
Our quest to eat at the best restaurants in Paris is a life long project that keeps evolving. Discover our current favorites and start planning your own food trip now.

We weren’t the first to fall in love with the food in Paris and we won’t be the last. The city’s food scene has become legendary all over the world, inspiring acolytes like Ernest Hemingway and Julia Child.
We never go to bed hungry in Paris – the city has more restaurants than we could visit in a year much less a week. Every trip, we choose where to eat from a bottomless well of worthy dining options that never runs dry.
Discover the Paris food favorites not to miss during your visit.

Sure, the city has more than its fair share of Michelin-starred establishments helmed by restaurant icons like Alain Ducasse and Alain Passard. Without a doubt, these 100+ luxury restaurants are worthy destinations for big-budget diners celebrating a special occasion.
But the Paris restaurant scene is so much more.

Timing matters a lot, especially if you travel during the summer. Paris, still as independent and cool as ever, hews to tradition with many restaurateurs closing their doors for all or part of August. Be sure to check a given restaurant’s website and social media for closure information. Parisians need their August beach time. Right?
And, as is the case in much of Europe, doing advance research and planning is key when it comes to scoring reservations and experiencing memorable meals. Many Paris restaurant websites now have reservation systems. You must check those sites in advance and act quickly.
Pro Tip
Make advance reservations as soon as you book your hotel room or apartment. Otherwise, you’ll likely experience dining disappointment since the best places to eat in Paris tend to book up in advance.
The Best Paris Restaurants | Where To Eat In Paris

People often ask us how we decide where to eat in Paris.
Sometimes we discover restaurants through online research. Other times we get recommendations from Parisian restaurant workers and baristas. And, occasionally, we follow our noses into eateries that catch our attention.
We’ve done the research and we’ve eaten the food. These are our picks for the best restaurants in Paris:
1. Les Arlots – Excellent Bistro Near Gare Du Nord

If you travel to Paris from London via the Eurostar train or use public transit to get to town from the Charles de Gaul Airport, you’ll most likely drift through Paris’ 10th arrondissement.
The immediate area around the Gare du Nord and Gare de l’Est train stations used to be blighted and ugly with cheap hotels and a seedy street scene – but that situation is rapidly changing. Today, a short walk either east or west of the stations will transport you to some of Paris’ most fun and funky areas. To the east, near Place de Republique, is one Paris’ most vibrant areas, running along the Canal St. Martin.

To the west is a sort of no-nonsense nether zone between the Gare du Nord and Montmartre labeled as SoPi (south of Pigalle). There you’ll find intimate restaurants tightly filled with Parisians eating simple yet elegant bistro food while seated elbow to elbow.
Les Arlots is one of those restaurants.

Chef Thomas Brachet serves what he humbly calls a ‘simple’ menu at Les Arlots. For us, food like his simple, expertly constructed, porky pâte de campagne is what we love about eating bistro classics in Paris.
Brachet’s main courses are just as satisfying. We loved eating his skate wing, served with earthy yet sweet carrots, carrot purée and a generous amount of girolle (chanterelle) mushrooms.
We especially adored his snappy, award-winning house sausage (Sausage Les Arlots) served with a rich sauce and creamy potato purée. When you dine at Les Arlots, this is a must-order dish.

Summertime, when tables spill onto the sidewalk, is a great time to eat at Les Arlots. Then again winter is also a great time to order comforting dishes from the bistro’s blackboard menu. Let’s face it, it’s always a great time to eat at Les Arlots. The same goes for its jovial wine bar, Billili, which serves surprisingly great food next door.
Les Arlots is located at 136 Rue du Faubourg Poissonnière, 75010 Paris, France.
More Restaurants Near Gare Du Nord
Carton Paris (boulangerie), Café le Deux Gares and Chez Michel
2. Chez Georges – Traditional Bistro In The 17th Arrondissement

If you want to experience the archetypal, old school bistro experience, start at Chez Georges. Want ratatouille? Start at Chez Georges? Rillettes and cornichons? Salade frisée with lardons? Sole meuniere? It’s best to begin at the bistro in the 2nd.
We have to wonder how many bistros of all types have duplicated or at least were inspired by Chez George’s interior, lined with banquettes and wooden chairs that look like they’ve been there since the 1920s (the restaurant’s 1960 roots are more recent) and arched mirrors that sit adjacent to small blackboard menus. Of course there’s a zinc bar and that’s across from a large painting of Frenchman playing Jeu de Mail – an early version of stick sports like golf, croquet and polo.

