With a dining room the size of a postage stamp and a menu that strictly excludes anything with fins or feet, Huitrerie Régis is an exercise in purity. The space is a narrow, whitewashed sliver in the 6th arrondissement, accommodating perhaps fourteen people at a tight squeeze. The walls, tablecloths, and porcelain are stark white, a deliberate choice that forces all visual attention onto the platters of grey-green shells that dominate the tables.
The operation relies on a direct supply line from the Marennes-Oléron basin, with stock driven up to the capital daily. Because the room is so small, the shucking station is practically part of the dining area; the sound of knives working against hinges provides a rhythmic backdrop to the conversation. The selection is rigorous – usually Fines de Claire, Spéciales de Claire, and flat Belons – though the kitchen occasionally offers organic shrimp, clams, or sea urchins to round out a platter.
There is no hot food, no soup, and no distraction. The ritual here is specific and unchangeable: a dozen oysters, a basket of rye bread with salted butter, and a bottle of crisp Sancerre or Aligoté. Due to the limited seating, traditional reservations aren’t part of the system. You stop by, leave a phone number if the few tables are occupied, and wait for the call to claim a spot along the banquette.