserve a week ahead, you’ll have to wait in line for a table at this excellent brasserie. The draw? Excellently executed bistro classics, served at low, low prices—like a delicious starter of egg and mayo for 2€, a main of sausage and mashed potato for 13€, and…$ -
Creperie
Breizh Café
After wandering off to Japan, where he found both a wife and professional success, Chef Bertrand Larcher started opening hugely popular crêperies, first in Tokyo and then back in the home country. His Paris version is a warm and modern wood-paneled space decorated with funky Japanese…$ -
Traditional Bistro
Buffet
After more than a decade of neo-bistro cooking (modern takes on traditional French dishes), Parisians have finally started to long for the classics that the city’s next-generation chefs have been subverting (albeit so deliciously) for so long. When nothing but smoked Morteau sausage…$$ -
Cafe
Café de Flore
A monument to the St-Germain quarter’s intellectual past, Café de Flore is a must-sip on the cafe tour circuit. Seemingly every great French intellectual and artist has had his or her moment here: Poets Apollinaire and André Breton wrote here; artists Zadkine, Picasso, and Giacometti…$$$ -
Cafe
Café de la Mairie
What could be nicer than sitting in a wicker chair at a sidewalk cafe on Place St-Sulpice? Relatively free of car exhaust (there’s one lane of traffic between you and the place), in good weather cafe tables on the wide sidewalk are much in demand; you may have to hover a while to get…$ -
Cafe
Café de la Paix
A Parisian institution ever since it was inaugurated by Empress Eugenie in 1862, this is the home of what is quite possibly the most expensive cup of coffee in the city (6€). Everyone from Emile Zola to Yves Montand has done time at this Second Empire marvel, whose gold leaf and…$$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Café des Musées
Weary culture vultures who’ve just finished the Picasso museum will appreciate this bustling corner cafe with its appealing sidewalk tables. I recommend it not just for the atmosphere, however, but because the young chef does terrific things with bistro classics like steak frites…$$ -
Tearoom
Café Jacquemart-André
Peek up at the Tiepolo ceiling as you sip your tea in what was once the dining room of Edouard André and Nélie Jacquemart. This beautiful tearoom serves excellent teas and delicious pastries from Stroher and La Petite Marquise. Lunch (or brunch Sun) from 11am to 2:30pm, tea and…$$ -
Cafe/Bistro
Café Trama
This is the sort of down-to-earth neighborhood cafe you dream of finding in showy Saint-Germain, where the food is the star of the show (and not the well-healed locals). Pull up a chair in the white and black dining area, or perch yourself at the marble-topped bar, and tuck into…$$ -
Traditional Bistro
Café Zephyr
This large, old-fashioned bistro sprawls out on the sidewalk of one of the Grands Boulevards. It’s nowhere near as hip as the new restaurants in the Passage des Panoramas across the street, but the joy of the Zephyr is all in the atmosphere. It’s a friendly, noisy place to stop for a…$ -
Modern French
Caïus
You would never know from the subdued tones of the wood-paneled dining room that the chef here is a fan of spices and herbs from faraway lands. That said, Jean-Marc Notelet’s subtle and delicious cuisine also makes use of more local products, in particular, high-quality regional…$$$ -
Modern Bistro
Canard et Champagne
Tucked away in the old-world Passage des Panoramas, this delightful spot attracts the eye with a giant wall mural of French actor Louis de Funès (in his iconic role as Mr. Septime in the 1966 movie Le Grand Restaurant). Patrons are reeled in with fabulous duck dishes—foie gras,…$$ -
Modern Brasserie
Champeaux
This is another one of multi-Michelin-starred-chef Alain Ducasse’s Parisian ventures: a vintage-chic, train-station-inspired neo-brasserie set under the canopée (roof) of the new Halles shopping center. The place takes its name from a circa-1800s restaurant that once stood near Les…$$ -
Traditional French
Chartier
With a dining room that can seat over 300, this gargantuan establishment is one of the last of the bouillons, or workers’ restaurants, found all over Paris back in the 19th century. The idea was to offer good food at modest prices, a concept that still speaks to working Parisians…$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Chez Fernand
This neighborhood institution packs a flavorful punch. Red-checkered tablecloths provide a homey background for excellent bistro dishes like thick steak with a pepper sauce and creamy mashed potatoes, veal liver with caramelized onions, or the boeuf bourguignon, the specialty of the…$$ -
Traditional French
Chez Georges
A step back in time, this is how Parisian restaurants were before cuisine became nouvelle. The room is crowded and lively, the cooking old-fashioned and delicious. Many of the customers are regulars who work in nearby offices. The handwritten menu features beautifully executed…$$$ -
Southwestern
Chez Gladines Saint-Germain
Hungry? Come here for enormous and tasty portions of rib-sticking southwestern French specialties. That means crispy duck confit with sautéed potatoes; Basque-style chicken (with tomatoes and bell peppers); pipérade (a casserole of eggs with smoked ham, sliced and sautéed potatoes,…$ -