There may be a game up on the wall but, for us, there was no game to what we ordered. We wanted classics and dove right into the restaurant’s excellent rillettes and crunchy cornichons along with ratatouille and a Lyon-inspired salade frisée that may have been better than salads we’ve previously eaten in Lyon.
A bold statement? The salad’s tendrils of frisée, heartily dressed in mustard, interspersed with chunks of pinky finger sized bacon lardons and topped with a perfectly poached egg, will make you a believer too.


Channeling our inner Julia Child, who was known to eat in this hallowed spot, we ordered sole meunière.
It was a beautiful piece of fish with that even ridge of white flesh that makes dover sole so meaty and satisfying. It could have used a bit more salt but we added that later, along with a generous squeeze of lemon, and it tasted fine. (Undersalting food seems to be a trend all over France. We chalk it up to universal medical access. That being said, the French make up for it with cheese.)

As for dessert, we shared a profiterole.

3. Bistrot Paul Bert – Classic Bistro Near Place Bastille

Far from a hidden gem, Bistrot Paul Bert is firmly on the radar for locals and travelers who enjoy elevated yet affordable bistro fare. Though it feels like it’s been around for a century, Bertrand Auboyneau opened the popular Paris bistro in 2000.
Bistrot Paul Bert offers an a la carte menu; however, ordering the three-course prix fixe dinner (priced at 41€ at the time of our meal and subject to change at any time) is the way to go unless your heart is set on cote de beouf. Presented on a handwritten chalkboard menu, the options available during our meal ran the gamut from classic trout menuière to seasonal asperges blanches (white asparagus).
Pro Tip
Grab a seat next door at La Cave Paul Bert if you can’t wrangle a reservation at the bistro. You can experience the bistro’s food while you sip on a glass or two of excellent wine. You can even order steak if you’re extra hungry.

The chefs at Bistrot Paul Bert have been cooking for decades. We could taste their experience in dishes like mullet carpaccio with lemon and cauliflower on top and sautéed squid flavored with preserved lemon.
Mindi ordered her usual tartare and was pleased with her chunky puck of mixed onion, gherkins and parsley.
Daryl went rogue by ordering beef tongue. Not only could he taste the various levels of preparation from the homemade stock to the braised tongue cooked until meltingly tender, but it was the first time that he’s eaten tongue that tasted better than his grandmother’s.

The three-course meal includes a final course of either cheese or dessert. Selecting the signature Paris-Brest named after a historic bike race between the two cities is a must for its light choux pastry and divine praline-buttercream filling. We also enjoyed a buttery, sugary Grand Marnier souffle that was as big as it was light.
Be warned that, dining at Bistrot Paul Bert comes with a side of service ‘tude. This is ultra cool Paris after all. We had to assert ourselves to avoid sitting in a back room designated for tourists and waited interminably for our bill after requesting it multiple times. We also didn’t appreciate our server glad-handing for a tip after claiming that “it was his first night” while working the room like he’d been there for years.
Service issues aside, Bistrot Paul Bert is a Paris restaurant that we fully recommend and will happily revisit whenever we’re in the neighborhood – assuming we can score a reservation without angst which isn’t a given (see above reference to ‘tude) these days.
Bistrot Paul Bert is located at 18 Rue Paul Bert, 75011 Paris, France.
More Restaurants Near Place Bastille
Boucherie Les Provinces, Clamato, Le Baron Rouge (wine bar), Marché d’Aligre (market), Mokoloco and Septime
4. Au Pied de Cochon – Classic Brasserie In Les Halles

It may be gauche of us to seek out the archetypal soupe l’oignon but who doesn’t love the ‘rich’ simplicity of stretchy cheese, beefy broth with pulverized onions and supple soaked bread.
Au Pied de Cochon serves the best restaurant version we’ve eaten in Paris. It’s not overfilled with onions. It has a dark bronze crust of stretchy Emmental cheese reaching from rim to rim. And the broth is rich and beefy with large globs of pleasantly soggy bread.

