Patisseries du Paris

Bonjour, Sugar Non-Apologists,

We’ve been in Paris for a little over three weeks, and I am happy to report I have tried nearly all the pastries. I’ve eaten so much pastry that I need a few blog posts to cover it all. This post is an overview. Later I’ll tell you about my favorite pastry, viennoiserie, the choux class I took, etc.

Okay, here we go! You should be excited.

To start, here is a lovely map I made to help you get oriented (this took me a LONG time, so I will accept compliments on how nice it is). I’d also like you to know that I went to way more bakeries than those listed on the map. This is a curated list. Never doubt my dedication to this cause.

Link to the interactive version.

As an aside, there are bakeries on literally every block in this city. If you go more than two blocks and don’t find a bakery, I hope you get a refund on your trip cause you are not in Paris.

The Basics

Alright, so, there are patisseries (pastry shops) and boulangeries (bread bakeries). The French are kind of funny about the distinction and you have to have special licenses to use the titles. There are some combo shops. It doesn’t really matter, it’s all good, but naturally you will find different treats at a patisserie versus a boulangerie.

If you want viennoiserie (flaky croissant kind of stuff), go to Du Pain et des Idees, it’s real good. It’s a little out of the way, but I’d make a special trip or three. (I’m working on an ode to the pistachio escargot, the most delicious viennoiserie, that will feature this place.)

If you aren’t in the mood to travel that far for your morning viennoiserie, go to an Ernest & Valentin or an Eric Kayser. There are a number of locations of each (more of Eric Kayser), and they are solid. Both also make tasty bread, and have been our go-to spots for baguettes and pain des amis, which we eat every single day with fromage. They’ve each got a few pastries too.

Croissant tip – You can get croissants hot twice a day. In the morning before “work”, and around 4:30 p.m. when the kiddos get out of school. Baguettes are also warm at these times.

Some Faves

Here are the highlights and spots not to miss.

Angelina

This place is serious — they have seasonal pastry collections . . . . The Autumn-Winter collection featured a meringue beehive looking thing with a “blackberry and blackcurrant heart”, and a pastry that looks like a pear made out of almond mousse and pear jelly.

(The blob on the far left is called a Mont Blanc. Hard pass on that one for moi.)

Angelina is right by Jardin des Tuileries. If you go, there will be a huge long line for the tea room. I wouldn’t bother with that. To the right of the entrance, there is a “boutique” where you can get all the pastries to go. And the chocolat chaud (super thick hot chocolate) is a must try. Get some and walk through the Jardin; it’s fun.

Action shot from Angelina.

Stohrer

Apparently the oldest pastry shop in Paris, Stohrer was started back in 1730 by Louis XV’s pastry chef. Stohrer was about .2 miles from our first apartment so I went, we’ll say, a few times. It’s solid, and has all the things. Here are some examples.

Pierre Herme

This guy is famous. Go here for macarons. There are, of course, seasonal collections of macaron flavors like “vanilla & violet”, “olive oil, mandarin & red berries”, and “rose & bergamot” (whatever that is).

Patisserie des Reves

Dream pastry, indeed! (Reves = dreams.) More modern, with artsy looking desserts. We had the Sainte-Honore (more on this later), and a Paris Brest (choux with hazelnut cream). Both delicious. The other desserts are more interesting to look at (sorry, no photos), but these two were recommended.

Fue de Patisserie

Saved the best for last, and it’s a gold mine (and was also .2 miles from our apartment). It’s actually a magazine with a brick and mortar pastry shop. Weird. Anyway, every day they have the best pastry chefs in the city ship in their most famous pastries. The selection rotates, and there is a photo of the chef and their restaurant/shop in front of every pastry, which is fun. If the focus of your trip to Paris is not a pastry tour (also weird), just come here four or five times and you’ll have it covered. It’s on Rue Montorgrueil — a really nice market street that we visited every day when we lived in the hood — and a few doors down from Stohrer.

That’s all for now. In case you doubt how much I’ve eaten, I leave you with some other random pastry photos below. I’ve got another week to go on my pastry tour, and am just lapping back through the favorites, so if there are any pastries you think I should try, let me know!

xoxo, Lauren

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