Saturday, June 21, 2025

Eating Our Way Through Paris by Lucy Burdette



LUCY BURDETTE: You know how much Hank loves it when a week turns out to have an unexpected theme? This week has two, searching for a place and food. Today you are going to eat with me in Paris, a trip that pushed me to really think about both food critics and chefs.

I was determined—some might say obsessed—about not wasting time on bad meals. You can’t imagine how much I researched where to eat before we set off. I’ve been collecting blog posts for years from David Lebovitz, Dorie Greenspan, Meg Zimbeck (who writes Paris by Mouth and puts out a yearly list of what she believes to be the top 50 restaurants in Paris), and many more.

To make things even more complicated, Lindsay Tramuta published a book with Eater (an online zine) called the Eater Guide to Paris right before we left. I was overwhelmed with possibilities! I had every kind of question circling through my mind: what kind of food do we want to eat? Should it only be French? Should it be fancy French or casual? Should it be confined to the center of Paris where we’d be staying, and if not, how far would we be willing to travel? Could we eat two big meals a day? Estimates of the number of restaurants in Paris fall around 40,000. How could we possibly choose the best when we were there for only eight days? How could anybody make a list of top 50 restaurants, not just in Paris but anywhere? This adventure gave me new insight into the challenges of restaurant critics.

(If all this is making you a little queasy, you might want to skip the rest of this very very foodie post🤪)



Luckily, my traveling companion (John) was relaxed about the whole adventure. He offered opinions when I asked him, but did not try to meddle with my ongoing obsession. I’ll share with you some photos of the meals we really loved. Stay tuned in the future for how some of this will end up in a book…


Pizza is not easy to find in Paris, good pizza that is. We took one of David Lebovitz's suggestions and traveled out to the 11th arrondissement to eat at Oobatz. This was a white asparagus and wild asparagus pizza, alongside a lovely salad. 



We eschewed the suggestion to have the chef's specialty. 

What is the chef's special? John asked.

Nothing specific, it’s whatever he feels like putting on your pizza, the server said.

Since we’d just read that some of his ingredients involved innards, we stuck with the asparagus.



I’d been dreaming about dinner at Café des Ministères which I regretted missing on my last visit, but it was too hard to get a reservation. This time I stalked the site until I grabbed one. I had been dreaming about their stuffed cabbage for years! Here it finally was and I swear to you, it was as big as a human being’s head! They brought it to the table, sliced it open and then poured on crème fraîche. We couldn’t even eat half of it. John ordered a cassoulet which was divine, filled with sausage, duck confit, and molten hot white beans.




Juveniles Wine Bar was the only restaurant we repeated from my last visit and as far as I know, it’s my favorite place in Paris. I had a roast chicken with potatoes and vegetables in an amazing sauce, whereas John ordered sausage in a pool of cheesy mashed potatoes. I could not pass up the rice pudding with caramel sauce on the side.




The next day went on a market tour of Rue Montorgueil, which is known as a foodie street, run by Amanda from Jane Bertch’s La Cuisine Paris. Everything we tried was amazing but this goat cheese was a standout, rolled in beautiful dried flowers and stuffed with a rose coulis. (I don’t even like goat cheese much, but this will definitely become a plot point…)



This was a lunch we had at Le Cornichon. I had what was essentially fish and chips on a homemade slaw (do notice those gorgeous frites in the background) and John had a little steak with a big glob of melted fois gras on top. 


Holy cholesterol, Batman! Fortunately, we were walking miles and miles a day.



This was another astonishing lunch at a Lebanese restaurant called Kubris. The best thing I ate was roasted cabbage with Aleppo pepper butter, shanklish, cri-cri peanut, pickled apricot and oregano. So many flavors! 


And then a stuffed eggplant shawarma. John once again enjoyed the sausage. 😂. 




I will stop there to give us all a break! And maybe give you time to grab a snack. One regret is that we barely had the chance to order dessert because we ate so much of the other food. This calls for another trip...


