
11 of the best restaurants in Paris
When Unesco added French cuisine to its Intangible Cultural Heritage list in 2010, it was specifically the 'gastronomic meal' they were honouring. And for many visitors to Paris, a typical Gallic round of creamy sauces, smelly cheeses and fine wine is as high on their to-do list as scoping out the Sacré Coeur or the Louvre. But there's more to this proud nation's gastronomy than clichés of bistros, brasseries and haute cuisine.
In recent times, Paris restaurants have shed rigid hierarchies to embrace a more dynamic and diverse worldview. I've been exploring the scene here for years, and the rise of neo-bistros has highlighted seasonally driven menus and vegetable-led cooking, while a new generation of chefs bring multicultural influences to bear on traditional tastes. But wherever and whatever you choose to eat, a meal out in Paris remains a daily ritual steeped in pleasure, provenance and a deep reverence for good food. Bon appétit!
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£££ | BOOK AHEAD | Best for a blow-the-budget gourmet extravaganza
Any of Paris's ten three-Michelin-starred restaurants will deliver a fine-dining experience that might very well be the meal of a lifetime (possibly with a once-in-a-lifetime price tag to match). But Plénitude one-ups the others with its magical location on the first floor of the ultra-luxe Cheval Blanc hotel and its dreamy views along the Seine and across the Pont Neuf. Dishes take inspiration from chef Arnaud Donckele's native Normandy, and his adopted homes of the Mediterranean (where he has the three-Michelin-starred La Vague d'Or in St Tropez) and Paris, with an emphasis on expertly balanced saucing. Expect the likes of chicken with caviar and courgette artfully arranged in a velvety champagne velouté. It's open for dinner only from Tuesday to Saturday, and you should leave time afterwards for a drink in the hotel's seventh-floor bar Le Tout-Paris with its view of the illuminated Eiffel Tower. A plush room for the night comes recommended for those looking to keep the celebrations going.
££ | BOOK AHEAD | Best for a fabulous French meal straight off the train
Quality places to eat around the Gare du Nord are as rare as an empty seat in the Eurostar waiting area, but to start (or end) your trip with an abundance of ooh la la, this tiny dining room — a five-minute walk from the station — is absolutely comme il faut. The day's menu is chalked up on a blackboard paraded around the closely set tables — though with only a few options per course, this is not the place for fussy eaters. Offal lovers and anyone who likes punchy flavours, however, will rejoice in the likes of a doorstep of duck pie laced with silky chicken liver. Les Arlots is a bistro à vins; chef Thomas Brachet takes care of the cooking, while his co-owner Tristan Renoux looks after the wine (and wine bar Billili next door), which involves a chat about preferences rather than a list.
facebook.com/lesarlots
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£££ | BOOK AHEAD | Best for fine dining without the formality
Eat in any French restaurant where fine dining is delivered without the fuss of starched tablecloths, supercilious service and sky-high prices, and you're eating in a restaurant influenced by Septime. Chef Bertrand Grébaut turbocharged the bistronomy movement when he launched this place in 2011 and Septime remains as relevant today as when it opened, with a frequently tweaked tasting menu served in an industrial-feeling interior of blackened steel and untreated wood. Influences are as likely to be Asian or North African as European, and the pairing of natural wines is the best way to get the most from the menu's assertively fresh flavours. Bookings open three weeks ahead; if you can't get a table, pay the corkage fee for a bottle at the wine shop Septime La Cave across the road and share some small plates, or try the no-reservations Clamato, a seafood sibling next door.
septime-charonne.fr
££ | BOOK AHEAD | Best for a French bistro fantasy with old-school charm
Picture the perfect French restaurant and it will probably look like Chez Georges: net curtains in the windows, mosaiced tiles on the floor, nicotine-yellow walls hung with huge mirrors for people-watching, leather banquettes buffed to a high shine from thousands of bottoms and backs, and paper-clothed tables packed so closely they must be removed when anyone wishes to go to the loo. One might assume it was a pastiche were it not for the fact that Chez Georges has looked like this since 1964, and the intervening years have allowed the kitchen to perfect a never-changing menu of classic bourgeois comfort. If in doubt, order something creamy: celeriac rémoulade followed by veal sweetbreads with morel sauce, then chestnut purée topped with double cream, perhaps. There are some big-ticket Burgundies and Bordeaux on the wine list proper, but the best-value bins are scrawled in the margins of the handwritten menu.
