60 SUNDAY TIMES TRAVEL MAY 2015
Transcription
60 SUNDAY TIMES TRAVEL MAY 2015
60 SUNDAY TIMES TRAVEL MAY 2015 TotalGuide I Paris On trend: left, pastry at Bistro Buvette; Lockwood bar; Le Rocketship. Opposite, clockwise from top left: Le Carmen; Hôtel Paradis; Rue des Martyrs; the bar of the Edgar hotel; Hôtel Fabric; Arnaud Delmontel; the Edgar hotel; Hôtel Amour; Rue des Petites Ecuries PARIS FOR… HIPSTERS Access cool areas You’ve done the star attractions, now it’s time to nose out the districts on the up. Alessia Horwich knows where to hang with your gang The stylish one: SoPi SoPi (aka south of Pigalle), in the 9th arrondissement, is gradually trading sleaze for style, as former hostess bars become cocktail lounges, and sex shops emerge as coffee stops serving spectacled hipsters and bohemians. By day: With Sacré Coeur’s alabaster domes behind you, graze your way down Rue des Martyrs. Stop for lip-smacking cakes at Pâtisserie des Martyrs (No. 22; about £4), bronzed Viennoiseries at Maison Lendemaine (No. 26; about 75p), and an official ‘best baguette in Paris’ at Arnaud Delmontel (No. 39; about £4). Buy edgy enamel tableware and funky light fixtures as you sip espresso at Le Rocketship cafe (13 Rue Henry Monnier), then pick up local designers’ vintage-style jewellery and fashion at Juju s’amuse (15 Rue Hippolyte Lebas) and Sept Cinq (54 Rue Notre-Dame de Lorette). By night: Share mini coq au vin and other tweaked classics in the exposed-brick, white-marble surrounds of Bistro Buvette (28 Rue Henry Monnier; plates about £7). Make your digestif a fruit-piled Tiki cocktail at Polynesianmuralled Dirty Dick (10 Rue Frochot; about £6). Dance it off under the chandeliers and moulded frescoes at Le Carmen, formerly Georges Bizet’s home, now a club with live DJ sets (34 Rue Duperré). Sleep: Bold colours, flashes of pop art and erotic photos jazz up the snug rooms at Hôtel Amour, where the restaurant is packed at night. Doubles from £127, room only; hotelamourparis.fr. The foodie one: 11th and north Furniture-makers have now given way to students and artists and the buzzing bars and boutiques that serve them, but among the grunge are some of the city’s most exciting chefs, such as Inaki Aizpitarte and Bertrand Grébaut. Expect inventive and sophisticated dining. By day: Regrette rien at Edith Piaf’s tiny apartment — now a shrine to the singer, with photos and that black dress (5 Rue Crespin du Gast; 00 33 1 4355 5272; Mon-Wed, by appointment, no English spoken; free). To kill time before it opens at 1pm, join the food-savvy folk shopping for gourmet sausages, Comté cheese and wine at Epicerie Verre Volé (54 Rue de la Folie-Méricourt). Unearth, too, bargain vintage cowboy boots and gingham shirts around the corner in La Petite Fripe (118 Rue Oberkampf). Your caffeine stop-off is Clint, a chipboard-banquette cafe selling Eastwood-slogan T-shirts (174 Rue de la Roquette; espresso £1.80). By night: Excellent wine bars abound. Start early at Septime Cave (80 Rue de Charonne), in a shabby former cobbler’s, where nibbles include fennel sausage. North next, to Aizpitarte’s Le Dauphin — among mirrored walls, try the tandoori octopus (131 Ave Parmentier; plates from £4). Finish with a gin, peach and rosemary l’Eau Fraiche at A La Française, a new drinking den serving 19th-century cocktails (50 Rue Léon Frot). Sleep: After hammam time at Hôtel Fabric’s spa, bed down in the former textiles factory, where rooms have huge, brightly coloured beds. Doubles from £114, room only; hotelfabric.com. The gritty one: Strasbourg Saint-Denis An influx of innovative and cheap neo-bistros have brought this rough patch of the 10th to the attention of older, dedicated culturists willing to seek out new openings among spice stalls and ethnic produce shops. MAY 2015 SUNDAY TIMES TRAVEL > 61 TotalGuide I Paris Paris picks PHOTOGRAPHS: ALAMY, GETTY GET OUT OF TOWN By Anna Brooke l A short