Au Pied de Cochon is a brasserie in the truest sense of the word.
You can look around and ogle at the colorful Greek revival space where spherical glass grapes overflow from the light fixtures. And, as the restaurant’s name suggests, you can eat pig’s feet here which Daryl gladly tried as part of The Temptation of Saint-Anthony “Patron of the Butchers” plate.
Its mix of ears, tails and bones is a bit of a chore to eat which is okay if you’re adventurous and enjoy an old-school eating challenge. But, If he had to do it again, he would have ordered the more eater-friendly stuffed pig’s foot instead.

Expect a throng of people, including families, chowing down on the local fare, wine in hand, when you dine at Au Pied de Cochon. While it was calm when we arrived at 7pm on a late spring evening, we noticed a large line forming out the front door just a half hour later.
Our service was hurried but still competent. Mindi’s 14-hour candied pork loin came ridiculously overcooked (it must have been sitting under a heat lamp for an extra half hour), so we sent it back with no argument. Sure enough, the properly cooked replacement plate had wonderful depth of flavor and melt-in-your-mouth texture.
Au Pied de Cochon is located at 6 Rue Coquillière, 75001 Paris, France.
More Classic Brasseries In Paris
Bofinger (mixed reviews), Grande Brasserie and Le Dôme (Seafood)
5. Frenchie – Michelin Starred Bistro In The 2nd Arrondissement

Described as a ‘micro-restaurant’ by Chef Grégory Marchand, Frenchie serves a seasonal prix-fixe menu that’s simultaneously global and local. After working around the world in cities like Hong Kong and New York, the acclaimed chef is adept at sourcing local product and adding international flavors.
Despite its notoriety, Frenchie is a small space with a fairly limited schedule that only serves dinner on week nights. The restaurant’s five-course dinner menu currently costs 140€.
Read our Frenchie restaurant review.

You won’t find Frenchie’s menu online since it changes frequently. Expect dishes like foie gras with caramelized pecans and grilled guinea fowl, both featured during our meal.
That meal started with gougeres made with French Comté cheese and ended with a British cheese selection sourced from London’s Neal’s Yard Dairy. Highlights included a ridiculously tasty truffled potato and celeriac feuillete as well as smoked salmon brightly flavored with Meyer lemons and pickled turnips.
Frenchie is located at 5 Rue du Nil, 75002 Paris, France.
More Michelin Restaurants In Paris
Paris currently has 130 Michelin-starred restaurants including nine thee-star restaurants, 15 two-star restaurants and 106 one-star restaurants. You can read about them all on Michelin’s website.
6. Le Châteaubriand – Neo Bistro In The 11th Arrondissement

People in Paris love to offer their opinions when it comes to restaurants. Those opinions change like seasons. That being said, we’ve never heard a bad remark about Le Châteaubriand. Not a peep.
Ask a local server about a lauded restaurant like Septime and you may be greeted with the kind of industry silence that speaks volumes of negativity without saying a word. With new bistros coming and going, there always seems to be a restaurant of the moment.


This isn’t the case with Le Châteaubriand which has taken its place as a classic neo bistro. In fact, if there was a list of classic ‘new’ restaurants or neo bistros in Paris, you’d probably find Le Châteaubriand at or near the top.
We’d always heard about the 11th arr. restaurant but the planets never quite aligned – we always had other plans or the bistro was closed on the nights of our visit. Finally, the timing was right and we scored a table at Le Châteaubriand where we enjoyed a meal worthy of the bistro’s reputation.

Le Châteaubriand’s Chef Iñaki Aizpitarte, a Basque native, epitomizes the modern Paris chef, integrating international flavors into the tightness of a Paris plate. It’s been awhile since he was the ‘new thing’ so, in a way, chefs like Aizpitarte, who have shed many of the stodgy traditions of the Paris dining scene, have become legends.
That being said, Le Châteaubriand’s constantly changing chef’s tasting menu retains a certain relevancy that feels fresh, new and free of gastronomic trickery. Some of the dishes like scallops, plated in a dome of endive, are ingenious. Magret de canard (duck breast) became memorable when served with a chocolate brown “duck ravioli” in a wonderfully glossy sauce.