No website; phone +33 1 42 60 07 11
££ | BOOK AHEAD | Best for fine French ingredients and authentic Moroccan cooking
This family-friendly Moroccan restaurant, all mosaic-topped tables and brass moucharabieh lanterns, stands out from the north African competition for two compelling reasons: the quality of its ingredients and the natural wines that partner the cooking. Le Tagine's commitment to all things orange and unfiltered is matched only by the high calibre of its beautifully presented cuisine, shown to most delicious effect in the 20 or so couscous and tagine dishes. Try a chicken with olive and preserved lemon tagine, or the couscous méchoui in which star billing goes to leg of milk-fed lamb from the Pyrenees. Breads and pastries made in house show the same dedication to labour-intensive sourcing and authenticity.
letagine-restaurant.com
££ | Best for a seafood-centric late lunch
The Marché Couvert des Enfants Rouges is the oldest covered market in Paris, having occupied this spot in the Marais since the early 17th century. Les Enfants du Marché arrived some 400 years later and still feels like it brings something new to Paris with its no-bookings chef's counter right on the market floor (wrap up warm in cooler months). Expect to queue for one of the dozen or so stools, then prepare to be dazzled by fish-focused small plates that excel in bold pairings: crudo of line-caught grouper with candied citron zest and horseradish is a typically vivid assembly. The wait to be seated is less painful as the afternoon goes on; should you find yourself still here at the early-evening closing time, pick up a bottle to take away from the restaurant's La Cave wine shop round the corner.
lesenfantsdumarche.fr
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£££ | BOOK AHEAD | Best for a unique fusion of cuisines from a star chef
Montparnasse was once famous for its café culture of caffeine-and-croissant-fuelled artists and intellectuals; now it's the cooking of the chef Mory Sacko that gets foodies coming to the residential 14th arrondissement — assuming they've had the foresight (and perseverance) to reserve a table the moment bookings are released about three months in advance. MoSuke was the first west African restaurant in France to win a Michelin star, but Japan is just as much of an influence on the French-born Sacko as his Malian and Senegalese heritage, alluded to in a restaurant name inspired by the only African samurai. If that all sounds too much to take in, it makes perfect sense on the palate in thrillingly distinctive dishes such as the signature Tanzanian and Madagascan chocolate tart with wasabi ice cream that concludes a menu available in four, six or nine courses.
mosuke-restaurant.com
££ | BOOK AHEAD | Best for a contemporary take on bistro classics
Sarah Michielsen, the soignée owner of Parcelles, respects tradition without being slavishly in thrall to the past. When she bought the former Le Taxi Jaune — a famous 1930s bistro near the Pompidou Centre — she left the look of the place largely unchanged: white tablecloths, copper-topped bar, tiled floors and windows which open to the Marais street when it's warm enough. But with Parcelles, she introduced a menu of classic comfort cooking updated for modern tastes and served by staff who seem to have been to charm school. Butter-drenched scallops come draped with guanciale, there are great veggie dishes such as potato gnocchi with sage butter and fried sage, and almost everything is made in house — so much so that there's now an épicerie opposite selling pickles and pâtés. The sort of casually sophisticated place you could just as easily turn up to in jeans and trainers as a suit and tie.
parcelles-paris.fr
£££ | BOOK AHEAD | Best for plant-focused, sustainable tasting menus
Manon Fleury is something special: a chef who has put her money where her mouth is and opened a restaurant that embodies her belief in natural sustainability, human dignity and animal welfare. Of course, it helps that her zero-waste cooking, prepared and served by a mostly female staff, is so enthralling, with fruit and veg at the forefront of a menu of micro-seasonal ingredients sourced from small-scale French producers, and meat and fish only used sparingly to point up the subtle flavours and aromas of the plant-based cuisine. Think pairings such as a Swiss chard mille-feuille with yellow pollock, or a dessert of lemon with Jerusalem artichoke. The skylit-illuminated room, with its polished concrete floors and oak dining chairs, is as invitingly textured as the cooking.