Pan-Asian
Chez He
Tucked down a narrow alley in a residential part of the 11th arrondissement, Chez He looks like an ordinary Asian restaurant until you venture inside and see the big-screen TVs showing kids playing in the downstairs games area, and parents enjoying some down time, one eye on the…$ -
Breton/Seafood
Chez Michel
Diners come from all over Paris, as well as from across the channel (via the nearby Eurostar train hub at Gare du Nord), to sample Thierry Breton’s superb cooking at affordable prices that have barely budged in a decade. A native of Brittany, Breton improvises on recipes from back…$$ -
Traditional Bistro
Chez Nenesse
This neighborhood haunt has stayed true to its proletarian roots in a frighteningly hip part of the northern Marais. At lunchtime, the chef sends out traditional bistro fare (such as blanquette de veau, or rump steak) into the busy dining room, while dinner comes with a change in…$ -
Italian/Pizzeria
Chez Pippo
This down-to-earth, child-friendly Italian eatery is a handy address to have up your sleeve when visiting the Eiffel Tower or Musée du Quai Branly. Despite being in the heart of tourist central, it’s well off the radar, drawing in-the-know locals, many from the American Library in…$ -
Traditional French/Brasserie
Closerie des Lilas
This restaurant, brasserie, and piano bar was a favorite of Picasso and Gertrude Stein, not to mention Ernest Hemingway, who downed whiskey here so often that both the bar and a signature dish (panfried steak in creamy whiskey sauce) bear his name. With such history, you’d expect…$$$ -
French/Steakhouse
Clover Grill
Grill restaurants are all the rage, but few can compete with this refined BBQ joint near Les Halles, which turns the concept of American-style grilling into something resolutely French: beech-smoked beef rib for two with mashed potato, fresh fish from petit pêcheurs (artisanal…$$ -
Modern French
Clown Bar
Clown Bar was named “Best Bistro in France” by the country's top food publication, Le Fooding, in 2015. It hasn't lost a step since. Set in the landmarked canteen where the performers from the next door's Cirque d'Hiver (“winter circus,” still operational) took their between-show…$$ -
Modern French
Cobéa
Grey and white elegance greets diners when they enter this pretty little house (a throwback to when southern Montparnasse was part of the countryside). Chef Philippe Bélissent invents concoctions that are as delicate and refined as the dining room. Perfectly cooked veal with fava…$$$ -
Wine Bar
Coinstôt Vino
What’s in a name? In this case, an amalgam of French and Italian words for “corner bistro” and “wine,” which pretty much sums things up. This tiny place, which sits on the corner of two covered alleyways in the lovely Passage des Panoramas, has a generous and excellent selection of…$$ -
Crêperie
Crêperie Saint-Malo
Of the dozens of crêperies concentrated near the Montparnasse train station, this is one of the best. The galettes and crepes are perfectly cooked with lacy, crispy edges, and what’s more, they use organic flour. Try to save room for a sweet crepe after. Tradition demands that this…$ -
Southwest French/Tapas
Dans les Landes
Les Landes is a region in the southwest of France blessed with green forests, sandy beaches, and lots of great food. Chef Julien Duboué takes inspiration from his native homeland and neighboring Basque country to create luscious tapas to be sampled with (many) glasses of great…$$ -
French
Derrière
The French famously declared Jerry Lewis a genius back in the day. It's that same wacky crowd grooving on the ambiance at Le Derrière. It’s a funhouse of a restaurant, with oddball touches in every corner including a table set next to a queen sized bed (guests can nap between courses…$$$ -
Modern French/Seafood
Divellec
Close your eyes and you’re at the seaside, Deauville or Trouville perhaps (famed posh spots along the Normandy coast), for you can smell the salt as you step into this ultrachic, seafood-only restaurant near Les Invalides, where truffles and oysters top pillowy Saint Jacques scallops…$$$ -
Bistro/Seafood
EELS
Foodies have been flocking to this fabulous seafood-orientated bistro, ever since it opened in 2017. And once you’ve tasted the namesake starter of smoked ‘eels’ with apple, you’ll understand why. Every single dish is a taste explosion, from the grilled sea trout with confit of…$$ -
Deli
ELMER l’Epicerie
If you’re into pâté, this narrow deli is the place for pâté en croute (pastry-encased pâté) and lip-smacking foie gras and chicken liver terrine, served with homemade gherkins and pickled onions. There’s a grocery section where you can buy fruit, veggies, and all sorts of meats,…$ -
Cafe
Eté en Pente Douce
n a delightful corner facing the tranquil eastern side of Sacré-Coeur, this colorful cafe features a lovely sidewalk terrace where you can relax away from the tourist hordes. Don’t bother with the food here, which is fair to middling; just order a café or a nice, cool beer, look out…$ -
Vietnamese
Foyer Vietnam
This humble restaurant is usually crammed with students, professors, and working stiffs who come for the generous portions of Vietnamese classics. The Foyer is also a nonprofit dedicated to all things Vietnam, so you can enjoy art and seminars after you slurp your steaming bowl of…$ -
Wine Bar
Frenchie Bar à Vins
