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Au Restaurant du Phare

5.0 (1 review)

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7 years ago

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Le Bréard - Sweetbread

Le Bréard

4.4(17 reviews)
14.0 km
€€€€

This was one of our favorite meals in Normandy and set the standard for the rest of the visit…read more While there were a couple misses (my duck was a bit under-cooked & tough and didn't have much flavor) just about everything in our 3 course meal was excellent and included tons of different flavors, textures, great ingredients. Plus of course, you have a zillion different bites you're given "for free" so don't worry too much about the prices (which actually aren't bad for someplace that's approaching a Michelin star) because you're going to leave very full and very satisfied with just about everything related to your meal. This seems to be the place for wine people, though we found the list to be okay but much smaller than Le Manoir des Impressionists (where the food wasn't quite as good but the ambience & view were better). Any way you look at it, Le Breard is someplace we would absolutely visit again when in Honfleur.

Who was Charles Bréard? I think I spent more time trying to figure out who this gentleman was than…read morewriting this article. And yet I do not think he is small. Writer and historian of the nineteenth century, he left to posterity only a few books on the navy and sailors. As well as his name at a restaurant in Honfleur. Probably his best posterity. The restaurant has a nice atmosphere, quite warm and with a nice covered terrace. The menu is very fish-oriented and asian. It must be said that the chef, Fabrice Sebire, has made his classes in beautiful houses, Tour d'Argent, Lucas Carton and Grand Véfour. In which he surely did not meet his counterpart of Entre terre et mer at Honfleur, who attended the Grand "Vaufur". I'm a little teasing, but go see my article about Entre Terre et Mer, you'll understand. Two tasting menus to test all the dishes. But with this bad French habit of imposing the same menu on the whole table. In Italy, they are more flexible. It starts a bit bad with extremely salty amuses-bouche. The advantage of our couple is that my partner eats very salty, me very low. So when she finds the product salty, it's unedible for me! On the three pieces, the rice chips and the breaded tuna were really over. The macaron with truffle was perfect. Then comes a nice panna cota of shells and leek bottoms. Fresh and elegant. It goes on but in another vein with tuna sashimi. Which is not one! It is quite amazing from a chef who has been a consultant in Japan to make such a mistake. I'm not a big specialist in Japanese cuisine but I think that with the photo, we can say that we are closer to a tataki than a sashimi since the edge of the slices is clearly cooked. This does not detract from the quality of the dish. The three small drops of real wasabi are largely enough to balance the sweetness of the confit of cucumber and marry perfectly with the fish. Obviously, we are with real wasabi and not colored horseradish. As an Alsatian, I have nothing against horseradish, which is my favorite condiment with sauerkraut. However, as it is part of the same family as wasabi and is less expensive, more tasty and less pungent, it is commonly used by the similis sellers of sushi and sashimi who sell you rice ... In fact, no I'll stop, it'll annoy me. The other entree consists of oysters with a pear tartare. This is the name of the menu. Again, we will fight with the Maincent-Morel as Bible, but we are especially close to a tartar of oysters and a macedonia of pears. And real horseradish! Nice but a little too sweet in the mouth. Iodine oysters are drowned between pear and tapioca pearls. The alliance of foie gras and chocolate was very fashionable in the 80s and then fell into oblivion. Our chef revigorates it clearly by adding in the terrine a device with hazelnut. Classic veal sweetbreads, with a rather strange presentation. We are in the art but the result is not always very harmonious. Wanting to do too much, it becomes a little mess. If turbot cooking is perfect, it suffers from an external appearance, let's be brutal, super ugly. To make a meunière cooking but to wipe all the butter to make a plate without fat removes all the gleaming side of the presentation. We end up with a dull and inelegant stretch. The rest of the plate can not climb the slope. The carrot puree is good. The cubes of mangos and potatoes were little burned. We stay in very sweet tastes. We conclude with a pre-dessert involving an old vegetable, parsnip. It was the potato of the Middle Ages. The still is in a mild sweet taste. The soufflé with passionfruit is well mounted but the passionfruit is too present and will be the only detonating tip of all the meal with the wasabi of departure. In conclusion, I remain on an embarrassing impression of mono-taste. The chef undoubtedly has a technique learned in the big houses, seeks to integrate his Asian taste discoveries and local products. The only concern is that the whole meal is in the same tone. I did not find any other word than "sweetish". Whether pear (yet my favorite fruit) with oysters, carrots, parsnips, mangoes, potatoes, candied cucumbers, sweetbreads, foie gras, chocolate, there is too much strong accumulation of sweet or sweetly processed products, and it gets a bit disgusting on a 6-course menu. The waitress providing the service is very competent and friendly. It is true that we were alone this afternoon! Not an overloaded service. What is regrettable is the lack of passage of the chef. He came to settle some business at the counter and then left in the kitchen. Since we were the only guests, a small passage in the dining room wouldn't have cost him much. Toilet not separated and not handicap adapted. Very clean. Check of 208 euros with a 2012 Auxey-Duresses Domaine Diconne.