datil-restaurant.fr
£ | Best for deep-filled pitta sandwiches that won't break the bank
You can eat in at the family-friendly L'As du Fallafel, but given that a falafel sandwich is the Middle East's answer to street food and the street here is so atmospheric — the traffic-free and cobbled Rue des Rosiers in the historic Jewish quarter of the Pletzl, where kosher bakeries now sit next to chic boutiques — do as the locals do and eat while window-shopping. A combination of quality cooking and celebrity endorsements (Natalie Portman says this is her favourite meal in Paris) means you should expect to queue, but what is handed through the hatch is worth the wait: a pillow of pitta stuffed with crisp falafel, crunchy salad, squishy aubergine and spicy harissa sauce for 10 euros (£8.50). Note that it's closed Friday evenings until Sunday mornings, in which case you could try King Falafel Palace a few doors down.
instagram.com/lasdufallafel
£ | Best for kid-friendly crêpes and parent-friendly alternatives
If you haven't had a proper crêpe since your French exchange (the ones made on a hotplate in the park don't count), then this ever-expanding stable of Gallic pancake houses across the city is a reminder of just how delicious they can be. Breizh is the Breton word for Brittany, where the founder and Breton native Bertrand Larcher grows his organic buckwheat (naturally gluten-free) for savoury galettes such as the ham, egg and Comté cheese 'complète'. Kids will love the chocolate and cream-filled sweet crêpes, though the version slicked with nothing more than salted Bordier butter and brown sugar is a rather more adult-orientated pleasure, as is a glass of crisp Breton cider if a Breizh Cola isn't going to hit the spot. The original, tiny Breizh Café in the Marais remains the most atmospheric, but with a dozen chicly simple branches in the centre of Paris, you're never too far from a sugar spike when sightseeing fatigue sets in.
breizhcafe.com
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
People left horrified as mum shares eye-watering amount she spent at Disneyland
A mother has shocked the internet by revealing how much money she spent on a trip to Disneyland. In a video posted on TikTok, Ashley Bradford (@ashleyb_ox), shares exactly what she bought with €270/£229 at Disneyland Paris. The mother first spent money on a Little Mermaid -themed bubble wand, which she explained cost €30/£25.64. Next, she spent €19/£16.24 on face painting for her daughter before buying two Disney-themed macaroons for €5/£4.27. One of the pricier items on her spending list were two burger meals and a kids meal for €49.50/£42.30. She then buys three lollies for €12/£10.26, with a Lilo & Stitch and Minnie Mouse theme, before getting another three lollies for the same price. The family purchased lots of sweet treats throughout the day, including a sweet stick €6.50/£5.56, a Mickey Mouse cookie for €3.50/£2.99, popcorn for €6.50/£5.56, candyfloss for €6/£5.13, a Mickey Mouse donut for €6.50/£5.56 and two crepes for €15/£12.82. When it comes to savoury food, Ashley and family also purchased three hot dogs, one fries, chicken nuggets and three drinks for €60/£51.28, on top of their earlier burger meals. The last buys on the family's spending list were an Ariel-themed key ring for €8.50/£7.26 and a light-up Mickey Mouse toy for €25/£21.37. But while Ashley and her family might have enjoyed their trip to Disneyland, people were pretty horrified by their high spending costs. 'Francescondon79' says: 'Why would anyone throw away their money like that'. 'Heather Simms' adds: 'The bubble wand at 30 euros had me almost choking on my own down Disney.' Another person says: 'I don't understand, this is a place for kids and they sell the things so expensive!' However, many TikTokers weren't surprised by how much the family had spent. One person says: 'I just got back from there. Spent £2,100 spending money in five days there, I have five kids. Soon adds up.' And 'Tiffany Ashworth' says: 'Is it just me that doesn't think this place is expensive?' But Ashley replied to the comment saying: 'If you think though park tickets on top of that at €200/£170 plus a day for a small family. If you've a few kids, it soon would add up.' It comes as a father who took his family of five on a day-trip to Orlando's Walt Disney World resort revealed the unexpectedly high cost of their outing. The man, from Florida, US, took to social media to break down the family's outgoings throughout the day, which later sparked a heated debate among viewers about the importance of budgeting. In a video, reposted by @financedystop on X, the father documented the price of the family's tickets, parking, meals and snacks, as well as the staggering cost of items in souvenir shops. Before the family even entered the park, the father revealed he forked out $30/£22 for all-day parking.