If you’re looking for a quiet night of nibbles and wine, don’t go to this wine bar in the up-and-coming Sentier district north of Les Halles. The sister establishment of chef Gregory Marchand’s ultra-sucessful Frenchie restaurant (where you still have to reserve well in advance) is a…$$ -
Bistro
Fulgurances
Fulgurances looks like any other hip neighborhood bistro: natural wood tables, open kitchen, and a quaint spiral staircase tucked away at the back. However, something exciting is afoot. This place is an “incubator,” a testing ground for sous chefs looking to become head chefs and…$$ -
Modern French
Geosmine
The bathrooms at this restaurant contain the coolest toilets in Paris. Water cascades into the tank from through a long, glass tube, making each flush an event. That might seem like a strange way to start a restaurant review, but it's indicative of the imaginativeness that’s goes…$$$ -
Street Food
Ground Control
There’s an underground feel to this sprawling venue near Gare de Lyon, a vast multidisciplinary arts center with its own radio station, exhibition spaces, and a food hall set in disused SNCF hangars. The food court is the place to get delicious Chinese, Mexican, and Central African…$ -
French
Hôtel du Nord
Overlooking Canal St-Martin, just across from where Amélie threw pebbles in Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s acclaimed 2001 movie, this vintage bistro is a hip place for a meal. For casual dining, book the front section, reminiscent of a 1930s cafe with tiled floors and an Art Deco zinc bar; for…$ -
Oysters/Seafood
Huîtrerie Régis
Like oysters on the half shell? Good, because that’s pretty much all they have here: delicious bivalves that come straight from the Marennes-Oléron region on France’s Atlantic coast. The brief and to-the-point menu gives you a choice of various sizes and grades of oysters, as well as…$$ -
Pasta/Vegetarian
Jardin des Pâtes
This quaint restaurant by the Jardin des Plantes specializes in pasta. But this is no ordinary pasta—not only are the rice, wheat, rye, and barley noodles made fresh every day, but the organic flour that goes into them is ground daily on the premises. The focus on wholesome…$ -
Bistro/Rotisserie
Jeanne B
If you are flagging and have kids in tow, here’s a relaxed place to eat that also happens to have excellent-quality goods. Run under the same umbrella as Astier, this comfy cafe and rotisserie offers roast chicken with gratin of potatoes dauphinois and dessert for 15€ at lunch, ideal…$ -
Modern French
Jules Verne
Sometimes Paris is about embracing the clichés, and dining on the second floor of the Eiffel Tower is definitely a cliché worth embracing. Not only are the views magnificent, with the city’s iconic rooftops undulating in graceful higgledy-piggledydom between Trocadéro, Les Invalides,…$$$ -
Wine Bar
Juveniles
This lively wine bar has been around since 1987, but since the owner’s daughter and son-in-law took over in 2014, people come just as much for the food as they do for the wine. You might start with chanterelle mushrooms with chives and poached egg, followed by panfried pork with…$$ -
Modern French
L'Astrance
This small and charming spot is owned by two former employees (some say "disciples") of megachef Alain Passard, scion of L'Arpège; Christophe Rohat supervises the dining room, while Pascal Barbot is a true culinary force in the kitchen. The menu changes seasonally, but might include…$$$ -
Modern French
L’Arpège
This is probably the only Michelin-three-star restaurant where vegetables are the stars. You can still find meat and fish on the menu, but it takes a back seat to carrots, turnips, sweet peas, or whatever other lovely plant life is in season. The pristine produce comes from Chef…$$$ -
Falafel/Israeli
L’As du Fallafel
This Marais institution offers, without a doubt, the best falafel in Paris. And they’re kosher too. True, falafel joints are scarce in this city, but that doesn’t take away from the excellence of these overstuffed beauties, brimming with cucumbers, pickled turnips, shredded cabbage,…$ -
Israeli
L’As du Fallafel
This Marais institution offers, without a doubt, one of the best falafels in Paris. True, falafel joints are scarce in this city, but that doesn’t take away from the excellence of these overstuffed beauties, brimming with cucumbers, pickled turnips, shredded cabbage, tahini, fried…$ -
Traditional French
L’Assiette
There’s a whiff of the Belle Epoque in this old-fashioned dining room with its mirrors and ceiling ornaments. The menu appeals to culinary nostalgia as well, with dishes like homemade cassoulet and pike quenelles (long and delicate fish dumplings) with Nantua sauce, as well as…$$ -
Wine Bar/Tapas/Crepes
L’Avant Comptoir
This shoebox-size wine-bar-cum-crepe stand is an outcropping of the venerable Le Comptoir next door. Hungry diners descend on the bar-and-tapas component while waiting for a table at the restaurant; those in search of quick and portable bites can order takeout crepes and salads (by…$ -
Modern French
L’Ebauchoir
Located in an unlikely corner of the 12th arrondissement, this atmospheric neighborhood hangout offers a fab selection of modern bistro cooking at decidedly reasonable prices. The high ceilings, sunny yellow walls, and wooden fixtures create a warm and friendly environment for…$ -
Modern French
L’Escudella
