Le Garde Robe
Now with two locations, Le Garde Robe rests comfortably within the current Paris bar à vins format.
View ArticleCaves Augé
A deep trove of natural wine, Augé plays host to legendary sidewalk tastings in the fall. One of the city's oldest wine shops.
View ArticleLavinia
Lavinia is the closest thing Paris has to a wine superstore, with a large international selection. The upstairs wine bar attracts a well-suited after work crowd.
View ArticleLes Papilles
Bring some friends to share in Bertrand Bluy's family style dinner at this cave à manger.
View ArticleLa Fontaine aux Vins
Hand-written signs, small production growers' wines, and a wonderfully sweet staff to advise you - this is the only wine shop on the rue Mouffetard that's worth your time.
View ArticleBibovino
This is one wine shop that's thinking outside the box by thinking inside the box. Don't worry--it's not the Franzia of your youth. Bibovino's bright purple boxed wines exclusively come from...
View ArticleLe Barav’
This upper Marais wine bar serves charcuterie, cheese, salads, and sandwiches to go along with 5€ glasses, or a bottle from their cave next door.
View ArticleCaves du Panthéon
Nearly 100 years old, this shop offers stacks and stacks of estate-bottled wines from all regions of France.
View ArticleLes Caves du Marais
Crates and bottles are piled high in this bare bones shop, run for more than two decades by Jean-Jacques Bailly, who offers good prices on estate bottled wines from all over France.
View ArticleLe Vin Qui Parle
An attractive and likable cave in the Latin Quarter, but slick design can’t quite mask a partial dearth of bottles of particular interest. There are famous names here and there, but much of the stock...
View ArticleChapitre 20
The clever pun in the name will, one assumes, be left standing when the half of this hyper-organized shop that’s devoted to wine books and maps eventually shrinks and then vanishes. But that’s okay,...
View ArticlePhilovino
Philovino’s proprietor, Bruno Quenioux, is a singular figure in the world of French wine. A radical for his age, he fought all his battles from within the institutional retail outlets of the French...
View ArticleSquatt
Pietro Russano, human whirlwind and proprietor of beloved 11ème cave-à-manger La Retro’bottega, opened this bare-bones, breathtakingly underdesigned wine shop in 2014, presumably to help contain the...
View ArticleLes Caves du Panthéon
Situated on a perpetually shaded nook just paces from the Panthéon, Les Caves du Panthéon’s boxy wooden room is wedged floor-to-ceiling with the cream of contemporary French natural winemaking,...
View ArticleLe Cave
Longtime Le Chateaubriand sommelier Sebastien Chatillon opened this tiny wine shop in 2013. Sandwiched between Le Dauphin and Le Chateaubriand, Le Cave is a narrow space and a deceptively narrow...
View ArticleLa Cave du Daron
“Daron” is French slang for “father,” but there’s nothing fatherly or fusty about La Cave du Daron, which at night becomes a casual and intimate wine bar with a healthy cast of loyal habitués. On most...
View ArticleLe Vin de Bohème
Nestled on a shady corner of the up-and-coming Square Gardette, Le Vin de Bohème is thoughtful little wine shop so discreet it would probably wink out of existence altogether if it weren’t so usefully,...
View ArticleLa Cave de Belleville
La Cave de Belleville’s unlikely origins sound like the set-up for a knock-knock joke: a pharmacist, a sound engineer, and a gallerist open a cave-à-manger. François Braouezec, Aline Geller, and Thomas...
View ArticleFine l’Épicerie de Belleville
Founded in 2010 on rue de Tourtille, Cécile Boussarie’s gourmet food and wine shop moved around the corner in 2014 to its current, more prominent rue de Belleville location. Its bold, clean red sign...
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