Times
6 hours ago
- Times
Forget croissants — the best Parisian grub is doner kebabs and mashed potato
Have you ever tucked into a charcuterie platter at a Parisian sex club wearing nothing but steamed-up glasses and a small sarong? Me neither. Fortunately, the food writer Chris Newens has participated in this dually pleasurable activity on our behalf and lived to tell the tale. The enormous establishment Moon City, which from the outside looks like 'a bawdy Balinese temple', but on the inside is 'a funhouse of mirrors' with a hot tub 'surrounded by fake vegetation and fibreglass rocks', offers its patrons a slap-up lunch: brioche, desiccated iceberg lettuce and 'the pink and white marble of a rosette de Lyon'. But never brie or roquefort, France's most famous cheese exports. 'We'd never buy cheese,' the club's doorman says. 'Most of the people who work here are from Senegal. They just buy what appeals to them.' Newens, who hails from an English family of bakers and as a toddler 'played with pastry as play-dough and food colouring for paints', migrated across the Channel a decade ago, drawn by the outstanding culinary reputation of Paris, a capital where even soup kitchens — restaurants solidaires — offer their patrons red wine and cheese courses. But, as he sagely points out in Moveable Feasts, his literary tour round the surprising culinary highlights of the French city, it's not all escargots, steak frites and perfectly domed madeleines, as flowery novels and cringey Netflix shows would have us believe. In fact it's far from it. The city's edible offering has slowly morphed into a joyfully unique combination of tastes and world cuisines: 'Many of the best bouillons these days are Vietnamese pho, the most popular sauce is a spicy ketchup called Algérienne and only tourists eat frogs' legs.' Having unveiled his plan to work backwards through the snail-shaped city map, choosing and recreating a dish he deems representative of each area, Newens starts with the 20th arrondissement, east of the historic centre. Here, paying attention to the rural origins of many Parisian bistro owners, he picks the ancient and fantastically tasty dish the French call aligot (and that the English in our slightly less unromantic language would probably call cheesy mash): pulverised potatoes with melted Tomme de vache stirred through, as well as garlic paste, 'a homeopathic amount of butter' and a drizzle of olive oil. 'Here was a dish to be eaten in a hillside shepherd's hut with a gale outside and maybe a goat at your feet,' Newens proffers. 'Its presence here, though, spoke of the city's willingness to accept and imbibe flavours from beyond its limits.' In the 19th arrondissement, once home to the city's many abattoirs, Newens delves into the history of the meat trade. 'The sheer tonnage of tendon, cartilage and offal sliced and auctioned here over the years is almost impossible to imagine,' he says. • 11 of the best restaurants in Paris for 2025 Kebab shops now proliferate in the area, always with a 'name spelled out in red plastic above its door, high-contrast photographs of its dishes peeling in the window', so he chooses the humble doner — invented by a Turkish restaurateur in the mid 19th century — as the area's token foodstuff, served with 'salade, tomate, oignon', necessarily in that order, and the aforementioned Algérienne sauce, a 'grainy, spicy, sweet orange gloop'. He briefly considers environmental concerns, heeding the loud call of veganism, but speedily admits that when hunger strikes he closes his ears 'to the panicked lowing of the phantom livestock, which can seem to roll with the wind down the canal' and tucks in. The 18th arrondissement has Newens seeking an authentic African restaurant in which to try malangwa fish in a marinade of 'white pepper, chicken stock, mustard, freshly grated ginger, lemon juice and a spice called Aromat'. In the neighbouring 17th arrondissement he takes a crash-course in how to craft the perfect croissant, revealing that the crescent pastries are so hard to execute that 'in Paris only 20 per cent of boulangeries make their own'. And so on. My favourite chapters were ratatouille, which he allocated to the 15th arrondissement and its anxious trainee chefs 'for no good reason apart from that Pixar film about a preternaturally talented rat' causing chaos in a kitchen, and the mouthwatering 10th arrondissement tartiflette. Although the sugary macarons of the 8th arrondissement should get an honourable mention, especially after Newens' wonderful description of the evolution of dessert in the region as 'a single continuous episode of Come Dine with Me played out over more than 50 