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    4.0 (3 reviews)
    Closed 12:00 pm - 3:00 PM, 6:00 PM - 10:00 PM

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    Le Karachi

    Le Karachi

    3.9(109 reviews)
    0.3 kmPart-Dieu, 3ème arrondissement
    €€€

    Stopped by on a whim. Very pleased with service and of course the food. The flavors were…read moreexcellent with enough spice to enjoy yet the spice did not overpower the senses. The buttered chicken was super tender and the lamb cooked perfectly. Had papadum and Nan both were served warm and amount was excellent. If you're looking for some exotic flavors in a warm and welcoming environment give Le Karachi a try. I would definitely go again and sample other dishes.

    After having Le Karachi recommended to me over and over by the locals, my husband and I finally had…read moredinner there this evening with some friends. The staff was very friendly and the atmosphere was nice. I ordered the Menu Végétarien, which included an appetizer, main course, choice of nan or rôti, and rice for 17€. I selected the pakora for my appetizer, the allou palak for my main course, and the nan as my bread. Along with the appetizer, I ordered a banane lassi which was tasty. It was not overly sweet and the banana tasted fresh. The pakora was very different than what I was used to. It was a single patty on a bed of salad greens, with a piece of tomato, some cucumber, shredded carrots, and a bit of cabbage. They brought the nan out with the appetizer as well, along with three choices of chutney: a yogurt-based sauce, a pepper jam, and some spicy pickled eggplant. I liked the pepper jam the best and spread it on the nan and the pakora. The allou palak was not very interesting. The spinach tasted overcooked, the potatoes were just boiled, and it wasn't spicy at all. My husband's palak paneer was a bit tastier but for some reason it was not an option on the vegetarian menu. (The other options were dal and a mixed vegetable dish.) For dessert, I ordered the framboisine which was my favorite part of the entire meal. It was strawberry sorbet, nougat ice cream, shaved coconut, strawberry sauce, and pistachios. I savored every bite. I might give this place a second shot but I wasn't that impressed with my first trip there. After the lassi and dessert, my bill came out to almost 30€ and I didn't think the food was worth that amount of money.

    Photos
    Le Karachi - Menu du vendredi midi : cheese nan, cuisse de poulet tandoori, légumes épicés, riz basmati, assortiment de sauces.

    Menu du vendredi midi : cheese nan, cuisse de poulet tandoori, légumes épicés, riz basmati, assortiment de sauces.

    Le Karachi
    Le Karachi

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    Le Splendid - Steak entree

    Le Splendid

    3.4(70 reviews)
    1.3 kmBrotteaux, 6ème arrondissement
    €€€

    Beautiful decor inside. Nice outdoor patio…read more The service was super slow The food was good, but not great. My steak was super tough to chew and hard to cut with a knife. Prices reasonable.

    This is a standard issue neighborhood cafe in a rich neighborhood…read more Rich means that the establishment is well upholstered. The decoration is not only tasteful but plush. Artistic sensibilities rule. In this case, animal sculptures show up in unexpected locations - including a large giraffe in the center of the dining room. The house fills with monied locals. The managers knows most of them by name and attends to their every need. * * * The house is run to make money rather than to be a great center of exciting gourmandise. The menu is small and standardized, although printed in elegant font. What is offered are the staples of everyday contemporary French cuisine. Duck a l'orange. Salad lyonnaise. Poke and pad thai are now standard items on French restaurant tables. They have two or three versions of those. The menu never changes. * * * Examination of other restaurants in the neighborhood shows very similar nice rooms ... with nearly identical menus. Everyone wants their pave du thon. Everyone wants their ile flottante for dessert. Each room is more charming than the one you just saw. * * * These restaurants are likely to be partially industrial. Industrialized food in France can be very upscale. Think about flying first class on Air Emirates. The food will be absolutely magnificent. However, that food will be prepared in an on-the-ground airline kitchen which will mass produce wonderful first class food for all of Air Emirates flights out of their hubs. France has the equivalent for upscale cafes, where a restauranteur can buy perfect canards a l'orange, or perfect pates en croute from a commercial supplier. Because salad greens and tartares have to be absolutely fresh and high quality, the purveyor sees that such highly perishable goods are reliably delivered to clients' kitchens, in a form suitable for rapid serving. The beef or the salmon for a tartare would come in a single serving unit, in packaging designed for maximum freshness, to be ground in the kitchen just before serving, with a standard flavoring and garnishing package to be added at the very last minute. The rules of French restaurants require that some items be made absolutely from scratch. Innovation is also appreciated So while I do not know for sure, I suspect that what is served at Le Splendide is a mix of a) premade-from-presupplied-fine ingredients b) half-to-three-quarters-premade-also-with-fine ingredients c) If need be, a few all locally-made. The house then concentrates on a) decoration so that each establishment feels unique, beautiful and has a personality. b) high quality service. Le Splendid fits this formula to a T. So do nearly all of the restaurants around it. The formula works. All of these cafes were filled for Sunday lunch with regular patrons who were clearly enjoying themselves. * * * Le Splendid and its neighbors are in Brotteaux, a stylish neighborhood near the elegant nineteenth century Gare de Brotteaux. I am staying a mile away in Charpennes in a North African neighborhood with some gentrifiers. The restaurants in Brotteaux are amazingly similar to the restaurants in Charpennes. In Charpennes, the standard neighborhood restaurant is a kebab house. There are many up and down the main commercial street. They all feature the same menu of all veal kebabs, merguez, hamburgers and tacos. At any hour of the day, they are being patronized by locals who are just hanging out. Management knows the locals and there are long standing relationships of friendship. The execution on the standard items that the customer wants to see are excellent. (I don't think much of the steaks served as part of steak frites in the rich part of town. I don't think much of the mass market hamburgers served in the poor part of town. Everything else tends to be pretty good.) In both cases, the restaurants are served by standard suppliers. The kebab houses' suppliers have to be halal. Halal meat is first rate. The suppliers of upscale cafes also have to provide first rate inputs. It is a fierce point of pride in a kebab house that each establishment makes its own kebabs from scratch. I am sure there are comparable made from scratch items in Brotteaux cafes. In both neighborhoods, the cafes/kebab houses are a staple of the communal public life of the city. I like the kebabs of the kebab houses better than the duck a l'orange of the upscale cafes. The kebab houses have cheap tables and fluorescent lighting. The Brotteaux cafes are easier on the eye. They both capture the soul of the neighborhood. The kebab houses may have a little more soul.