But, evidenced by the poppy seed gougères that commenced our meal, Le Châteaubriand has not forgotten its Parisian roots. This is the kind of exciting dining we seek when we’re in Paris.
Le Châteaubriand is located at 129 Avenue Parmentier, 75011 Paris, France.
More Neo Bistros In Paris
Café les Deux Gares, Le Cafe de Mars and Le Servan
7. Arpège – Three Star Michelin Restaurant In The 7th Arrondissement

Eating at a three-star Michelin restaurant in Paris wasn’t our goal until we saw Arpège featured on Netflix’s Chef’s Table, France. Helmed by acclaimed Chef Alain Passard, the Left Bank restaurant caught our eyes both for the beauty of its plates and its mostly vegetarian restaurant.
The concept of a three-star Michelin restaurant that eschews meat and seafood may seem incongruous but Passard pulls it of with a mostly vegetable menu that draws heavily from his farms outside Paris. There’s an almost Beethoven-esque quality to his food which is not as much about innovation as it is about expression and refinement.
Read our Arpège restaurant review.

While our lunch wasn’t vegan or even vegetarian in the strictest sense, it celebrated vegetable from start to end. Yes, even our desserts featured ingredients like celery and Jerusalem artichoke. It was also a leisurely affair that included twelve savory courses and three sweet courses.
8. Le Baratin – Classic Bistro In Belleville

We ate at Le Baratin for the first time in January 2010, capping off a day trip to chilly Versailles and a gorgeous sunset walk through Père Lachaise. We loved the intimate bistro’s atmosphere and loved the food even more.
Back then, Le Baratin’s Argentinian-inflected French cuisine was lauded as a hidden gem by Paris food authorities. Alex Lobrano’s enthusiastic admiration contributed to its status as a must-eat for food lovers visiting Paris.
Tempted to return a decade after our first meal, if for no other reason than to improve our dreadful photos, we solidified our decision after receiving a slight nudge from Frenchie’s Chef de Cuisine Sasha Minins. Lucky enough to score a last-minute Saturday night dinner reservation, we invited our niece Danielle to join us for this culinary trip down memory lane.

In the 10-year gap between meals, it was easy to forget the rusticity of Corena’s utterly French menu dotted with occasional flirtations toward her native Argentina. Our meal brought those memories back.
While Danielle shared tales about exercising her young brain in Italy, Daryl dug into cervelle de veau – creamy calf’s brain in a lemon butter sauce – one of the bistro’s longtime favorites.

We enjoyed our meal with a fabulous, if slightly pricey, Cabernet Franc from Loire Valley. The wine paired well with braised one-pot dishes like epaule d’agneau (i.e. braised lamb shoulder) and travers de veau – a veal rib served over a light drizzling of Barolo vinegar.
9. La Bourse Et La Vie – Daniel Rose’s Bistro In The 2nd Arrondissement

Open since 2015, La Bourse et la Vie is a classic French bistro ironically helmed by an American. The irony is not so palpable considering that the American is Daniel Rose, the chef responsible for Paris’ Spring and Chez La Vieille (both now closed) as well as Le Coucou in New York.
Dining at La Bourse et la Vie was a no-brainer for us after experiencing Rose’s vision at Le Coucou. Although La Bourse et la Vie offers a full dinner menu, going for lunch was an equally easy decision since the restaurant’s midday meal provides excellent value.

House-made fresh cheese spread with chives and shallots and a beautiful, rainbow-like salad with large heirloom tomatoes, herbs and olives started our meal. Soon after, sides of dressed butter lettuce and an epic bowl of crispy frites that was almost impossible to finish accompanied our main course.
But, without a doubt, the meat was the star of the show.
Mindi’s rustic steak tartare was a round mound of chunky raw meat surrounded by egg yolk, egg whites, capers, onion, anchovy, pickles and garlic. Daryl’s generous entrecôte steak, prepared to a wonderful à point doneness with a hint of smokiness, shared the plate with an elegant sauce just viscous enough to avoid being thick or runny.
La Bourse et La Vie is located at 12 Rue Vivienne, 75002 Paris, France.
More Restaurants In The 2nd Arrondissement
Aux Lyonnaise (bouchon by Alain Ducasse), Chez Georges, Echo, Frenchie and Stohrer (Paris’ oldest patisserie)
10. Bouillon Julien – Gorgeous Bouillon In The 10th Arrondissement

Bouillon Julien oozes with history from its vintage cash register to its menu filled with classic French dishes. Though only operating as a bouillon since 2018, this popular bouillon is in a fabulous art nouveau building that dates back to the turn of the 19th century.
Edith Piaf dined here with her lover Marcel Cerdan in the 1940s. Decades later, the building achieved historical monument status in 1997. You really have to see the space to believe it – calling the restaurant ornate is an understatement.
Painted nymphs, stained glass and mirrors adorn sea-green walls covered with sconces galore while floral tiles cover the floor. It all sounds incredibly gaudy and yet the result is beautiful.

