Where is 30 gay lussac 75005 paris
Welcome to Les Papilles, an authentic bistro-brasserie nestled in the heart of the Latin Quarter, at 30 rue Gay-Lussac. Here, French gastronomy invites itself to your table in a warm and friendly atmosphere, promising a unique culinary experience on every visit.
Under the guidance of Chef Ulric Claude, every night is a new culinary adventure. The menu, based on market finds, applications a variety of delicious dishes that will delight your taste buds.
Savor bistronomic classics such as old-fashioned duck foie gras, pan-fried black pudding, or succulent pan-fried veal sweetbreads with butter.
Each plate bears witness to the chef's passion for quality ingredients and traditional know-how.
But Les Papilles is more than just a bistro. With its carefully selected wine cellar, you'll have the opportunity to taste bottles from excellent producers, enriching your meal with tasty meal and wine pairings.
And for lovers of fine products, the gourmet grocery proposals a range of delicacies from local artisans, perfect for bringing a brief of the experience house with you.
Les Papilles is also a place steeped in history, a
Les Papilles is an old-school cave à manger adjacent the Luxembourg gardens. Deliver some friends to give in Bertrand Bluy’s family style lunch and dinner, which consists of a prix fix menu that usually begins with soup, continues with a braised meat dish served family style, and finishes with dessert and cheese. It’s an affordable and delicious spot for omnivores. Wines are sold at caviste prices to-go, or with a modest corkage fee to open at the table.
FIND OUR FAVORITE RESTAURANTS IN PARIS
LES PAPILLES
30, rue Gay Lussac, 75005
Open Tuesday-Saturday from 9:30am to midnight
Closed Sunday & Monday
Reservations at +33 1 43 25 20 79 or lespapilles@hotmail.fr
Their Instagram / Our Instagram
OUR PHOTOS OF LES PAPILLES
IN OTHER WORDS
CNN.com (2013) “A lot of chefs like to move there on their diurnal off because they don’t have to think about it…”
The New York Times (2009) “The food is often Michelin-star quality, and though the menu offers no choices — everyone gets the same soup, main course, salad and dessert — as long as your tastes are broad (or you’re a not-super-hungry vegetarian) you are going to be not only satisfied but h
Property information
This easy 30 m² apartment is located on Rue Gay Lussac, in a prestigious section of Paris 5th district. Collected of 2 rooms, including 1 bedroom, this furnished apartment rental can accommodate up to 2 people. This luminous and very tranquil apartment is located on the 8 floor (elevator available). It offers a clear view of La tour Montparnasse. It is also equiped with all you need for a nice trip including Internet included, Vacuum cleaner, Iron, table linens, dish towels, armored door, etc. The apartment is accessible by Paris public transportation (Luxembourg/RER B), and nearby you can find many businesses and services (like a Bar, grocery store, Laundromat nearby, Restaurant, Supermarket, etc. ). The residence offers a Quartier parisien, Local poubelles.
18.2 m² certified - Floor area 20.0 m²
Interactive plan
Источник: https://www.lodgis.com/en/paris,long-term-rentals/apartment/LPA18399-rue-gay-lussac-apartment-paris-5.mod.htmlLes Papilles
BP take: A tiny, unpretentious neighborhood bistrot, wine shop and gourmet grocery in the Latin Quarter—the mention means taste buds. The excellent, reasonably-priced four-course dinner menu offers dishes prefer artichoke soup with foie gras mousse and grilled pork belly with mushrooms. Lighter lunch and a la carte dishes include salads, terrines, tartines and escargots.
“There’s the equal kind of “a-good-time-was-had-by-all” spirit at Les Papilles, which has develop a much-loved institution in the Latin Quarter. Affable patron Bertrand Bluy displays his terrific selection of wines on open shelving, where customers can browse and choose, and the kitchen prepares a single menu daily—on a recent visit it was pumpkin soup garnished with tiny croutons, lardoons, chives and shavings of raw chestnut, followed by roast pork with ivory beans, sun-dried tomatoes, garlic, thyme and pistou sauce, with pannacotta and Reine Claude plums for dessert. At lunch, you can also just stop by for a lighter bite and a glass of wine after a friendly stroll in the nearby Jardin du Luxembourg.” — Alexander Lobrano, “The Wine Bar Boom,” France Today (2012)
The Latin Quarter and the 5th arrondissement of Paris
Boulevard Saint-Michel. The National Museum of the Middle Ages. The Saint-Séverin Quartier. Montagne Sainte-Geneviève. Rue Mouffetard. Le Jardin des Plantes. Val-de-Grâce. The Sorbonne. The church of Saint-Séverin. The church of Saint-Julien-le-Pauvre. Rue de la Huchette. Montagne Sainte-Geneviève. The Panthéon.
Before setting off to explore the Louvre or the Eiffel Tower, you really must observe around the Latin Quarter, take a seat on a café terrace in Saint-Séverin and go up and down the Boulevard Saint-Michel and the Champs-Elysées. You should wander along the banks of the Seine, listen to the buskers playing guitars or accordions resonating from the underside of a bridge, have a rummage amongst the books sold by the famous 'bouquinistes' and gaze at the steeples of Notre-Dame above the Seine, one of the most famous views in the capital.
You should also take a stroll along Rue Mouffetard, the once working class area of Vieux Paris that has now been renovated and become a trendy neighbourhood. The 'bobos' (bourgeois bohème) like to have brunch in its cosy restaurants that have replaced the local bistros t