
I skip the tourist spots and head straight for the boulangerie. My best days start with fresh bread and end on a terrace.
Inside a former 18th-century pharmacy on the Île Saint-Louis, the shelves that once held tinctures have given way to retro-modern wood paneling and speckled mirrors. Soft neon filament lights trace the historic architraves, but the real focus is the open kitchen. A custom-built grill and wood-fired oven drive the operation, filling the compact room with the smell of smoke and roasting meat. If you are seated in the upper dining section, you have a direct view of the line, watching the staff navigate the heat and tight quarters. Chef Marcin Król approaches the menu with a strict seasonal focus. Lunch and dinner are fixed tasting formats that shift constantly – often service to service – based entirely on availability. You aren’t here to order specific signature dishes, but rather to eat whatever the kitchen has decided works best that day, whether that’s spider crab with confit egg yolk or rotisserie chicken finished with chamomile sabayon. It is technical, elemental cooking that draws on Król’s background at Noma and Le Chateaubriand without feeling overly academic. Quentin Loisel manages the floor and the cellar. His background at Le Jules Verne shows in the service, but the wine list feels more personal, focusing on curated growers that match the kitchen’s spontaneity. With limited seats and a location in the middle of the Seine, booking is the only way to guarantee a table.