"Eating your feelings" or "drinking the pain away" are hardly sound solutions. But sometimes, when you've had an extra tough day, having dinner reservations with friends is just what you need. Especially if those reservations had to be made weeks in advance because the restaurant is one of the world's 50 best. And if the dinner begins with champagne, and then continues with six courses of pristine, seasonal plates--created that day from Bertrand Grébaut's culinary genius--paired with
sommelier-chosen organic wine.
1st course
2nd course
3rd course
4th course
+5th course
6th course
7th course
At 55-euros, the
Septime tasting menu (wine and cheese not included) was a splurge... but oh-my-god was it worth it. What you see above may very well have been the best meal I've ever had, in Paris or elsewhere. A few notable components: raw scallops, sliced fennel, aged
Basque ham, melted comté cheese, whipped celery root, roasted pidgeon, blacked red pepper, pear sorbet with mint and feta, vanilla bean crème brûlée. And the impeccably warm and knowledgeable service only made the experience more divine.
Once again,
neo-bistros win, and now I understand why Chef Bertrand Grébaut deserves celebrity status. Previously, I must admit I'd been turned off by the hype. For my friends who still are, (or who have no desire to intensely plan ahead nor blow their monthly budget in one meal), I'd also recommend stopping by the
Septime Cave. It's a cozy spot for an
apéro snack and modestly-priced glasses of natural (read: without added sulfites) wine. Excellent bottles from small producers are also available for purchase.