Photos
Le Bréard - Tuna

Tuna

Le Bréard - Terrace

Terrace

Le Bréard - Amuse bouche

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Amuse bouche

L'Estuaire Restaurant

L'Estuaire Restaurant

4.0(4 reviews)
13.9 km
€€

For our second night in the coastal village of Honfleur we decided to have dinner off the boat…read morebasin, giving up the idyllic ambience, but hoping for a better meal because the kitchens would have to try harder to attract patrons since they don't have the view to draw people in. We picked well with L'Estuaire. Three women were taking care of everyone in the front of the house. One seemed to be the owner and the other two, dressed in black pants or skirt with white blouses and black sweaters, were the height of efficiency. Not that they didn't get a bit confused in bringing us and others dessert before the cheese course that was expected, but I marvel at how French restaurants don't rely on busboys and food runners. Everyone does everything with way fewer people and if you need something from someone, you just ask anyone. August may not be a month with R but I knew I had to have moules (mussels) on this trip to France. Not surprisingly, they're a regional specialty along the Normandy coast where you can get versions made with brut cider, cheese sauce, and cream. Brian had had the cider version the day before so I went for the Moules Normande, made with cream. By that description alone, what's not to like? Fresh mussels cooked with cream, onions, and herbs: shut yo' mouth! In his usual attempt to eat healthfully Brian had the salmon toasts and for our mains we went with red meat this night accompanied by a really nice bordeaux from St. Emilion. Rounding out my list of trying the French classics while here I had steak au poivre and Brian had grilled lamb rib chops. Never mind that seafood is the thing in these parts! Both were cooked as ordered: medium to medium rare and it helped that the waitress was able to explain to us that it would be "entre rouge a rose." And the frites! The French just really know what to do with a freakin' potato! Something so ordinary at home is once again sublime here in La France! Very young cheese being the thing in this region we specifically chose a restaurant with a cheese course as part of the set menu. Really, one serving of cheese would have done for us both and we could have shared a dessert but of course we both had cheese plus our own desserts. Livarot cheese was the discovery this night, which had a markedly distinctive tang compared to the very smooth Camembert and the in-between Pont L'Eveque. Brian had a delicious Livarot crepe the next day that really outshone my Pont L'Eveque version. Dessert more than held its own as usual. I had to have the apple tart in this region also known for its apples. It was delicious and seemed to have layer of apple sauce on the bottom, something I've seen in recipes for French apple tart. I was a bit surprised that there was bit of a scorch on some of the apples but then I saw a recipe with a picture and sure enough that seems to be an expected feature of the tart. Brian's chocolate fondant in a pool of creme anglaise was also impeccably delicious, needless to say.

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L'Estuaire Restaurant

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Au Restaurant du Phare - french - Updated May 2026

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