This smart neo-bistro is located on a quiet residential street between UNESCO and Les Invalides. Its name means “plate” in Occitan—a nod to both chef Paul-Arthur Berlan’s origins and the southwest-inspired dishes you’re about to tuck into: delights like tomato and mustard gazpacho,…$$ -
L’Excuse Mogador
In the hustle-bustle of clothing stores and lunch spots that line the streets in this crowded quarter, this tiny crêperie is a must if you’re hankering after classic Breton flavors. The crepes are generously filled with fresh ingredients like goat cheese, spinach, eggplant, and of…$ -
Modern French
L’Ourcine
A great choice for wine lovers, L’Ourcine has a long list of bottles from small, little-known French vineyards. A personal favorite is the 2012 Fitou by Château de Nouvelles in the Aude region, a full-bodied red with notes of violet and rosemary (35€). And ready to soak it all up are…$$ -
Traditional Brasserie
La Brasserie de l’Isle Saint-Louis
Owned by the same family for three generations, this lovely, old-fashioned brasserie serves healthy portions of classic Alsatian dishes, like choucroute garni—a small mountain of sauerkraut topped with slices of ham, sausage, and other smoked meats—in a relaxed atmosphere. If…$$ -
Southwestern French/Bistro
La Cerisaie
A shoebox-size dining room near the Tour Montparnasse, La Cerisaie serves a classy version of the soul-warming cuisine of southwestern France. In autumn and winter, Chef Cyril Lalanne does amazing things with wild game, and his menu features every animal in the forest from hare to…$$ -
Modern Bistro
La Condesa
On an up-and-coming street in SoPi, this joint is emblematic of Paris’ cosmopolitan dining scene: At the helm is a Mexican chef who trained at Lyon’s legendary Institut Paul Bocuse, worked in three-star restaurants in Paris, whizzed off to learn more in Japan, then came back to…$$$ -
Cafe
La Coupole
The artistic legacy of this brasserie is almost as vast as its square footage: Marc Chagall, Josephine Baker, Henry Miller, Salvador Dalí, and Ernest Hemingway are just some of the stars that lit up this converted charcoal depot. One of the largest restaurants in France, this Art…$$ -
Traditional French
La Ferme Saint Simon
Off the beaten track, down a quiet side street, this gourmet restaurant feels like a secret, attracting only those in the know—generally ambassadors from the nearby embassies and other locals. The menu treats classic dishes with kindness and care, giving each a dash of delicious…$$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
La Ferrandaise
Named after a particularly tasty breed of cow, this carnivore’s paradise serves beef that comes direct from Puy du Dôme, the center of France’s green heartland. The young chef is also a great believer in local products (all vegetables are local and/or organic) and authentic bistro…$$$ -
Bistro/Southwestern French
La Fontaine de Mars
Red and white checks are everywhere at this old-school bistro: on the tablecloths, the wicker chairs, and even the curtains. A venerable institution that first opened in 1908, it continues to draw crowds with its classy, low-key decor and traditional menu. The kitchen turns out…$$ -
Alsatian
La Forge
The menu and the decor at this woodsy tavern honor Alsace, an eastern region that shares a border with Germany. Decked out with a chalet interior and a wood-burning oven, this cozy restaurant serves up delicious specialties like flammekueches, the Alsatian version of pizza. The…$ -
Modern French
La Fresque
Named for its frescoed walls, this cozy, centrally located favorite serves modern bistro cuisine with plenty of vegetables (and vegetarian choices). While packed with business folk and shoppers at lunchtime, at night it draws a cooler crowd, ready to tuck into hearty dishes like…$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
La Poule Au Pot
Decor in this stalwart late-night restaurant (open ‘til 5am) hasn’t changed since 1935, and that’s part of the charm. Red banquettes, a marble bar, and pre-war knickknacks make an atmospheric backdrop for the sort of French classics you dream about: garlicky snails, kidneys in…$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
La Régalade
With its red banquettes and wood floors, Chef Bruno Doucet’s neo-bistro is an homage to the good things in life, like foie gras in asparagus bouillon or marinated sea scallops with basil and Parmesan. Main dishes are variations on French comfort food, such as a succulent pork breast… -
La Rotisserie d’Argent
This sister brasserie of the gastronomique Tour d’Argent serves some of the best half chickens in town–juicy and garlicky with piles of mashed potato. There are other birds too, namely pigeon and duck, with sides ranging from spinach and candied onions to delicious, crispy fries. …$$ -
Classic French
La Tour d’Argent
Everyone from Queen Elizabeth II to Orson Welles has dined in this venerable restaurant, famed for its history (a restaurant has stood here since 1582), its impeccable service, and its sweeping view of the Seine and Notre-Dame. In 2023, the place was given a makeover, adding a…$$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
La Tour de Montlhéry–Chez Denise
One of the last remnants of the bustling atmosphere that used to surround the old Les Halles central market, Chez Denise stays open through the night until 5am and serves sturdy platters of côte de boeufc(a giant rib steak), grilled marrow bones, and brochettes of grilled meat so…$$ -
