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Le Bistrot Paul Bert in Paris has been the place to go for classic French fare for almost three decades.Supplied

In Paris, there are restaurants and then there are bistros. The former is the more formal option, while the latter is, as the dictionary defines it: small, relatively simple, more relaxed. The ethos at Le Bistrot Paul Bert, in Paris’s lively 11th arrondissement, has always been just that.

The location at 18 rue Paul Bert was previously a coal cafe owned by a man from Aveyron; truckfuls of coal that had been shovelled off of trains at the Gare de Lyon were bagged in the rear of the cafe for delivery throughout Paris while the owner’s wife doled out glasses of Avèze, an herbaceous French liqueur, to peddlers and patrons at the bar.

In 1996, Bertrand Auboyneau and his wife, Gwénaëlle Cadoret, bought the cafe, transforming it into an old-meets-new bistro furnished with salvaged Thonet chairs, pendant lights, retro posters and chalkboards with hand-scribbled daily menus. But the bustling conviviality of the bistro’s former incarnation has always remained.

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Released Nov 04, 2025Supplied

Yet it’s the food – classically French and just as resolutely simple as the setting – that has continued to pack people into Le Bistrot Paul Bert for close to three decades. It’s the place to go for perfectly executed classics: pâté, steak au poivre, sole meunière, leeks vinaigrette, roasted pigeon, île flottante and the delectable gougères that magically appear on each table gratis. There’s also the crowd-pleasing crème caramel. And now, home cooks can replicate some of those dishes in their own kitchens with the release of the establishment’s first cookbook, Le Bistrot Paul Bert: French Comfort Food from the Parisian Restaurant (Abrams).

The bistro – and its masterful cooking – has been frequently name-checked by culinary glitterati such as Anthony Bourdain, Ina Garten and Ruth Reichl, the latter of whom wrote in a 2024 Substack piece that Le Bistrot Paul Bert was a pioneer in a neighbourhood that has since become a bastion of interesting dining options. “Now it’s become everybody’s favorite little bistro,” she wrote.

“I can’t tell you how many videos I have of somebody jiggling their perfect crème caramel,” said James Beard Award-winning cookbook author Dorie Greenspan (her most recent book, Dorie’s Anytime Cakes, came out in October). To her, Le Bistrot Paul Bert operates at a standard that is increasingly hard to find in Paris. “It’s a place that you return to not looking to be surprised but to be comforted by good food, and to be surrounded by people who are truly enjoying it and each other’s company.”

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The contents of the cookbook, which have been arranged restaurant menu-style, are a greatest hits album of the bistro’s signature French comfort dishes, from terrine de campagne and asperges blanches vinaigrette to blanquette de veau and profiteroles – and, thrillingly, those magical little gougères.

The promise of a restaurant cookbook can often feel like a pipe dream, a seemingly futile attempt to recreate beloved recipes. But here, many of them are surprisingly accessible and unfussy, approachable enough for the home cook. And while the effect of being in the thick of Le Bistrot Paul Bert’s Paris location, with its intoxicating cornucopia for the senses, may be unmatched, the cookbook might be the most evocative souvenir you can find outside of France.

In one of the short essays prefacing the book, Auboyneau writes that a bistro is a journey taken in place. For those who can’t get to that little street in the 11th arrondissement any time soon, so is this cookbook.

Dining and Cooking