Beyond its decor, Bouillon Julien’s affordable menu attracts a mostly local crowd for lunch and dinner. Though empty when we arrived for our lunch just past noon, the bouillon soon filled and was bustling when we left an hour later.
Our lunch included a selection of French food favorites starting with ‘garlicious’ escargot and crab-filled tarama and continuing with tête de veau and bouillon.

How could we resist ordering the bouillon’s signature dish, a beefy broth loaded with pasta, braised beef, lemongrass and ginger? We couldn’t and we didn’t.
A big bowl of frites and a carafe of ruby red Gamay wine completed our meal. Paying our bill, which clocked in at just under 40€ including service, was the opposite of a hardship. In fact, it was a pleasure.
Bouillon Julien is located at 16 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Denis, 75010 Paris, France.
More Bouillons In Paris
Bouillon Chartier, Bouillon Pigalle and Bouillon République
11. Le Train Bleu – Famous Paris Restaurant Inside Gare de Lyon

Le Train Bleu is a restaurant that has to be seen to be believed. If you’re visiting Paris on a budget, we propose a few ‘hypotheticals’ in which you can experience what is probably one of the grandest restaurant spaces in the world:
- Eat breakfast on your first morning before heading to your hotel room or apartment.
- Splurge on lunch between museum visits.
- Enjoy a simple coffee and croissant before boarding a train to Lyon or Provence.
We chose a variation of option one assuming that we’d be seated in the main dining room. Alas, our breakfast was served in the quieter, less opulent ‘salon’ section of the restaurant.

Priced at 13€, our omelette was good though cooked with a surprising degree of brown. (We were taught that the French don’t brown their omelettes.) The accompanying bread service, which included fruit confiture and Normandy butter, clocked in at 7.50€.
The restaurant, originally built for the 1900 Paris Exposition along with the Gare de Lyon, transports diners to the Belle Epoque with its intricate relief sculptures, humanist paintings and mirrors that enhance the ‘wow’ effect. Just passing through the ornate art-nouveau room is a thrill. Eating here is a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
Le Train Bleu is located at Place Louis-Armand, 75012 Paris, France.
More Famous Restaurants In Paris
Arpège, Bistrot Paul Bert, L’ami Jean, L’As du Fallafel and Le Tour d’Argent
12. Septime – Most Difficult Reservation In Paris

We’re not far from the mark when we jokingly refer to Septime as the hottest ticket in town. Despite the neo-bistro’s compact size and streamlined Nordic decor, an enormous number of diners vie for the relatively small number of lunch and dinner reservations available for Septime’s weekday meals.
We understand the competition from personal experience – it took us three days of trying to get a reservation. You might find that crazy considering the immense number of restaurants in Paris and we don’t necessarily disagree. But eating at Septime was a must once we scored that golden ticket, i.e. lunch reservation at Septime.
Read our Septime restaurant review.

Betrand Grébaut brought a range of experiences when he opened Septime in 2011 with partner Théophile Pourriat. Originally a graffiti artist who trained to be a graphic artist, Grébaut paid his dues by attending culinary school, interning for Alain Passard at L’Arpège and helming the kitchen at L’Agapé.
13. Breizh Café – Crêperie In The Marais

After growing up eating crêpes in Brittany, Chef Bertrand Larcher started his crêpe empire in Tokyo. He later opened his first Paris crêperie in the Marais where he serves a full menu of sweet crêpes and savory galettes as well as oysters sourced from Brittany’s Cancale.
We didn’t grow up eating crêpes and were previously unfamiliar with the buckwheat version (commonly called Gallette Bretonne) until our Breizh Café lunch. After his first bite, Daryl joyfully exclaimed that the hearty flavor reminded him of kasha, a dish he’s enjoyed since childhood at family holiday dinners. Mindi just smiled and dug in with gusto.

Breizh Café’s menu separates its savory galettes into four categories – classics, ‘complètes’, house specialties from the sea and house specialties from the farm. The restaurant uses organic eggs and sources ingredients like buckwheat flour and andouille sausage from Brittany.
During our lunch, we ate two ‘compléte’ galettes – one topped with mushrooms, scrambled egg, ham, Comté cheese and onion confit and the other topped with a sunny side up fried egg, Comté cheese and andouille. The flavor of the raw milk Comté cheese paired well with the earthy buckwheat base in both, though we preferred the mushroom galette between the two.

