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Le Trumilou

I was walking down the Quai de lโ€™Hรดtel de Ville on a recent warm summer night and passed by the outdoor tables of Le Trumilou. I like eating outside on a terrace in Paris but when they implemented the non fumeurย law in France for restaurants cafรฉs, the smokers went outside. It was kind of vexing because it was so nice that everyone could go outsideโ€ฆ

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Le Bon Georges

ย  Many of what are called the โ€œnewโ€ bistros of Paris areย actually just restaurants with hip young chefs painting plates with a straight line of sauce, adding some powdered radishes and a shiso leaf next to pieces of pork belly, or doing theย โ€œline-upโ€ of food (ie: a smearย of root vegetable puree down the center of the plate, with herb leaves, flowers, a dice of vegetables,โ€ฆ

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Chez Dumonet

One of my downfalls is that I do not have a photographic memory. Sometimes I go out to eat and the next day, I have less of a recollection of what I ate (and drank) than some of my esteemed colleagues who write about restaurants so eloquently do. (My memory is gradually been replaced by the camera on my phone.) In this case, as soonโ€ฆ

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Dessance

Like Espai Sucre in Barcelona, I wasnโ€™t sure that I wanted to eat at Dessance, in Paris. Itโ€™s not that I donโ€™t love dessert (which is a good thing because I think itโ€™s a little late to change careersโ€ฆ), but because the idea of an all-dessert menu โ€“ or as Dessance calls it, a meal featuring cuisine du sucrรฉ โ€“ just didnโ€™t appeal to meโ€ฆ.

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A Noste

Although Iโ€™m trying to make it less-so, itโ€™s rare that I go out to lunch with friends. People tend to think that everybody in Paris sits around all day, eating dainty macarons and sipping a coffee at the corner cafรฉ watching the world go by, while youโ€™re all working away. But most of us are swamped like everybody else (including you), hurdling toward deadlines, waitingโ€ฆ

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Au Sauvignon

I was recently reading a Paris-based website and a reader had written to them, asking them why they were always talking about restaurants in the 10th arrondissement where โ€œ.. there isnโ€™t much to do there.โ€ The response was that thatโ€™s where most of the new and interesting places are opening. And while itโ€™s not where most visitors dream about staying when they come to Paris,โ€ฆ

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Alain Ducasse at the Plaza Athenee Restaurant

UPDATE: After the lockdown in Paris during the Covid pandemic in 2020/2021, the Alain Ducasse restaurant at the Plaza Athenรฉe didnโ€™t reopen its doors, and the restaurant is now closed. A few years ago in Paris, I was invited to a special lunch by Dan Barber, of Blue Hill in New York City, who prepared a meal at the restaurant of Alain Ducasse at theโ€ฆ

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Le Richer

Iโ€™ve had a swirl of visitors lately, and every morning it seems like I open my Inbox to find more โ€œWeโ€™re Coming to Paris!!!โ€ in subject lines. Iโ€™m not complaining because I love seeing my friends, especially those I donโ€™t see often enough, but the joke about needing a social secretary has become a reality for me โ€“ just so I can get my otherโ€ฆ

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Tricotin (Dim sum in Paris)

One thing you probably donโ€™t know about me is that Iโ€™m half-Chinese. Actually, Iโ€™m not officially half-Chinese, but I was unofficially adopted by two Chinese-American sisters, who have told me that Iโ€™m Chinese. Dining with them has a host of advantages, which includes assuming that if youโ€™re going out for Chinese food, theyโ€™re going to order three or four times what youโ€™re actually planning (orโ€ฆ

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