![]() ![]() To help you navigate it all, here’s our pick of 16 caves à vins, bars à vins, caves à manger, and combos of all three, arranged by neighborhood for your petit barathon (that’s French for bar crawl) convenience. Guests can enjoy the heated outdoor pool or relax in the Taste wine bar where they can try some of the many wines and spirits on offer. These are more likely to require reservations and often feel closer to a restaurant-which makes sense since you're legally required to order food if you want to drink at a cave à manger. Then there are bars à vins and caves à manger, where you can pull up an actual stool and order from a bartender (and maybe even off a menu). At one, you might sidle up to an oak barrel on a sidewalk surrounded by unopened cases of Jura savagnin, while at another you’ll linger on the street as the sun sets, sampling a citrusy chablis with a snack before you pick up a bottle to take home. Caves (pronounced “cah-ve”) reign supreme in the capital, are extremely casual, and don’t really have any rules. Old school shop front for Le Sancerre, wine bar/restaurant on 22 Avenue Rappin, Paris. But you will find a lot of different places where you can drink wine. You can share tasty parfait, croissants and biscuits with your friends and spend a good time here. ![]() Many visitors come to order perfectly cooked duck, escargots and succulent steaks. Le Sancerre is famous for providing French cuisine. Despite the name of this guide, you won’t really find a “wine bar” in the American sense in Paris. 113 photos You can visit this cafe if you happen to be near Le Mur des Je t'aime. ![]()
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