14. Brasserie Lazare Paris – Brasserie Inside Gare Saint-Lazare

Think again if you think that Le Train Bleu (see above) is the only notable Paris restaurant located inside a train station. Case in point – Brasserie Lazare Paris is in the forecourt of Gare Saint -Lazare.
Open since 2013, the brasserie is what you’d likely expect of a large brasserie situated inside a train station. It’s busy. It’s fairly informal. And its menu has a gamut of French dishes that somehow all fit on one concise page.


We ate several of those dishes. Some, like rillettes de canard and tartare de boeuf, were traditional and familiar. Others were more unique – namely a whole artichoke served with green beans and a flavorful mashup of garlic-fried calamari with calamari.
Desserts finished our meal. Not settling for one sweet treat, we shared beignets aux pommes (apple donuts) and a profiterole.
Brasserie Lazare Paris is located at Rue Intérieure, 75008 Paris, France.
Most Famous Paris Restaurants Located Inside A Train Station
Le Train Bleu
15. Pierre Sang – Chef-Driven Korean-Influenced Food In Oberkampf

The first restaurant opened by Chef Pierre Sang after he competed on Top Chef France in 2011, Pierre Sang (the restaurant) manages to be simultaneously simple and sophisticated with a rotating set menu that blends flavors from the chef’s home country (Korea) and adopted country (France).
Lunch guests can choose two, three or five plates while evening diners get six courses. Prices are ridiculously fair, ranging from 23€ for the two-course lunch to 44€ for the six-course dinner at the time of our visit. Prices are subject to change at any time.

Hedging our bets, we opted for three courses during our midday meal. Though it was more than enough food, we regretted not going for the full five based on the quality of the hake as well as pork loin garnished with gochujang miso sauce, haricot verts, mustard grains, broccoli puree and baby corn.

And how can we forget our dessert – four apple preparations on one seasonal plate – chantilly, sorbet, baba and cider – which we slurped and sipped with childlike glee.
We also can’t forget the street art that we viewed through the restaurant’s window. We thought it was Banksy but the art’s signature said otherwise. Either way, the whimsical design provided a harmonious complement to our satisfying meal.
Pierre Sang is located at 55 Rue Oberkampf, 75011 Paris, France.
More Restaurants In Oberkampf
Astier, Au Passage, Aux Deux Amis (wine bar), Café Mericourt (brunch and coffee), French Bastards (boulangerie/patisserie), Le Rigermarole and Surpriz (cheap eats/döner kebabs)
16. Maison – Chef-Driven Cuisine In The 11th Arrondissement

Considering the mutual affection between Tokyo and Paris, it’s no coincidence that a Japanese chef helms one of the city’s most exciting restaurants. Prior to opening Maison, Sota Atsumi trained at Michelin-starred restaurants in Lyon as well as at famed Le Maison Troisgros before making waves at Paris’ Clown Bar. Now on his own, Atsumi has created a culinary oasis in the city.
Diners enter Maison through a spartan ground-floor lounge that leads up a stairwell to a sophisticated, sun-drenched dining room situated in an ultra-modern space with a vaulted A-frame ceiling, hexagonal tiles lining the walls and a chef’s counter facing the kitchen. This is an urban farmhouse with large exposed maroon beams stretching over the room’s vast communal table.
But, at the end of the day, the real wow is in the food.

Starting with chestnut bread baked in the kitchen’s wood oven and miniature cloud-like tartlets filled with onion and haddock, we enjoyed a two-hour journey that took our taste buds to the Basque Country and beyond.
The aforementioned Basque Country can claim credit for the yellowfin tuna and monkfish as well as the cider, but Maison’s culinary team took each item further. Slabs of tuna, layered with paper-thin grapefruit, burst with acidity.
Atsumi’s Meaty monkfish was multidimensional – feeling more like a culinary journey than a mere plate of food. On this food trip, an initial bite of simple meaty flesh segued into flavors of herbs, mushroom, rich sauce and foie gras that unfolded like chapters in a book.