Classic French
La Truffière
An atmospheric 17th-century dining room near the Seine with exposed stone walls and wooden beams is the setting for the sort of French cuisine you crave when you think of Paris—langoustines, suckling lamb, ultra-ripe cheeses, and the “black diamonds” (truffles) that the restaurant…$$$ -
Tearoom
Ladurée
This luxury pastry shop has boutiques everywhere these days, but there’s nothing quite like a cup of tea and macarons (Ladurée’s famous light-as-air filled cookies) in one of its elegant Parisian tearooms. The rue Royale location, with its original 1862 boiseries (decorative wood…$$ -
Mediterranean
Laïa
It's a team of alums from the George V palace hotel who set up this wonderful Mediterranean restaurant, tucked away in a hidden garden along the tourist-free boulevard Volatire, on the site of a former distillery. It’s like a slice of urban paradise—just you, the flowers and not a…$$ -
Gourmet French
Lasserre
André Malraux, Salvador Dalí, Audrey Hepburn, Marlene Dietrich—the list of celebrities who have dined at this legendary restaurant is understandably long. What famous person wouldn’t want to eat in this superb dining room, where the ceiling opens when the weather is willing? The room…$$$ -
Modern Bistro
Lazare
Before the Gare St-Lazare train station had its 2012 makeover, about the only thing you could get to eat was a limp sandwich. Today, you can eat like a king as you wait for your train to come in, and we’re not talking Burger King. Eric Frechon, a three-Michelin-starred chef, is the…$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Le Baratin
For some time, people have been crowding into this bistro to sample the cooking of Argentina-born Chef Raquel Carena’s down-home bistro fare. You can find modern treats like smoked mackerel tartare and duck with ginger and gooseberry jelly, as well as more traditional fare. Lunch is…$$ -
Cafe
Le Bistrot du Peintre
Artists, hipsters, and other fauna from the bustling rue de Charonne area crowd in to this popular spot, which sports an authentic Art Nouveau interior with the original peeling paint. Lean up against the zinc bar and admire yourself and others in the vast mirror behind the barman,…$$ -
Bistro/Traditional French
Le Bistrot Paul Bert
This part of town has so many beautiful old bistros that it’s hard to choose just one, but when in doubt, you can’t go wrong here. Even the most hard-nosed food critics get misty-eyed about this place, which specializes in the kind of cooking that reminds people of the good old days,…$$ -
Traditional French
Le Boudoir
This intimate restaurant features three different settings for your gustatory pleasure: a chic restaurant in shades of red; a cozy dining room upstairs; and a fumoir, or cigar salon, where you can smoke without driving your neighbors mad. But the main event here is the food, which…$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Le Café du Marché
Located on rue Cler, a pedestrian market street, this bustling cafe has one of the nicest sidewalk terraces in the area. You can do some serious people-watching here without inhaling excess car exhaust. The menu is nothing to shout about, but features pleasant bistro dishes like…$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Le Casse Noix
Chef Pierre-Olivier Lenormand brings his high-caliber food to a casual, affordable setting. The decor is nostalgic (note the nutcracker collection and vintage advertisements), and the traditional French cooking is sincere and generous. Perhaps a roast pork shoulder Ibaïona with olive…$$ -
Wine Bar/Bistro
Le Chapeau Melon
Wine enthusiasts won’t mind the trek up to the heights of Belleville to sample the goods at this wine bar-cum restaurant, not far from the beautiful Parc des Buttes-Chaumont. Specializing in “natural” wines (that is, grown and fermented according to tradition and without additives),…$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Le Comptoir du Relais
The brainchild of super-chef Yves de Camdeborde, this small and scrumptious bistro set below the Relais Saint-Germain hotel is still bringing in the crowds more than a decade after its opening in 2005. Camdeborde is often credited with starting the bistronomy movement in the 1990s,…$$ -
Rotisserie
Le Coq & Fils
At the top of the Butte de Montmartre, this popular rotisserie is where renowned chef Antoine Westerman proves that poultry can go way beyond the nugget. When raised in the right conditions (in the open-air, with space and with nutritious food), poultry can be just as delicious as…$$ -
Modern Brasserie
Le Drugstore (Publicis)
You won’t find toothpaste at the Publicis “drugstore,” whose name comes from a former 1950s incarnation that consisted of a warren of shops, restaurants, and services “à l’americaine.” This ultramodern, oh-so-chic complex has replaced the funky original, keeping the multifunctional…$$ -
French-Scandinavian
Le Fumoir
With its high ceilings, subdued lighting, and large windows, this understatedly hip spot is a good place to regroup. During the day (except at lunchtime) dawdling is encouraged: Magazines and newspapers are available at the front entry, and a small lending library/book exchange is in…$$ -
Modern French
