Where to Find the Best Socca In Nice

โThe great thing about socca,โ Rosa Jackson told me, as we ripped into our second double order of the giant chickpea crรชpe between us, โis that even if youโre not hungry, you can still eat it.โ
A few days later, while standing on the square in Vence, waiting while a young man poured chickpea batter onto a very hot oiled griddle, a timid young American woman asked him for a crรชpe. He explained, in fractured English, that he only made socca, and she started to walk away.
Because I hate to see anyone miss out one something so delicious, I brashly stepped in, telling her the chickpea griddled-cakes were a specialty of the region and that she really should try one, but she wasnโt convinced and left empty handed.
Me? I was waiting for my second.
Socca is a specialty of the region and youโre not likely to find them being made anywhere else. And itโs not something one makes at home: to be authentic, socca should be baked over a fire. (Hereโs a socca recipe, in case youโre determined to try one at home.) The best are baked on a searing-hot griddle, and even though Iโve been on the Cรดte dโAzur less than a week, I think Iโve tried so many that I can crown myself an expert.
And Iโve got the gut to prove it. Believe me, thereโs nothing that will make one feel more tubby than to spend a day on a beach surrounded by French people in those micro swimsuits.
Hereโs the three best places I found for socca in and around Niceโฆ

1. Chez Pipo
Rosa Jackson, whoโs been leading culinary tours of Nice for years, and lives in the old part of the city herself, asked me where I wanted to go when we met. Not hesitating for a moment, I said โFor soccaโ, so we breezed past some great food shops, where she pointed out some of the local specialties, until we arrived at Chez Pipo (13, rue Bavastro, Tรฉl: 04 93 55 88 82).


A bit off the beaten track, itโs well-worth the effort to take a detour to this corner hot-spot, which I mean in the most literal sense. Each socca is piping-hotโฆand massive, about 5-feet in diameter, and raked as itโs baked which makes the surface extra-crispy. When the giant disk is yanked from the oven, itโs brought to your table seconds later. Donโt waitโdive right in! The drink of choice is icy rosรฉ and be sure to request a double order, since youโll eat every bite. Rosa tells me the place gets packed, so try to go in off hours. (Opens at 5:30pm, and closed Mondays, except in summer, when theyโre closed on Saturdays.)

2. The guy at the outdoor market in Vence
Thereโs a lovely little market in Vence with local farmers selling their fruits and vegetables. But the big draw is the socca-maker. (He told me heโs just there on Fridays and Sundays.) Each socca feeds two, and you have to wait for him to make them, which he does two at a time, to order, in his small, but effective, wood-fired oven.


Super-crisp and sprinkled with salt and pepper, after I did my rounds of the market, I found myself back at his stand, ordering my second. Then I found myself back there todayโฆso in case you were in the area, and saw some guy hovering impatiently by the oven, that was me.

3. Chez Thรฉrรฉsa
In the midst of the daily Cours Saleya market, in Vieux Nice, stands an overly made-up woman, serving socca from a larger, fire-breathing drum. Thรฉrรฉsa will scrape off shards and bring them to your table, along with plastic cups of well-chilled rosรฉ from the Var. And I canโt imagine a better way to spend ones first morning in Nice, which is where I spent mine.
The socca is actually baked just a few blocks away and rushed to her stand via bicycle. Be sure to arrive early, as she runs out around 1pm and when sheโs done, thatโs it for the day. Trรจs provenรงal. Later in the week, eager for more, I arrived at 1:02 and had just missed her last batch.

Related Posts