How does a normal person go about choosing a restaurant in a strange place? Inquiring minds want to know…

31 comments:

  1. While I have no clue as t the process involved in picking a restaurant in a place that I've never been before, I can say with all certainty that I've probably gained ten pounds just reading about all this delicious food! It all looks sooooo good . . . .

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  2. Lisa in Long BeachJune 21, 2025 at 1:01 AM

    I have been in cassoulet-land for three weeks, but it has been too hot to eat it. When we got an evening in the 70s, I grabbed my chance to enjoy it.
    It is hard to select a place with online info getting less and less reliable. We are enjoying the fact that even if we miss the best meal in town, what we eat didn’t come off a Sysco truck and is always good!

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    1. Lisa, you can walk around cassoulet and discover new restaurants. It’s an adventure. It’s fun to discover restaurants that many tourists do not know about. In 1994 I read about restaurants in Rick Steves guidebooks and the mentioned restaurants had long lines of people outside the entrance.

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    2. Yum, I love eating cassoulet! I have had decent versions in Montreal (I'm going back there next week).

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    3. There's a lot of junk online these days. Plus Tiktok and Insta create sensations and people feel they must follow. I'm not interested in waiting in line though!

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  3. We went to Les Bosquet restaurant on our first night in Paris. We had salad with goat cheese. I can eat goat cheese without any problems. We had salmon. For dessert we had crème brûlée. I had my first Kir Royale drink. Everything was delicious. Note: if you are allergic to cigarette smoke, I suggest outdoor seating. Our tour organizer chose the restaurant.

    The next day we had free time after the tour of the louvre museum. Others went to a pizza restaurant and it didn’t appeal to me even though I love pizza. I went across the street and treated myself to a chocolate crepe and espresso. Yum! The waiter was very kind. Everywhere we went the French people were very kind.

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    1. We found the same thing Diana, people were mostly very nice. With English better than our French, though we did try!

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  4. LUCY: I am like you when I research food choices for a new destination. I was in Singapore (10 days in 2014, 6 days in 2025) and Taipei. Taiwan (8 days in 2025). Both are foodie havens with unique dishes that I cannot find in any restaurant in Ottawa.

    Of course, I did tons of online research beforehand but there's over 120 hawker centres in Singapore & 1000s of regular restaurants. FYI, I went on a 1/2-day guided food tour on the first full day in Singapore which helped. Then I found & bought a "MAKAN-MAKAN (eat-eat) in Singapore" souvenir plate with 20 iconic Singaporean foods listed. Specific hawker stalls has limited hours/days they were open so I sometimes planned my itinerary based on that. Most of these were open for breakfast or lunch.

    Taipei's night markets are open 5 pm-midnight and had 50-100 stalls. Long queues are a good sign of a popular food item. And I just wandered and bought & ate what caught my fancy.

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    1. P.S. The 3 places that Ovidia Yu & I went to DO NOT take reservations. You just have to wait in a (long) queue. Asians are very patient, waiting politely for over an hour.

      Raffles Hotel, classic Singapore Sling cocktail (30+ minutes queue on a Sunday mid-afternoon)
      Swee Choon, classic 24/7 dim sum eatery
      Song Fa Bak Kut Teh (Michelin guide 7 years in a row). We lined up at 10:45 for a 11:00 am opening on a weekday.

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    2. Those sound like wonderful adventures Grace! I think it's smart to take a food tour in a new place--you get the lay of the land from someone who lives there.

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  5. What an amazing eating tour you had. If I get to Paris again, I'm going to find restaurants by asking you!

    Even though all of both of your meals look delicious, I can't fathom eating that much. I'm well-known for bringing home half of dinners I order out. Did you have a fridge in the place you were staying? Are "doggie" bags even a thing in France?

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    1. We didn't have a fridge so we had to leave what we couldn't eat.

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    2. Lisa in Long BeachJune 21, 2025 at 7:40 AM

      Edith: doggy bags are finally becoming more accepted in France. And if you don’t finish your bottle of wine, you can take it with you.

