using "forks" for Paris reservations
#1
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using "forks" for Paris reservations
I will be going to Paris this summer. I ran across a web site "Forks" which appears to offer some discounts. Is this useful? I don't plan on using my iphone (other than with wifi) while in Paris.
thx
thx
#2


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#3

Joined: Jan 2003
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I have used that for years, but the French site (La Fourchette). The discounts usually don't work for me.
FYI it is fork, not forks. If you are looking at some website named forks it is not the real one, maybe an imitator, I would avoid it.
FYI it is fork, not forks. If you are looking at some website named forks it is not the real one, maybe an imitator, I would avoid it.
#5

Joined: Aug 2003
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The Fork or, especially the French version, was quite useful in our last visit to Paris. You can sort restaurants by type and location, some have nice discounts if you reserve via the site, and you don't need to speak/understand French over the phone. The restaurants also have reviews by recent users, plus menu prices for a selection of menu items. Google Translate will make la fourchette site usable. It has more information than the English version, too.
#6

Joined: Mar 2018
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Just FYI, La Fourchette/The Fork is owned by TripAdvisor. It is widely used, and I use it many times (especially the app). It is very similar to OpenTable but more widely used in France, and with occasional discounts (especially down south in the offseason, off days, or off hours)
#7
Joined: Jan 2014
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We’er off to Paris next month after a 4 year absence and I’ve found that many restaurants now have online reservations. I’ve booked for 4 of our nights online on the restaurants website. I did some restaurant research over at hungryonion.org and checked out a bunch of online food people I trust. I think the Fork has been around for awhile and functions like an opentable reservation system. I just knew exactly where I wanted to eat so went to the restaurant directly. Of, course like everywhere there are a few places that don’t take reservations. We usually just show up at 7 when most restaurants in Paris open and get a spot. The actual residents eat much later!
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#8


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#9

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We just got back from Paris last week and ate at two of the restaurants you mention- Kubri & Bistrot Des Tournelles. I highly recommend Kubri. It's a hip & trendy (and loud) but unlike here in the states the service was very friendly (a hip spot like that in my city would usually have servers who are too cool to smile). The menu when you go will likely be different then when we were there as it changes often but the labneh seems to always be available and is a must order in my opinion. Everything we had was good and I'd go again in a heartbeat.
We didn't love Bistrot Des Tournelles. It was one of two places we ate at in Paris that we wouldn't return to (the other being Juveniles). It was not bad at all (we both loved our deserts and my starter of pan fried mushrooms was great) but seemed overpriced (and overhyped). For example my husband had the steak au poivre and while he said it was the best sauce he'd had the steak itself wasn't as good as he'd had other places on our trip (and it was the most expensive one he had). Of course a lot of people seem to love it on the boards & Instagram so perhaps it was a bad night.
If you are willing to travel you might look at Les Canailles Menilmontant (I think I got it from the hungryonion boards), il bacaro (Italian with a Venetian touch as they say on their site) and Au Vieux Comptoir. We enjoyed our dinners at all of them. And we had a nice lunch just down the street from Bistro Des Tournelles at Bistrot de l’Oulette. We had some other great lunches as well but they were more casual like Aux Bons Crus & La Sifflotte or further from you like at Ripaille. But if in the area they are all worth visiting.
We didn't love Bistrot Des Tournelles. It was one of two places we ate at in Paris that we wouldn't return to (the other being Juveniles). It was not bad at all (we both loved our deserts and my starter of pan fried mushrooms was great) but seemed overpriced (and overhyped). For example my husband had the steak au poivre and while he said it was the best sauce he'd had the steak itself wasn't as good as he'd had other places on our trip (and it was the most expensive one he had). Of course a lot of people seem to love it on the boards & Instagram so perhaps it was a bad night.
If you are willing to travel you might look at Les Canailles Menilmontant (I think I got it from the hungryonion boards), il bacaro (Italian with a Venetian touch as they say on their site) and Au Vieux Comptoir. We enjoyed our dinners at all of them. And we had a nice lunch just down the street from Bistro Des Tournelles at Bistrot de l’Oulette. We had some other great lunches as well but they were more casual like Aux Bons Crus & La Sifflotte or further from you like at Ripaille. But if in the area they are all worth visiting.
#10


Joined: Jan 2008
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We just got back from Paris last week and ate at two of the restaurants you mention- Kubri & Bistrot Des Tournelles. I highly recommend Kubri. It's a hip & trendy (and loud) but unlike here in the states the service was very friendly (a hip spot like that in my city would usually have servers who are too cool to smile). The menu when you go will likely be different then when we were there as it changes often but the labneh seems to always be available and is a must order in my opinion. Everything we had was good and I'd go again in a heartbeat.
We didn't love Bistrot Des Tournelles. It was one of two places we ate at in Paris that we wouldn't return to (the other being Juveniles). It was not bad at all (we both loved our deserts and my starter of pan fried mushrooms was great) but seemed overpriced (and overhyped). For example my husband had the steak au poivre and while he said it was the best sauce he'd had the steak itself wasn't as good as he'd had other places on our trip (and it was the most expensive one he had). Of course a lot of people seem to love it on the boards & Instagram so perhaps it was a bad night.
If you are willing to travel you might look at Les Canailles Menilmontant (I think I got it from the hungryonion boards), il bacaro (Italian with a Venetian touch as they say on their site) and Au Vieux Comptoir. We enjoyed our dinners at all of them. And we had a nice lunch just down the street from Bistro Des Tournelles at Bistrot de l’Oulette. We had some other great lunches as well but they were more casual like Aux Bons Crus & La Sifflotte or further from you like at Ripaille. But if in the area they are all worth visiting.
We didn't love Bistrot Des Tournelles. It was one of two places we ate at in Paris that we wouldn't return to (the other being Juveniles). It was not bad at all (we both loved our deserts and my starter of pan fried mushrooms was great) but seemed overpriced (and overhyped). For example my husband had the steak au poivre and while he said it was the best sauce he'd had the steak itself wasn't as good as he'd had other places on our trip (and it was the most expensive one he had). Of course a lot of people seem to love it on the boards & Instagram so perhaps it was a bad night.
If you are willing to travel you might look at Les Canailles Menilmontant (I think I got it from the hungryonion boards), il bacaro (Italian with a Venetian touch as they say on their site) and Au Vieux Comptoir. We enjoyed our dinners at all of them. And we had a nice lunch just down the street from Bistro Des Tournelles at Bistrot de l’Oulette. We had some other great lunches as well but they were more casual like Aux Bons Crus & La Sifflotte or further from you like at Ripaille. But if in the area they are all worth visiting.
SF Carole on the HO France board was in Paris for 6 weeks and did amazing writes up of all the restaurants she went to and it’s definitely worth reading through to get ideas for all over the city. Here’s the first week.
https://www.hungryonion.org/t/our-fi...rre-sang/31783
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