Buttery tender squab grilled on charcoal was served claw-on in recognition that the squab was once a living being. A tube of thick pasta arrived with a tasty liver-like sauce starkly similar to the banh xeo sauce we’d eaten in Da Nang, Vietnam.
We ended our Maison meal with brie noir de Coulommiers, an earthy, nutty cheese aged for 12 months, paired with an equally earthy, nutty fig walnut bread made with buckwheat flour. However, proving that enough isn’t really enough in Paris, we found room for pear crème brûlée served with olive oil ice cream, candied kumquats and cereal crunchies.
Maison is located at 3 Rue Saint-Hubert, 75011 Paris, France.
More Chef-Driven Restaurants in Cuisine In Paris
Arpège, Frenchie, Le Baratin, Le Châteaubriand and Pierre Gagnaire
17. Restaurant Le Dalí – Afternoon Tea In One Of Paris’ Most Exclusive Hotels

There’s nothing like slowing down, relaxing and enjoying a dose of fine living after a day of hectic sightseeing in Paris. With the city’s embarrassment of pastry riches, experiencing afternoon tea is a must in Paris with no lack of options.
You can enjoy your tea with Russian grandeur, next to an intimate courtyard or (as we did) at Le Dali inside the grand Hotel Le Meurice


During a leisurely afternoon tea session shared with our sister Holly and niece Oliva, we enjoyed a tea tower topped with world-class pastry created by pastry giant Cedric Grolet. The price skewed high but the shared memories are priceless.
Le Dali is located at the Hotel Le Meurice at 228 Rue de Rivoli, 75001 Paris, France.
More Hotel Afternoon Teas In Paris
Angelina, Bontemps, Great Mosque Of Paris Tea Room (Moroccan), Hôtel de Crillon, Hotel Ritz Paris, and Le Café Mulot
18. Huîtrerie Régis – Oysters In Saint-Germain-Des-Prés

Huîtrerie Régis is compact and doesn’t take reservations. Either of these features could be a deal breaker but that’s not the case at this Saint-Germain-Des-Prés restaurant. Instead, people flock here to eat oysters sourced from France’s Atlantic waters.
Ironically, oysters aren’t the only thing on the menu at Huîtrerie Régis despite a name that loosely translates to Regis Oyster Bar. Others food options include charcuterie and cheese as well as fruits of the sea like prawns, clams and sea urchins.

We didn’t try any of those foods. Instead, like most people who squeeze into Huîtrerie Régis, we shared a dozen oysters that ranged from salty to sweet. Sourced from the Marennes-Oléron and simply served with fresh lemon wedges, bread, butter and tabasco, those oysters proved to be an excellent pre-dinner snack.
19. Vivant 2 – Lively Comptoir In The 10th Arrondissement

Vivant 2 lives up to its name. Dimly lit with an intimate atmosphere, the restaurant is fully alive with a buzzing vibe generated by its busy culinary team and a stream of fashionable guests.
Though relatively young in years, Chef Pierre Touitou (pictured above) is a culinary sage who creates nightly magic in a compact, open kitchen behind the restaurant’s sleek marble bar. A dozen or so lucky diners get a front-row view of the action, with Vivant 2’s kitchen just meters away from the stools.
Touitou trained with top chefs like Alain Ducasse and hails from a privileged lineage as the son of an acclaimed designer. This pedigree doesn’t stop him from cooking with controlled abandon.

During our meal, the young chef didn’t stop hustling – chopping, plating and blow-torching food with an aggressive precision that was fun to watch and a joy to taste.
Our first taste of duck pastilla made with Greek pastry and foie gras primed us for dishes like ruby red blow-torched tuna topped with juicy bits of finger lime. Our La Cour D’Armoise chicken arrived two ways – the breast roasted with black sauce, corn and tofu and the thigh served in a salad with frisée and watercress topped with padrons.

However, the piece de resistance had to be Touitou’s Tunisian-inspired, braised veal topped with vegetal Mloukhiya sauce.
Blackened with squid ink, the sauce’s complex flavor and mole-like texture provided an excellent counterpoint to the multidimensional flavors of the braised veal. The dish”s fiery Tunisian harissa paste gave us all the motivation we needed to start dreaming about a future trip to North Africa.
Vivant 2 is located at 43 Rue des Petites Écuries, 75010 Paris, France.
More Hipster Restaurants In Paris
Billili (wine bar), Double Dragon, Dumbo, La Cave à Michel (wine bar), Miznon and Mokoloco
20. Rigamarole – Modern International Omakase (Temporarily Closed)

Our dinner at Le Rigmarole started on a highly inauspicious note as we dashed in from the rain and promptly broke a vase at our table while removing our outerwear. Things looked up when talented co-owner Jessica Yang welcomed us to the restaurant with a shrug and a smile.
Let’s cut to the chase. We loved everything about Le Rigmarole from its eclectic, yakitori-friendly menu to its bare-bones vibe. Though the menu could be described as more Japanese than French, Yang and partner Robert Compagnon deliver a culinary experience that’s Paris dining at its best.

