Paris: American Eateries
#1
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Paris: American Eateries
Hi,<BR><BR>My wife is VERY SELECTIVE in what she eats, and has basically an "americanized food" only palette. From years of travel with her, I've given up on trying to change her eatting habits (that's how we made it to "years")
My question is: are American style restaurants plentiful, and if so, could you recommend a few. She enjoys places like: TGIFridays (I see one in MonteMartre), Chillis, Applebees, Bennigans, Texas Road House, Hard Rock, fast-food, etc.<BR><BR>Thanks in advance<BR>Billy
My question is: are American style restaurants plentiful, and if so, could you recommend a few. She enjoys places like: TGIFridays (I see one in MonteMartre), Chillis, Applebees, Bennigans, Texas Road House, Hard Rock, fast-food, etc.<BR><BR>Thanks in advance<BR>Billy
#4
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Are you troll or are you for real? I sure hope it's former rather than the latter! If it's the latter, then all I can say is. "How sad!" It's an insult to quality American cooking to cite the places you list as "americanized food." <BR>Foodie is right!
#6
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If this is an honest request, you might be better off renting an apartment with a kitchen so she can shop at the corner grocery and do her own cooking. In most restaurants, she could get a steak and fries, salad, fish. Just make sure she studies a menu list for French items so she doesn't get surprised. Or eat in areas that cater to tourists and a more "American" taste (an oxymoron in your wife's case).
#7
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Sounds unlikely, but if it's real, believe me there are enough such chain restaurants in Paris to keep her fed. Just look in the phonebook, you seem to have looked some up already. <BR><BR>There is at least one Chicago Pizza Factory or something on bd Edgar Quinet, as well as numerous Tex-Mex chains (Indian Cafe and Mustang Cafe), plus the Hardrock Cafe, as well as tons of fast food places liked KFC or Pizza Hut or McDonalds, etc.
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#10
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Hi all,<BR><BR>The post is real. My wife likes burgers, potatoes, steak, roast beef, prime rib, "American style Pizza",...and all fairly unseasoned...and nearly no vegetables. A basic beef/potatoes/bread type. Sort-of American frontier food. Its just her preferences. She has a fairly simple pallate..nothing wrong with that..it's just her preferences. Sorry if the post offended a few. We're going to see the sites & history, not for the gastronomic aspects of Paris.<BR><BR>By "Americanized", I mean that Mexican food in most places in the US tastes different than the same food in Mexico. Same with Chinese, Italian,etc.
#11
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Billy, Steak w/ french fries is easily available (and common) at most any lunch or dinner bistro or cafe style place in Paris. Also there are fast-food joints similar to a McDonald (I forget the French chain name) but the food is the same type menu.<BR><BR>My advice is rather than try to find American chains specifically, that you can figure out some plain, non-sauced dishes to order in normal French places.<BR><BR>The above posters idea of getting a kitchen would solve the problem, if you're interested in shopping and cooking for yourselves.
#14
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One of my favorite New York and London places is Joe Allens. Last week we ate at their Paris branch -- yea, yea, I know, 'why do American when you're in Paris'? Surprisingly we were the only Americans I saw there. The place was full at lunch of local business people -- quite a number who seemed to have their regular tables and came and went. We decided it was the place for Parisians to go when they want to secretly eat ketchup with their pommes frites, as nearly every one of them was pouring the Heinz right over them. While I had a little more contempory lunch (seared rare tuna on a tomato coulis with pesto, following a spinach, bacon, and blue cheese salad) partner Lee stuck to the traditional -- a big plate of barbeque spare ribs with a baked potato and corn on the cob. I think your wife would be very happy there and the food is really very good. It's near the corner of Etienne Marcel and Rue St. Denis.
#15
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Good lord, Billy, your wife must be so unhealthy if that's all she likes to eat. What a pity to go to Paris and only eat in places like Friday's! Being an American myself, I NEVER EVER go to chains in this country! You guys must be from the midwest.
#16
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Actually, I like more authentic Mexican food (because I lived in LA many years) than what you can get in most places and I really don't like Tex Mex --- the TexMex in Paris hasn't really been that bad when I had it, just as good as in the US Midwest (or better).<BR><BR>In any case, I thought of a new one -- the restaurants in the Paris Hilton near the Eiffel Tower try to be sort of Americanized California cuisine (unless they've changed), so that's an idea.<BR><BR>I don't think there is any French McDonalds -- there is the Quick chain but they aren't French, and I think they are worse than McDonalds, although you wouldn't expect they would be (I think they are Belgian). YOu really don't want fast food joints anyway, for dinner, I'm sure. <BR><BR>I will admit I'm puzzled by this request, certainly not offended, just because I don't understand what that means for most regular dishes, like grilled steak, roast chicken, potatoes, etc. You can certainly avoid any French sauces or unusual dishes if you want, even in French restaurants/cafes. There are tons of Italian restaurants in Paris, also, most people like Italian food. Along the lines of Patrick's comments, there are quite a few English pubs around (I know there's one around rue de Buci) and they might have food that is probably pretty much like you might want (hamburgers, simple steaks, etc).
#17
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Billy, we just got back from Paris and our last three nights in a row we ate a place called Coffee Parisien at 4 Rue Princess in the St Germain des Pres area. They dub themselves an American restaurant although we were the only Americans there. We had great cheeseburgers and fries. After almost two weeks in England and France, we just wanted some good old burgers and fries. For those food snobs who want to put us down for wanting cheeseburgers, fine.
#19
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I'm in the hotel business in a major US tourist area. We get a lot of French visitors. The first thing they all ask for is a good French restaurant -- so you see they're no different from many Americans.<BR>Why would it be fine for a French person to ask for French food in the US, but outrageous for an American to ask for American food in France?