Le Grand Restaurant
Chef Jean-François Piège is—in my humble opinion—the most exciting chef in France right now. His ultramodern take on traditional “bourgeois” cuisine is playful, delicious, and wholly unlike anything you’ll taste anywhere else. Book ahead for a table in his swank, gray dining room…$$$ -
Classic French
Le Grand Véfour
Back in the day, when the galleries of the Palais Royal were known for drinking, gambling, and revolutionary plotting, what was then called the Café de Chartres was the place to see and be seen. Napoleon, Hugo, Colette, and Cocteau all dined in this magnificently preserved…$$$ -
Bistro
Le Jardin d’en Face
This dinner-only place is in tourist central, just off Place des Abbesses, yet it’s jam-packed with locals, which is always a good sign—and the reason you’ll probably have to reserve ahead. The draw? Excellently executed bistro classics are served at low prices—like a delicious…$ -
Brasserie
Le Malakoff
While the brasseries on the Place du Trocadéro are generally overpriced and sniffy, this one is accessible, both in terms of price and service. The menu is standard Parisian brasserie fare—steak tartare, grilled chicken, choucroute garni, steak frites—executed with skill and…$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Le Pantruche
The name is old-fashioned slang for Paris, but this little bistro has a decidedly modern feel to it. Maybe it’s the mirrored column near the bar. In yet another case of runaway chefs from Michelin-starred restaurants, here you’ll find flavorful updated bistro fare like braised…$$ -
Bistro
Le Pantruche
The name is old-fashioned slang for Paris, but this little bistro has a decidedly modern feel to it. Another case of a runaway chef from Michelin-starred restaurants, Le Pantruche offers deliciously updated bistro fare like braised sweetbreads with carrots in a licorice glaze, or…$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Le Petit Cler
This cute little cafe tumbles out onto the rue Cler pedestrian market street and serves high quality but simple food at very reasonable prices. While you won’t find many red and white checks, you will find classic cafe fare (steaks with sautéed potatoes, omelets, open-faced grilled…$ -
Crêperie
Le Petit Josselin
Of the dozens of crêperies concentrated near the Montparnasse train station, this tiny dining room is one of the best. The galettes and crepes are perfectly cooked with lacy, crispy edges, and include fillings like bacon and egg, smoked salmon, and the can-do-no-wrong classic, ham…$ -
Bistro
Le Petit Pontoise
Looking for somewhere authentic and friendly in the tourist heart of the Latin Quarter? Le Petit Pontoise is just a 5-minute walk from Notre-Dame and even closer to the Seine, but it’s coveted by locals who come for foie gras with figs, Provençal scallops, and honey-fried pigs’…$$ -
Traditional French
Le Petit Rétro
This gorgeous little restaurant, dolled up in original Art Nouveau tiles, a zinc bar, and vintage wooden tables, captures the essence of Belle Epoque Paris, and not only in terms of decor. The menu harks back to days gone by with traditional dishes like cod in langoustine cream sauce…$$ -
Vegan
Le Potager du Marais
The shoebox-size dining room fills up quickly, as Paris doesn’t have many vegan eateries, so make sure you reserve in advance. But even omnivores enjoy the delicious veggie offerings here, which might include seitan bourguignon, mushroom pâté, and pumpkin Parmentier. Many items are…$$ -
Modern French/Asian Fusion
Le Pré Verre
This laid-back gourmet wine bar is the work of the Delacourcelle brothers (Philippe is the chef, Marc is the wine maven), trailblazers in the bistronomy movement. One of the first restaurants to offer a reasonably priced, easy-to-understand menu of gourmet goodies, this crowded and…$$ -
Cafe
Le Pure Café
In the heart of the residential 11th arrondissement, this is a neighborhood cafe in the truest sense: With a small V-shaped terrace that looks out over a trio of relatively quiet roads (for Paris), it’s the place to watch an odd assortment of local hipsters, pensioners, freelancers,…$$ -
Traditional French/Steak
Le Relais de l’Entrecôte
You won’t have to trouble yourself with deciding what to eat here: The only thing on the menu is steak. Just tell the waiter how you want it cooked (bien cuit for medium-well, à point for medium-rare, or saignant for rare), and sit back and wait. First comes a fresh green salad, and…$$ -
Traditional French
Le Relais Louis XIII
In an ancient building on the site where Louis XIII was crowned back in 1610, this acclaimed restaurant pays homage not only to the monarch, but to traditional French cuisine at its most illustrious. No tonka beans or reduced licorice sauce here—Chef Manuel Martinez trains his…$$$ -
Cafe
Le Rostand
This quintessentially Parisian cafe has a swell terrace directly opposite the entrance to the Jardin du Luxembourg, and despite its touristy location, it draws oodles of chic locals. It’s the ideal spot for a before- or after-promenade drink, a book-reading session, or just taking a…$$ -
Wine Bar/Modern French
Le Verre Volé
The sun is shining, the leafy trees are posing prettily along the Canal St-Martin, and you are walking one of the pretty footbridges that curve over the water. All that’s missing is a table and a glass of wine. Luckily, this wine bar/restaurant is on hand with a vast selection of…$ -