    Photos
    Le Splendid
    Le Splendid - Cheese appetizer

    Cheese appetizer

    Le Splendid

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    La Belle Colombe - Salade avocat-gambas...

    La Belle Colombe

    3.4(8 reviews)
    1.7 kmCharpennes
    €€

    Simple everyday French cuisine with superlative execution…read more Superlative execution is a good thing. I had two dishes that you have eaten a million times. 1) Veal Parmigiana (French people eat this too. It is not purely an Italian dish). 2) Creme Brulee. Both of them were the finest versions I have ever had of either dish. * * * The Veal Parmigiana was a pure quality of raw ingredients play. The French have magnificent veal. The United States has mediocre veal. This dish shows what a huge difference veal quality means. One bite of the naked veal with no sauce and no cheese on it - And I could see I had entered a whole new realm of veal eating. There is more to La Belle Colombe's execution than just good veal. La Belle Colombe puts a thick slice of eggplant on top of the veal. The eggplant was the eggplantiest eggplant I have ever had in my life. ("Eggplantiest" is a real word. As of now. Sez me.) Their eggplant makes the eggplants I get in my supermarket at home seem like cardboard. Which did I like better, the veal, the eggplant or the tomato sauce with cheese? Oh my god, can I have ten weeks to decide With me eating their veal parmigiana every day just to be sure? * * * But then there was dessert. You think you know what creme brulee is all about? La Belle Colombe will change your entire thinking about the dish. Americans make a sweet creamy pudding on the bottom which gets covered with crispy caramelization on top. But the crisp caramel glaze is just a lid for what is in essence a very creamy custard. The sugar in the custard makes the dish dessert. La Belle Colombe reverses the roles. Very very little sugar is put in the custard. A spice is added - not to make things interest - but to make things dull. The cook is trying deliberately to make the custard as flat as uninteresting as possible. The spice cancels out whatever sugar or dairy taste is there - giving you a base of creamy nothing. Why would any cook deliberately do that? So You Taste The Crispy Brulee On The Top. The cook is saying, why should I bother grilling the custard if nobody is going to taste all the work I put into this? The creme brulee crust is not just a wrapper that you take off and throw away. The cook at La Belle Colombe puts much more of a char on the brulee crust than you are used to seeing. This brulee is really really really brulee. It is charred and broiled like a steak. And THIS crust really tastes like something. * * * Pretend that the custard in a creme brulee is the saxophone and the crust is the bass. The cook is saying - Bass Solo! The saxophone player gets away from the front of the stage and has a beer. It is time for the bass player to show what he can do. THIS brulee crust is Charles Mingus all the way! An interesting dessert I would be happy to have over and over and over again. * * * There are no novelties on the menu of La Belle Colombe. These are all standard French favorites. But they are so so good ... and in some cases ... they are original takes. A fine fine fine establishment.

    Photos
    La Belle Colombe - Pavé de saumon, ratatouille et gratin de pommes de terre.

    Pavé de saumon, ratatouille et gratin de pommes de terre.

    La Belle Colombe - Oeufs à la neige....

    Oeufs à la neige....

    La Belle Colombe - Souris d'agneau, haricots verts et gratin de pommes de terre...

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    Souris d'agneau, haricots verts et gratin de pommes de terre...

    Saphir - halal - Updated May 2026

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