train ride from Gare de Lyon gets you to royal palace Château de Fontainebleau. Stroll through the grounds, where the Sun King built Europe’s largest formal garden (musee-chateaufontainebleau.fr; £8). l You’ll need at least a day for Disneyland Paris (45 mins on the RER A train line): half in the Walt Disney Studios park (try the new Ratatouille ride); half in the main park. End with fireworks at nightfall (disneyland paris.co.uk; from £45). l An hour from Gare Montparnasse, you’re in Chartres, the Medieval home of one of France’s loveliest Gothic cathedrals, with its 13th-century stained glass (chartrestourisme.com; free). l Arrive at Monet’s garden in Giverny by 9.30am (leave GareSt-Lazare around 8am) and you’ll have the artist’s lily ponds almost to yourself (fondationmonet.com; £7). l Châteaux and chevaux await at Domaine de Chantilly, 25 minutes from Gare du Nord. Follow a look in the treasure-filled castle with dressage shows in the stables (domainede chantilly.com; from £12). Bar gazing: a peek through the window at the wine bar of Bistro Buvette By day: Get set to spend on Rue de Paradis: impeccable leather brogues sell for close-to-wholesale prices (about £210) at Markowski (No. 46). Find rare first-edition art books and classic children’s titles at gallery-shop Rouge 58 (No. 51). On parallel Rue des Petites Ecuries, sharp French fashion gets an emo twist from small-name brands such as Des Petits Hauts at Les Voltigeuses (No. 45); vintage finds and house-music LPs await at boutique Thanx God I’m a VIP (12 Rue de Lancry), towards the canal. By night: Order egg-yolk ravioli and duck with cocoa beans in the Scandi-minimalist former butcher’s that is chef Charles Compagnon’s third neo-bistro, Le 52 Faubourg Saint-Denis (mains about £11). Too packed? Try creative canteen Le Ratapoil du Faubourg, and leave room for the salted caramel pud (72 Rue de Faubourg Poissonnière; three courses £30). Round things off 10 minutes east at Le Syndicat, a low-lit cocktail hideout where the crystal-glass drinks only use French ingredients — Armagnac, Maquis bitters and Calvados (51 Rue du Faubourg-Saint-Denis). Sleep: Opened last year, Hôtel Paradis has striped, cloud-shaped headboards, bird-print wallpaper, high-backed sofas and a ’30s shabby-chic vibe. Doubles from £63, room only; hotelparadisparis.com. The pioneer one: Montorgueil–Sentier Home to some of Paris’s original hip hang-outs, such as the late-2000s Experimental Cocktail Club, this 2nd-arrondissement sliver is often dismissed as being too mainstream. Don’t listen to that kind of talk — you just need to know where to look… By day: The rum baba was invented at Stohrer, Paris’s oldest patisserie (51 Rue Montorgueil). Get a takeaway (£3) to gobble en route to Le Corner (2 Rue Tiquetonne), for emerging accessory designers such as Mila Louise, and tongue-in-cheek jewellery from Félicie Aussi. Huge second-hand shop Espace Kiliwatch (64 Rue Tiquetonne) has all the cool kit — checked shirt, distressed jeans. At Nose (20 Rue Bachaumont), they’ll diagnose your perfect scent, then make it for you from rare perfumes. By night: Influential bar Lockwood (73 Rue d’Aboukir) knows its caffeine (check out the coffee-filter lampshades), but join the city’s in-the-know urban professionals for apéritif hour, where spritz comes alongside mounds of charcuterie. Head on to Frenchie (5-6 Rue du Nil; plates about £10), a trendy wine-bar that goes back all the way to 2009, with mandatory filament bulbs, industrial stools and Brittany blue-lobster rolls. Finish up at Mabel (58 Rue d’Aboukir), a new rum-focused dive with distressed decor and a grilled-cheese counter. Sleep: A former garment factory dragged into the now with bright blues, rich brown leather and copper lamps, hip hotel Edgar has 12 wackily decorated rooms — Dream has action-figure light fittings. Doubles from £127, room only; edgarparis.com. MAY 2015 SUNDAY TIMES TRAVEL 63