Le Voltaire

Paris, France

Tucked beneath a discreet black awning on a nondescript street, the name (and address) of this wood-panelled brasserie denotes its hidden history. Writer and philosopher François-Marie Arouet once lived in the building. His pen name? Voltaire. By the tail-end of the 19th century, the property had been transformed into a restaurant by a father-and-son team and was drawing in the city’s artistic community. Now, entrusted by the Picot family to a trio of friends, Le Voltaire has become a dining destination of choice for the city’s crème de la crème.

This is classic Parisian hospitality. Take a seat in the front café for coffee and sandwiches, or head to the dimly lit dining room out back to enjoy quintessential French cuisine: garlicky escargot, sole meunière and rotund mounds of chocolate-draped profiteroles. Le Voltaire is romantic brasserie dining at its best, inviting leisurely noon lunches that end as dusk settles on a third or fourth grasshopper cocktail. With crisp white tablecloths, velvet booths, dark wood panelling and chess board tiled floors, it's Parisian pleasures made material.

Key Information

Location

27 Quai Voltaire, 7th Arrondissement, Paris, 75007