years.' • Read more book reviews and interviews — and see what's top of the Sunday Times Bestsellers List Far more than a map of the city's most significant culinary markers, Moveable Feasts is a portrait of a place told through those who live there, the 'nicotine-pickled locals' who may have started life elsewhere but now make their living by sifting flour and sharpening knives, from a Peruvian marine biologist retraining at the world-famous Cordon Bleu cookery school to a nearly-80-year-old market seller who 'looked a little like a garden gnome' and deserves 'a chest full of medals' for the hard grind he puts in before dawn each morning. It's a thoroughly entertaining (and seriously hunger-inducing) book that will make the Eurostar marketing team squeal with joy. Et voilà. Moveable Feasts: Paris in Twenty Meals by Chris Newens (Profile £18.99 pp368). To order a copy go to Free UK standard P&P on online orders over £25. Special discount available for Times+ members


The Sun
16 hours ago
- The Sun
Eight travel insurance mistakes to avoid that could cost thousands – including tricks to buying cover and what to pay
IF you've planned a holiday but scrimped on travel insurance, you could lose thousands of pounds. Travel insurance covers you if something goes wrong on holiday. 4 4 The most common claims are for transport delays, followed by medical costs and lost baggage, according to Holidaymakers put in 574,000 claims in 2023, according to latest figures from the Association of British Insurers, up 59 per cent from 362,000 in 2022. While it might be tempting to get the cheapest cover or avoid buying it altogether, you could end up footing the bill for a holiday nightmare all by yourself. The key is to make sure you get the right cover - otherwise your policy could be useless. MEL HUNTER explains the most common travel insurance mistakes that can trip people up. MISTAKE 1: NOT TAKING IT OUT There are lots of different types of travel insurance, from single trips, annual cover, family trips, holidays in Europe, and more. Costs vary depending on your age, holiday destination, and any medical conditions. A single-trip policy for a 61-70 year old costs £21 on average, but £15 for a 26-34 year old, for example. While a single-trip policy for an adult holidaying in France would be £16, but £43 for Thailand. More than half of holidaymakers have gone away without travel insurance, according to Co-op insurance. But that's an expensive mistake to make, considering the size of payouts dished out. The average medical bill claim was £2,148 last year, according to LV= General Insurance. Around £359 was paid out for lost or damaged luggage, and £1,390 for cancelled holidays. Christian Bennett from insurer said: 'Travel insurance is essential, and it goes far beyond medical cover.' MISTAKE 2: LEAVING IT TOO LATE 4 With suitcases to pack and flights to catch, it's easy to forget about travel insurance. One in four holidaymakers book it on the day they travel, according to consumer body Which? But leaving it until the last minute is a big mistake. You are only protected from the moment you buy your policy. So if your airline or holiday company cancels your trip or someone in your family falls ill before you take out insurance, you won't be covered. Christian said: 'You should get your cover sorted as soon as you book your flight or holiday. 'If you wait until closer to departure to arrange your travel insurance and then find yourself in the unfortunate position of not being able to travel, you may not be able to recover the cost of your trip.' MISTAKE 3: NOT KNOWING THE DETAILS OF YOUR POLICY Read the T&Cs before taking any policy out, so you know what you are covered for. Only a fifth of holidaymakers research their travel insurance properly. But it may come as a surprise to know that water sports, gadgets like laptops and cameras, and even cycling, may not be covered. It can be difficult wading through piles of paperwork, but key things to look out for are cancellation policy, baggage and medical cover, as these are the most common things to go wrong on holiday. Make sure your policy will cover all your costs if you need to claim. A basic policy may only pay out £1,000 per person if you have to cancel your trip, while a higher level might go to £10,000. Baggage cover can range from £1,000 to £3,000. Medical cover usually pays out up to £1 million at least, but it's crucial to read the small print of what it does, or doesn't, cover. MISTAKE 4: GIVING TOO LITTLE DETAIL ABOUT YOUR MEDICAL HISTORY People underestimate the level of medical details they need to give. You should tell your insurer about every visit to a doctor in the past two or three years, along with any chronic conditions or upcoming treatment. Say if you've had cancer, heart attacks or strokes, even if they happened a long time ago. Include if you or someone on the policy is neurodivergent or waiting for an assessment for conditions such as ADHD or autism. Grant Winter from Goodtogo Travel Insurance said: 'Failing to declare pre-existing medical conditions can result in your policy being invalid. 