Rigamarole has a menu. Ignore it. This is a restaurant where it makes sense to order one of two prix fixe chef’s menus which were priced at either 49€ and 69€ (subject to change) at the time of our meal.
Not only is the chef’s menu the price-effective way to go, but it’s also fun to succumb to an element of surprise as you await each course. And by each course, we mean many courses. Many, many courses. So many that we stopped counting after a dozen.
Yang queried us regarding our preference for offals, raw fish and vegetables before the parade of small dishes commenced with pickled kohlrabi, red cabbage and golden turnips. The kitchen team crafted our menu accordingly, including offals just for Daryl and a range of tasty treats for us both.

Each miniature course was a revelation. Raw endives shared a plate with caramelized pistachio. Grilled salmon with a spicy homemade yogurt sauce was so flavorful that we used a demi spoon to scoop out every drop.
Compagnon didn’t disappoint, grilling juicy yakitori skewers with the likes of butterflied chicken wings, chicken liver and a chicken heart on white binchotan charcoal. He also delivered with a thick and beefy homemade bone marrow spaghetti dish seemingly inspired by the cuisines of both Bologna and Rome.
Paris Restaurant FAQs
Like New York, L.A. and London, Paris’ dining offers a myriad of options with bistros and larger restaurants serving a range of traditional dishes and modern cuisine. In other words, you can enjoy steak tartare or sole meuniere at a classic bistro like Chez Georges one day and roasted beet carpaccio with XO sauce at a restaurant like Septime the next day.
The top Paris restaurants are indeed expensive. However, the city has numerous inexpensive boulangeries and bistros where it’s still possible to enjoy a three course lunch ‘plat du jour’ for under 50€. There are also cheap eats options all over the city for those traveling on a budget.
Bourdain visited dozens of Paris hot spots while filming No Reservations (twice) and The Layover. After eating at several including Bistrot Paul Bert, Du Pain et des Idées, Frenchie, Le Baratin and Le Châteaubriand, we share his enthusiasm.
The Somebody Feed Phil star ate at Arpege, Blé Sucré, L’Ami Jean, L’Ami Louis, L’As Du Falaffel, L’avant Comptoir, Les Deux Magots, Marché D’Aligre and Pierre Herme in Paris.
Yes. Reservations are necessary at most Paris restaurants.
No. Tipping is optional in France.
People typically eat dinner between 7pm and 9pm in Paris.
Paris currently has 130 Michelin-starred restaurants including nine thee-star restaurants, 15 two-star restaurants and 106 one-star restaurants.
Things To Do In Paris

There’s absolutely no need to be bored in Paris. We recommend the following activities between meals:

Make your life easier and buy a Paris Museum Pass like the 2-day pass we enjoyed during our most recent visit. Not only does the card give access to top museums including the Louvre, l’Orangerie and Orsay, but it also includes entry at the Arc de Triomphe and Sainte-Chapelle.
Getting Around Paris

Paris is a sprawling city. You could easily walk for hours every day and never see it all.
We recommend taking the RER train from the airport unless you have the misfortune of flying into Beauvais. (We did that once and will only do it again for a crazy-cheap fare.)

With more than 300 stations, the Metro is the best way to traverse Paris and its many arrondissements. The fare is cheap, especially if you buy a 10-pack of tickets.
Paris’ subway system goes pretty much everywhere. Other options include buses, car share services, taxis and your two feet.
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About The Authors
Daryl & Mindi Hirsch
Saveur Magazine’s BEST TRAVEL BLOG award winners Daryl and Mindi Hirsch share their culinary travel experiences and recipes on the 2foodtrippers website and YouTube. The married Food and Travel content creators live in Lisbon, Portugal.
Disclosures
Article Updates
We update our articles regularly. Some updates are major while others are minor link changes and spelling corrections. Let us know if you see anything that needs to be updated in this article.
Funding
We self-funded our multiple trips to Paris.
Original Publication Date: August 13, 2023