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Paris Eating and Drinking

Paris Travel Itinerary



Paris Eating and Drinking

Eating and Drinking

Eating and drinking are among Paris's chief delights, as they are in the country as a whole. The capital offers a tremendous variety of cuisines: as well as regional French cooking, notably from the southwest, you can sample Senegalese, Caribbean, Thai, eastern European and North African cuisine, among others. There's also a huge diversity of eating and drinking establishments: luxurious restaurants in the traditional style or elbow-to-elbow bench-and-trestle-table jobs; spacious brasseries and cafes where you can watch the world go by while nibbling on a baguette sandwich; or dark, cavernous beer cellars and tiny wine bars with sawdust on the floor offering wines by the glass from every region of France. You can take coffee and cakes in a chintzy salon de the , in a bookshop or gallery, or even in the confines of a mosque. Bars can be medieval vaults, minimalist or postmodern design units, London-style pubs or period pieces in styles ranging from the Swinging Sixties to the Naughty Nineties.

It's true that the old-time cheap neighbourhood cafes and bistros are a dying breed, while fast-food chains haveburgeoned at an alarming speed. Quality is also in decline at the lower end of the restaurant market, particularly in tourist hotspots. Yet, however much Parisians bemoan the changing times, you'll find you're still spoiled for choice, even on a modest budget. There are numerous fixed-price menus ( prix fixe ) for under ?12.20, particularly at lunchtime, providing staple dishes; for ?22.87 you'll have the choice of more interesting dishes; and for ?30.49, you should be getting some gourmet satisfaction.

The big boulevard cafes and brasseries are always more expensive than those a little further removed, and addresses in the smarter or more touristy arrondissements set prices soaring. A snack or drink on the Champs-Elysees, place St-Germain-des-Pres or rue de

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Rivoli, for instance, will be double or triple the price of Belleville, Batignolles or the southern 14e. Many bars have happy hours , but prices can double after 10pm, and any clearly trendy, glitzy or stylish place is bound to be expensive.

We list the different eating and drinking establishments by area. They are divided into restaurants , including some brasseries, and bars and cafes , incorporating snack bars, ice-cream parlours and salons de the .


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Paris Travel Itinerary

Around Trocadero the Eiffel Tower and Les Invalides
Bastille
Day-trips from Paris
Eastern Paris
Grands Boulevards and around
Hotel de Ville
Islands
Left Bank
Louvre
Marais
Montmartre and Pigalle
Montparnasse and the southern arrondissements
Pompidou Centre
Quartier Beaubourg
Tuileries and Champs-Elysees
Western Paris

France Travel Itinerary

Alps
Alsace-Lorraine and the Jura mountains
Brittany
Burgundy
Corsica
Cote dAzur
Dordogne Limousin and Lot
Languedoc
Loire
Massif Central
Normandy
North
Paris
Poitou-Charentes and the Atlantic Coast
Pyrenees
Rhone valley and Provence

Regions



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