'That means your claim may not be paid in full, or declined completely.' Update your insurer if there's any changes to your health for annual policies. If you are travelling in Europe, you should also get separate GHIC cards for everyone in your family on top of insurance. They cost nothing, and entitle you to medical care at the same cost as someone who lives in the country – which may not be free. MISTAKE 5: NOT HAVING ENOUGH EVIDENCE TO MAKE A CLAIM If you don't have the evidence to back up your claim, it may be rejected. That's why taking pictures, keeping receipts and notes is so important. For luggage, take a picture of all the items you intend to pack, from clothes to perfume. If your luggage goes walkies or items get lost or stolen, you can show you packed them. Photograph important documents like your passport, hotel and flight bookings, medical and insurance documents. Store them online, password protected, in 'the cloud'. That way if your device gets stolen, you'll still have copies. MISTAKE 6: GETTING SINGLE TRIP COVER INSTEAD OF AN ANNUAL POLICY 4 An annual travel insurance policy covers all your trips away for a whole year, and costs £67 on average. A single trip policy just covers individual trips and typically costs £25. It is priced by the number of days you are away. Picking a single trip policy only usually makes sense cost wise if that's the only holiday you take in the year. Alicia Hempsted from MoneySuperMarket said: 'An annual policy tends to be more cost effective if you're going away at least three times a year.' Use a comparison website like MoneySuperMarket or Compare the Market to compare costs for single trip and annual policies. MISTAKE 7: SPENDING TOO LITTLE, OR TOO MUCH While travel insurance may seem like an annoying extra cost to factor in, scrimping could be even more costly. Some 18 per cent of holidaymakers buy the cheapest travel insurance they can find, according to But cheapest doesn't mean best value for money - and there are important checks to make first. Check the provider is covered by the FCA (Financial Conduct Authority). This means it has to meet minimum standards, like dealing with claims fairly and promptly. Search its register using your insurance provider's firm reference number (FRN), which should be on its website. Check the reviews for possible insurers. Look at Defaqto ratings, which go from one star for the most basic products to five for the most comprehensive. It could be cheaper booking directly with an insurer instead of through a comparison site. Some insurers, like Direct Line, aren't on comparison sites so contact them directly. These days we travel with a pile of expensive gadgets. But the value of these items can easily exceed the protection offered by most standard travel insurance policies. That means if you lose these items, you may not be covered for the full value. If your laptop, phones, camera and iPads fall outside the per-item limit for baggage cover - around £250 - you'll need extra insurance. A specialist gadget policy may be available as an add-on. It typically adds £10 per person to a single trip policy and £20 per person to annual cover. Alicia said: 'These policies can also cover repairs as well, which would be helpful if you needed to get your phone repaired while you're abroad.' What should you look for in a good travel insurance policy? TRAVEL insurance policies can vary a great deal, but here are some "must haves Medical expenses - A good policy will give cover of £1million or more for travel in Europe and £2million or more for the USA Repatriation service - The costs of getting you back to the UK for medical reasons should be covered automatically by your policy Cancellation and curtailment - A good policy will cover you for £2,000 or more if you have to cancel or shorten your holiday Missed departure - Covers additional accommodation costs and travel expenses up to £500 or more if you miss your flight due to circumstances out of your control Delay - You'll usually be covered for £250 or more if your travel plans are delayed due to circumstances out of your control Baggage cover - Covers you if your baggage is lost, damaged or stolen. Look for policies that have cover of £1,500 or more.