Traditional French
Le Violon d’Ingres
Decked out in shades of cream and chocolate, this is the most elegant and refined of the three Christian Constant restaurants on rue Saint-Dominique. The menu treats classic dishes with kindness and care, giving each a dash of delicious originality. Menu choices might include roast…$$$ -
Cafe
Le Zeyer
After a hard day of shopping in the discount stores on rue d’Alesia, nothing could be nicer than a steaming café crème at this gorgeous Art Deco brasserie. One of the last of its kind that hasn’t been turned into a tourist trap, this local hangout has a spacious covered terrace—the…$ -
Healthy/Mediterranean/Takeout
Lémoni
For a quick lunch that does not involve grease or excessive carbohydrates, this Franco-Cretan (as in Crete, Greece) cafe is a sure bet. Dedicated to healthy, organic cooking with a Mediterranean bent, this colorful luncheonette offers a delicious selection of homemade soups, salads,…$ -
Wine Bar/Bistro
Les Arlots
You’ll need to reserve several days in advance to get a table in this tiny, noisy bistro by Gare du Nord, quite simply because it serves some of the best comfort cuisine in town—everything from langoustines in mayonnaise to foie gras–stuffed cabbage to perfectly cooked (that is,…$$ -
Modern French
Les Cocottes de Christian Constant
An affordable version of Chef Christian Constant’s cuisine is on offer at this casual restaurant where everyone sits on a stool at the counter or a high table and almost all dishes are served in a cast iron cocotte (casserole). The hearty cocottes range from simple concoctions of…$ -
Cafe
Les Deux Magots
After the war, de Beauvoir and Sartre moved from Café de Flore to this nearby artists’ haunt, where they continued to write and think and entertain their friends for a good chunk of the rest of their lives. The literary pedigree here is at least as impressive as that of its neighbor:…$$ -
Bistro/Wine Bar
Les Papilles
Lined with shelves upon shelves of delectable bottles, this bustling wine shop/bistro/gourmet grocery matches simple but excellent fare with terrific samples of the fruit of the vine. At dinnertime, the fixed-price menu offers great value—four courses for 36€—but no choices. If you…$$ -
Modern Bistro
Les Parisiens
On the ground floor of the Pavillon Faubourg St-Germain hotel (the building where James Joyce once lived), this gorgeous restaurant packs a flavorful punch. Orange velvet chairs, wood panels and an Art-Deco- style tile floor provide a chic background for chef Thibault Sombardier’s…$$ -
Modern French/Bistro
Les Petits Plats
Not especially hungry but you still want to eat well? This friendly bistro offers all of its main courses in full or half-sizes (at full- and half-prices). The blackboard lists the day’s offerings, which might include a juicy slab of Aubrac beef, lightly sizzled cod with compote of…$$ -
Modern French
Mangetout
This affordable taste treat comes courtesy of Michelin-starred chef Alain Dutournier, the force behind Pinxo. For a relative pittance, you can get a delicious two- or three-course set meal that might start with a golden broth decked with fresh shrimp and vegetables, continue with a… -
Moroccan
Mansouria
Generally accepted as the queen of Moroccan cooking (she’s published half a dozen cookbooks), Fatéma Hal rules supreme in the kitchen of this elegant restaurant. Naturally, it offers a wide variety of delicious couscous dishes, garnished with fragrant broths and grilled meats, but…$$ -
Street Food
Marché des Enfants Rouges
On rue de Bretagne, this quaint, 400-year-old food market (the oldest in Paris) is a bustling, fragrant labyrinth of ready-to-eat food stalls hawking everything from Caribbean curries to couscous, sushi, and pasta. A hugely popular spot (if the queues are anything to go by) is Alain…$ -
Japanese
Michi
So discreet is Michi’s facade (on rue Ste-Anne, the hub of Paris’s “Little Tokyo”) that you’d be forgiven for walking past without so much as batting an eyelid. But miss it and you’ll miss one of the best sushi joints in town, a tiny spot where fish is as fresh as it gets, and the…$ -
Modern French/Bistro
Mijo T
On busy nights, chef Isabelle Bouillon calls in a kitchen aide, but the rest of the time MijoT is a one-woman show, with Isabelle doing everything, from the cooking to the waiting, and even the washing up. But sample this tiny bistro’s delectable fare—carrot and orange soup, duck…$$ -
Self-service/French
Monte Carlo
Hitting a self-serve canteen might not be your idea of Parisian dining, but if you’re on a budget, don’t dismiss this handy spot by the Arc de Triomphe. Monte Carlo has been a favorite with local police officers, office workers, and tourist bus drivers alike since the 1970s—largely…$ -
Tearoom
Mosquée de Paris
For an altogether different cup of tea, have a seat at the lovely tearoom attached to the grand Paris Mosque. Sip a glass of sweet mint tea and nibble on a corne de gazelle (a crescent-shaped, powdered-sugar-covered delight) on the patio or in the beautifully tiled tearoom and dream…$ -
Gluten-Free
Noglu
This small restaurant is where gluten-intolerant people bring their friends because the home-cooked gluten-free food is so tasty you don’t have to have a food allergy to appreciate it. Dishes might include cod with lentils, vegetable lasagna, and warm chocolate cake. Though not…$ -