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  6. I love research but it would never occur to me to research dinner! How great. It is always fun to read about someone enjoying their passion. How do you stay so petite? After all those stupendous meals I would be, in the words of the old chanty, "Rolling home, rolling home, rolling home across the sea." (Selden)

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    1. I agree, Selden. Lucy is quite svelte. Unfortunately, I don't think that we can walk enough anymore to make up for those enormous meals!

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    2. LOL, it took a week or so at home with my own food and no desserts to get back to normal!

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  7. That really looks divine, Lucy. You are a very adventuresome eater and a confident foodie. I will love seeing some of your restaurant experiences in a future book!
    I am sure that I've occasionally researched restaurants before going somewhere new, but never to the extent that you did before your trip. I am always a little concerned about whether I can avoid eating something that might trigger my allergy, especially when I have to tell the kitchen what my weird allergy is. In Greece, honey is a key ingredient and could be hidden in many dishes. I hope that it is taken seriously. Sometimes, an allergy can seem like an insult to the chef. Even a tiny amount can make me very sick.

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    1. JUDY: Avoiding honey in Greece will be challenging. I have had similar issues with my chili allergy esp in Singapore. Sambal is their normal condiment in all dishes. They spoon a dollop on the side and also give you a side dish of fresh diced red chilis! But I also have to avoid other sauces containing chilis or chili powder: sriracha, harissa, BBQ rubs, Cajun/Creole rubs, hot sauce etc. So many eateries now add chilis to dishes to add a kick. I pay the price for weeks if I accidentally ingest some.

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    2. Don't you think restaurants are more attentive to allergies these days? When my Meniere's was at its worst, and I couldn't eat salt, that was an awful challenge. Chefs use more salt than I would ever consider!

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    3. Yes, I think good restaurants can accommodate most common allergies
      But I swear that I see "chipotle aioli or mayo" on so many sammies & appetizers here in Ottawa, I could scream.
      The allergist I saw yesterday said my chili allergy was uncommon. The office did not even have a chili allergen to use in my skin test. So avoidance is my only strategy.

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    4. Lisa in Long BeachJune 21, 2025 at 7:42 AM

      GRACE: so unfair for you to have that allergy during the chili crisp era.

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    5. Akk,I totally forgot about mentioning chili crisp ! Of course I have never tried it.

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  8. What a great eating tour. I always check out restaurants before I dine there, so I get it.

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  9. If I am going to choose something jut by walking around, I like the restaurants that post the menu on the front window or outside the door so I can see if they have anything that interests me and the prices. My husband likes to do the internet researching.

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  10. During our last trip to Paris, we consulted "Madame" the concierge at our Left Bank Hotel for restaurant recommendations. All were winners, especially the local place serving cuisine from Dordogne, where we were headed (lots of duck). We enjoyed a post dinner conversation with a Swedish runway model in town for fashion week, who shared an insider's view of the week-long event. Missing Paris and anxious to return!

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  11. So enjoyed your food article. We visited by bus tour England and Scotland in 1995, and like John there were many people who enjoyed the sausages. It did not take us too long to realize that part of the Full English which was always breakfast was the local featured sausage, and often mushrooms as well. Lots of different flavours and then of course there was the haggis (I like it).
    The last night we popped into a local pub to get something to eat, and topped it off with sticky pudding – ambrosia on a plate, and my first time eating it. Small pub = Good food! Another was a huge Yorkshire loaded with roast beef, peas and slathered in gravy – another cholesterol fest.
    I think my idea of how to eat is more to visit the hole-in-the wall eateries where what you get should be what you eat. Rick Steeves often goes to these places and even though I know they are well researched, it always interests me.
    Off to what is essentially a barn-raising. Putting up a gazebo and greenhouse. Jack will be working and I am offering tote and carry services. It should be interesting as it may be sunny, but it is blowing an almighty gale.

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