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Brasserie Lipp
3 Stars [None from Michelin]
Brasserie Lipp is located at 151 Boulevard
Saint-Germain-des-Prés, 75006, Paris Metro Saint-Germain-des-Prés],
accross the street from the Café des Deux-Magots.
Tel: (0) 1 45 48 53 91
This Parisien landmark has been around since
1880. Their cuisine is Germanic.
I enjoy their jarré de porc
with Alsacien sauerkraut et pommes de terre. François
Mitterrand, a former president of France, used to dine here
frequently. Be sure to dine upstairs, and make sure your cell phone
is turned off. Relatively inexpensive.
La Tour d'Argent
4 Stars [Michelin gives them 2 stars]
15-17 Quai de la Tournelle,
75005, [Paris Metro Pont Marie]
Tel: (0) 1 43 54 23 31
This is a Paris landmark not to be missed
having delightful ambience, presentation and a belle view. Your
view is breath taking of Notre-Dame, especially from the 6th floor
open-air dining room, where caneton Tour d'Argent is still served on
settings that outshine the cuisine. They still have one of the most
extensive wine lists in Paris. Diner is very expensive, but lunch
is a mere 60 Euros.
You can have your aperitifs in the ground floor
bar-dining room.
Be sure to wear a tie, or you will be fixed up
with a fancy one.
Café des Deux-Magots
6 place St.-Germain-des-Prés.
75006, Paris [Metro Saint-Germain-des-Prés], accross the
street from Brasserie Lipp. The
Deux-Magots was a turn of the
century shop that was converted into a restaurant. It features both
regional and traditional cuisine. The existentialist crowd, headed
by Jean-Paul Sartre and Simon Beauvoir, used to hang out here in the
50s and 60s. Even Hemingway sipped his coffee there.
An expensive, but good place, to sit on the
terrace, drink coffee or wine and watch chic Paris pass by. Not
only do they have a terrace on the sidewalk, alongside the
restaurant, but a separate one planted in the middle of a busy
thoroughfare.
La
Coupole
102 bd. Montparnasse, 75014,
Paris [Metro Vavin]
Tel: (0) 1 43 20 14 20
La Coupole is a great 1927 Art Déco interior from which to
watch Parisian characters [both on the street and in its cavernous
interior, the ceiling being held up by decorated pillers]. French
movie stars, yuppies, you name it and it will be there.
The food is generally good, but a little
expensive. There are shellfish assortments, grilled meats and not
so friendly waiters. And, don't order ketchup with your eggs unless
you want the waiters to point at you.
Chez Maître Paul
12 rue Monsieur-le-Prince [métro
Odéon] 75006
Tel: (0) 1 43 54 74 59
A small, quaint bistro-like restaurant with
polished sophistication, located on a small street with a similarly
quaint name. The decor is interesting, with white table colths
covering the tables. Not far from where Benjamin Franklin lived and
swung when he was the US Ambassador to France.
I used to dine there frequently when they
served the best foix de vaux au vin du paille. The other
Franche-Comté specialties, such as saucisson chaude avec pommes a
l'huile are typical dishes from France's Alps.
Moderately expensive.
Le Dôme
108 bd. Montparnasse [metro Vavin] 75014
Tel: (0) 1 43 35 25 81
Le Dôme's dining room and terrace front on bd. Montparnasse, a good place to go for coffee and people watching.
The Dôme's cuisine is centered around sea food, which is good and
not very expensive.
Le Café du Commerce
51 rue du Commerce, [metro
Emile-Zola]75015
Tel: (0) 1 45 75 03 27
Housed in a turn of the century building loaded
with pictures of well-known authors that frequented the Café du
Commerce. A great working mans dining bargain where you can eat
good, moderately priced food on any of its 3 floors.
Leon de Bruxelles
Numerous Parisian locations, including St.-Germain-de-Prés
by Odéon [metro Odéon], blvd. Montparnasse [metro
Montparnasse-Bienvenue] and 63 av. des Champs Elysées [Metro:
Charles de Gaulle-Étoile].
Tel: (0) 1 42 25 96 16
Little in the way of atmosphere, but extremely
good mussels [moules], frites and Belgian beers. Inexpensive.
I like the moules poulet and moules aux
lardrons.
Morot-Gaudry
6 rue de la Cavalerie, [metro
La Motte-Picquet Grenelle] 75015
Tel: (0) 1 45 67 06 85
A Romantic view of Parisian rooftops, from this
6th story 'penthouse' restaurant, overlooking the Ecole Militaire.
Chef Jean-Pierre Morot-Gaudry serves a variety of personally
prepared classic and modern cuisine. Try the chocolate mille-feuille
with wild raspberries for desert. Expensive but very good.
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