Couscous In Paris
#1
Posted 21 November 2002 - 02:02 AM
Thanks in advance.
Adam
#2
Posted 21 November 2002 - 07:33 AM
It is around the corner from WILLI’S Wine bar 13, rue des petits champs Métro Palais Royal, 20 A 35 € Tél. 01 42 61 05 09. One of Willi's great appeals is if you want to have a good late lunch, past the normal serving hours, they will serve you at the bar.
I realize that the Palais Royale metro stop is not on any direct Montparnasse line, but you can change at Concorde for line 1.
#3
Posted 21 November 2002 - 02:15 PM
It's good fun and the couscous and tagines are amazing. Very hot hip and happenin'.
#4
Posted 21 November 2002 - 02:19 PM
#5
Posted 21 November 2002 - 02:22 PM
What's your favorite there? I love it too.. In fact I prefer it for its quiet ambiance. Dunno why...Mansouria on rue Faidherbe in the 11th.
#6
Posted 21 November 2002 - 02:37 PM
To me Mansoria is contemporary even though it is decorated in a Morrocan style. It's also sort of intimate. Timgad has more of the old school North African casbah style and is brighter and glitzier. They each serve their own purpose. Actually the little neighborhood Mansouria is in is a treasure trove for foodies. One of the best SW bistros in Paris, A Souseyrac, is right down the street. And another good bistro Le Chardenoux is around the corner. And the wine bar Le Passage, which has a stellar collection of Rhone wines and serves a half dozen artisinal andouille sausage is on the next block.
#7
Posted 21 November 2002 - 02:42 PM
It seems you do know Paris. My first love was an American who lives in Paris and is critical to the prestige of the Louvre. It makes a great story for an American has charmed these people so entirely. In fact thye now have lost anything American about them. It was through them that doors in Paris that would be shut to non French speakers opened with grace and dignity for me. I was taken by one of the many ladies who was trying to take the "young Indian man" out about town.And the owner Fatima is so beautiful.
To me Mansoria is contemporary even though it is decorated in a Morrocan style. It's also sort of intimate. Timgad has more of the old school North African casbah style and is brighter and glitzier. They each serve their own purpose. Actually the little neighborhood Mansouria is in is a treasure trove for foodies. One of the best SW bistros in Paris, A Souseyrac, is right down the street. And another good bistro Le Chardenoux is around the corner. And the wine bar Le Passage, which has a stellar collection of Rhone wines and serves a half dozen artisinal andouille sausage is on the next block.
Couscous in Paris was even tastier than many preparations I have eaten across Morocco.
What wines do you drink with couscous??
PS: You have still not answered my question on the Diwan thread...
Edited by Suvir Saran, 21 November 2002 - 02:43 PM.
#8
Posted 21 November 2002 - 03:09 PM
#9
Posted 06 January 2003 - 11:55 AM
blog
#10
Posted 21 August 2011 - 05:43 AM
Had some very fine couscous & tagine recently at:
Dar Lyakout
94 boulevard de la Tour Maubourg
75007 Paris
01-45-50-16-16
In the École Militaire area.
I can't suggest it highly enough and have been to most every other recommended Paris place; many expensive and underwhelming (it's still Paris tho')...
Dar Lyakout was excellent.
"When you look at the face of the bear, you see the monumental indifference of nature. . . . You see a half-disguised interest in just one thing: food."
Werner Herzog; NPR interview about his documentary "Grizzly Man"...









