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RUE DU FAUBOURG-MONTMARTRE From Belle Époque beauties to bonbons, Jeffrey T Iverson finds Rue du FaubourgMontmartre hits the sweet spot with its heady mix of history and gastronomy
RAP DELICATESSEN
RAP CAVE ITALIENNE
LACTEM CAFÉ
MONBLEU
À LA MÈRE DE FAMILLE
BOUILLON CHARTIER
In Paris, RAP is known simply as the mecca of Italian gastronomy. Alessandra Pierini has scoured her country for 30 years to find the greatest artisan producers, and this delicatessen represents her most delicious discoveries. Her farmhouse mozzarella, mouthwatering hams and mortadella, Bronte pistachios, and even just her pasta, olive oil, balsamic vinegar, or tomatoes, are pure delights. A must for epicureans!
For years, Alessandra Pierini defended Italian artisan wine at her renowned delicatessen RAP, working to erase the old image of bad Chianti in straw-covered bottles. But frustrated by her shop’s limited space, she decided to open what is today undoubtedly the greatest Italian wine shop in Paris. This vast collection of wines represents a veritable tour of Italy’s terroirs and 600 grape varieties.
Speciality coffee culture is conquering Paris today, thanks to charming, cosy, chic coffee shops like Lactem. Owner Hoëlle Jego matches delicious vegetarian brunches and indulgent pastries (like ultra thick, ultra moist vegan peanut-butter chocolate-chip cookies) with perfect lattés, made with coffee from Lomi, the Parisian company founded by pioneering Australian coffee roaster Paul Arnephy.
France can be criticised for lacking innovative spirit to match its proud gastronomic traditions, yet Monbleu brings a whole new approach to the country’s most beloved food – cheese. Equal parts cheese shop and restaurant, Monbleu sells exceptional artisan cheeses to go, and serves them straight up and in lovely cooked dishes with great artisan wines and charcuterie in a chic, relaxed space.
Its historic façade, offering desserts, vin fins, and fruits confits, is one of the most renowned in Paris. Founded 260 years ago in 1761, À la Mère de Famille is the city’s oldest sweetshop. Its cornucopia of delights represents the confectionery history of France, from almond dragées, marrons glacés, and calissons de Provence, to violet bonbons, Nevers caramels, and exquisite Palet Montmartre chocolates.
Founded in 1896 and named after the restorative soup it once served the working classes, Bouillon Chartier is a true Parisian monument. Steeped in tradition, Chartier’s authentic French dishes (and low prices!) have changed as little as the stunning, historic décor. With its savoury cuisine and ebullient ambiance of another era, it’s a restaurant that transports you back to the Belle Époque.
61 Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre Tel. +33 1 42 00 09 55
P
aris has a host of ancient streets, but among the most trodden of all is Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre. When the city was taken by the Romans in the late 1st century AD, it was part of a road that extended all the way from Lutetia up to the highest butte, or hill, north of the city. After the Romans arrested the first bishop of Paris, Saint Denis, around 250 AD, for converting the Gauls to Christianity, it was along this road that he would finally be marched to meet the executioner’s sword atop the butte overlooking Paris. As the legend goes, after Saint Denis was beheaded, he casually picked up his head, washed it off in a fountain, and continued his stroll a few kilometres more (all the while delivering a homily to stunned onlookers). The butte would thereafter be known as Mons Martyrum – literally ‘martyrs’ hill’, or Montmartre. The road leading there from Paris became the Rue de Montmartre, with the section outside the medieval city walls referred to as the Faubourg Montmartre (from the Latin foris, ‘out of’, and burgum, ‘town’ or ‘fortress’). The road thus became a sainted path, and several 52 ❘ FRANCE TODAY Dec/Jan 2022
An intricate bas-relief of the Virgin Mary, sculpted in the early 18th century, can be found at no. 21 Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre
58 Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre Tel. +33 9 86 36 71 26
churches and abbeys would be built along it through the centuries. An enigmatic bas-relief sculpted in the early 1700s depicting the Annunciation to the Virgin Mary still figures on a building at no. 21, purportedly the vestige of a convent that once flourished there. Anticlerical revolutionaries of 1789, clearly conscious of this history, briefly changed the name of the street to Rue du Faubourg Montmarat as a snub to the Church, in honour of the Jacobin icon Jean-Paul Marat. Yet despite its symbolic importance, through much of its early history Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre was little more than a means of getting somewhere else. Even now, it’s a street that many visitors to Paris rush by without a second glance, hurrying towards other sites their guidebooks deem more worthy of their attention. And yet there was a time when this street was a destination in its own right, when it was lined with enticing shops, ebullient cafés, and raucous theatres, and some of the greatest artists and writers of the 19th century lived, worked and played here. Today, with the opening of several delectable new addresses – and the revival of a number of historic ones – Rue du FaubourgMontmartre is becoming a destination once again.
37 Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre Tel. +33 1 45 89 23 96
IMAGES © J T IVERSON, YANN DERET
4 rue Fléchier Tel. +33 1 42 80 09 91
35 Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre Tel. +33 1 47 70 83 69
If Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre is on the rise today, it’s thanks in part to its location in the heart of Paris’s right bank. Running 635m through the 9th arrondissement between the métro stops Grands Boulevards and Notre-Dame-de-Lorette, the street is walking distance from numerous landmarks, be it the Louvre, Sacré-Cœur or the Pompidou. Which is probably why the 9th counts the most hotels of any district in Paris – 184 at the last census. Rue du FaubourgMontmartre abounds with attractive lodgings, from recent openings like the Walled Off Hotel at no. 44 (a reproduction of Banksy’s art hotel in Israel) and Monsieur Cadet (a stylish Art Deco boutique hotel just around the corner on Rue Cadet), to the numerous venerable hotels that line the street’s serene passageway, La Cité Bergère. Built in 1825, La Cité Bergère is where Frédéric Chopin rented a room (at no. 4) for a year in the 1830s, the period when the Polish pianist fell in love with Paris – and with George Sand. The writer Isidore ‘Le Comte de Lautréamont’ Ducasse, who later became the posthumous patron saint for the Surrealists movement, spent his most productive days on Rue du Faubourg-
Cosy coffee shop Lactem serves delicious treats along with some of the best coffee you will find in the capital
7 Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre Tel. +33 1 47 70 86 29
Montmartre, living at no. 32 and no. 7, where he died in 1870 just days after publishing his final book of poems. Heinrich Heine, a German poet whose lyric poetry was set to music by composers such as Schumann and Schubert, moved into no. 3 La Cité Bergère in 1836 after meeting his future wife, Mathilde, in the nearby Passage des Panoramas. Ten years later, he’d write, “If I die in Paris, I want to be buried in the cemetery of Montmartre, and no other, for it was among the people of Faubourg-Montmartre that I lived the dearest moments of my life”. Life on Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre may never again compare to the heady years of the Belle Époque, but over the last decade it has undeniably begun to regain its lustre. One herald of the street’s revival came in 2018 with the opening of Lactem (no. 58), a freshfaced café that’s helping change the image of coffee in Paris. At her cosy, chic coffee shop, Hoëlle Jego brews up perfect lattés with avocado toast brunches and generous vegan desserts. “My generation has developed a taste for speciality coffee travelling in places like London and New York,” she says. “Which is why today there’s a growing coffee shop culture in Paris.” ❯❯ Dec/Jan 2022 FRANCE TODAY ❘ 53