Italian/Pizza
Ober Mamma
Arrive at 5:45pm for the early sitting or after 9:30pm for the late one. Any other time, you’ll have to queue. But the wait will be worth it, because Ober Mamma (part of a group owning seven other great restaurants, including East Mamma, 133 rue du Faubourg Saint Antoine; Biglove…$ -
Bakery
Pâtisserie Viennoise
Squeezed between two medical schools, this old-fashioned pastry shop gets its share of students and professors in need of a nosh. And this is a nosher’s heaven: It has a huge selection of pastries, including Viennese classics like Linzer torte and strudel, and the hot chocolate is…$ -
Bistro
Pierre Sang in Oberkampf
Pierre Sang was a finalist in France’s TV cooking competition “Top Chef,” yet there’s nothing pretentious or showy about this restaurant. The open kitchen does provide entertainment, as Sang’s chefs chop, sizzle, and steam all sorts of spice-infused delights that send fragrant scents…$$ -
Pizza
Pink Flamingo
This is a pizza delivery you won’t forget. Once you’ve ordered your pizza from the Pink Flamingo’s impressive menu (try the Poulidor with goat cheese and sliced duck breast or the Ho Chi Minh with chicken, shrimp, and green coconut curry sauce), you’ll be handed a pink, helium-filled…$ -
Modern French/Seafood
Restaurant Auguste
It’s not every famous chef who can call himself “Mr. Goodfish.” Gael Orieux’s love of the sea and everything in it has led him to become spokesperson for an association dedicated to protecting the oceans. Naturally, that means that what you see on your plate is not only delicious,…$$$ -
Traditional French/Bistro
Restaurant Polidor
An unofficial historic monument, Polidor is not so much a restaurant as a snapshot of a bygone era. The decor has not changed substantially for at least 100 years, when Verlaine and Rimbaud, the bad boys of poetry, would come here for a cheap meal. The bistro would continue to be a…$ -
Tapas
Rosa Bonheur
This unconventional space is named after an unconventional 19th-century painter/sculptor. Yes, it’s a tapas bar, but it’s also a sort of off-the-wall community center, hosting various expositions and events, not to mention its own chorus and soccer team. Located in an old buvette…$ -
Modern French
Saturne
Paris does not have very many glass-roofed restaurants, and even fewer with a kitchen like this one. The chef’s Scandinavian roots are evident in the decor, with its sleek blond wood and white walls. But it’s what’s on the plate that makes it difficult to get a reservation here:…$$$ -
Street Food
Saucette
An intriguing trend in Paris at the moment is the “mono-restaurant” serving variations of just one product. In Saucette’s case it’s sausage, but not just your average sausage. We’re talking artisanally made, innovatively flavored, non-greasy sausage, created in the on-site atelier or…$ -
Modern French
Septime
With its seafood tapas bar next door (Clamato) and its tiny wine bar across the street (Septime la Cave), Septime has done more to gentrify this stretch of the 11th arrondissement than years of town planning ever could. With reservations made well in advance, people cross the entire…$$$ -
Modern French
Verjus
Okay, the chef’s American, but that doesn’t stop this nosh nirvana from being utterly Parisian, from the setting (an all-white dining room, nestled at the top of a hidden staircase, with Art Deco–style furniture and views onto Théâtre du Palais Royal) to the food (contemporary takes…$$$ -
Bistro
Virtus
This pretty Art Deco–inspired place, tucked away on a narrow street filled with eateries behind the Aligre Market, draws food-savvy locals with impressively executed dishes like scallops in hazelnut butter, succulent roast lamb with peas, and lip-smacking passion fruit mousse with…$$ -
Senegalese
Waly Fay
Take a gastronomic voyage to West Africa at this popular restaurant that has introduced umpteen Parisians to delicious Senegalese cuisine. A former French colony, Senegal has absorbed culinary influences from France, as well as its northern neighbors in the Mahgreb. Cool music and…$ -
French Brasserie
Wepler
Picasso and Modigliani used to hang out at this venerable brasserie on Place de Clichy, as did writer Henry Miller, who made it his headquarters. “I knew it like a book,” he wrote. “The faces of the waiters, the managers, the cashiers, the whores, the clientele, even the attendants…$$ -
Modern Bistro/Wine Bar
Willi’s Wine Bar
Contrary to what you may expect, Willi was a dog. The owner’s basset hound to be exact. But he graciously lent his illustrious name to this wine bar, which has been thrilling taste buds for over 30 years. You’ll hear a lot of English spoken here, but don’t let it scare you—in…$$ -
Chinese
Yodia
While most of the Chinese restaurants that have sprouted up all over Paris are decidedly mediocre (except those in Chinatown), this tiny place is a standout. For one, it specializes in homemade noodles garnished with ingredients and flavors from Sichuan province. The wheat-based…$ -
North African
Zerda Café
Intricately carved Moorish designs cover the walls of this friendly restaurant, which serves some of the best couscous in Paris. Zerda offers a choice of lamb, chicken, and merguez (spicy lamb sausage) versions; my favorite is the meltingly tender “lamb cooked in sauce,” but all are…$