Posted: 25 Jul 2014 - David Lebovitz
I’m not always in agreement with
those that say dining out in Paris is expensive. For example, last week I found
myself with a rare moment of free time at lunch, and I pinged a neighbor, who
unfortunately replied that he was out of town, like the rest of Paris in the
summer. So I decided to go to Le
Servan by myself, a restaurant I’d been hearing a lot about.
And since it’s “hot”, I figured lunch would be the perfect time to go. And I
was right. Although it filled after I got there, I managed to get there during
the “sweet spot”, and grab a stool at the counter, where I had a terrific lunch
for €23, all by my lonesome.
If you think about it, that’s three
courses of food made with fresh ingredients, prepared by a highly competent
staff. The price includes tax and tip, which in the states, would mean that
about one-third of that total would be earmarked for those extras, and the meal
itself would cost roughly €15. Yikes. Of course, one often adds a glass of wine
– I had a nice Vouvray for €6 – so my meal deal clocked in at €29. But either
way, I can’t imagine getting a meal like I had in, say…New York, London, or San
Francisco. Because I liked it so much, I went back the next day with Romain.
Unfortunately the next day didn’t
start off very well. Like, at all. But as Gloria Gaynor famously said — or sang
— “I will survive.” (Although she didn’t sing it in French.) But good food, and
wine, heals a lot – although not all – and it was nice to get a particularly
bad taste from the morning affairs out of our mouths.
Two glasses of surprisingly inky
rosé from the Loire did the trick. They were deeply colored, with the slightly
maderized (sherry-like) taste that one often finds in natural wines, which have
been left to their own devices.
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