28. L’Ogre
Dish to order: Côte de boeuf (for two)
Deliciously tucked away in the 16th arrondissement, L’Ogre is a meat-lover’s triumph. Foie gras or smoky bone marrow are followed by enormous cuts of perfectly pink côte de boeuf, wagyu or black angus to share, sliced at the table and served on wooden boards with the fluffiest, crunchiest chips. The whole setup is delightfully French; vintage wine bottles line up along the central zinc bar, wonky candles drip onto red-and-white-checked tablecloths, and a fumoir cigar room is tucked away at the back. If you’re here for supper, try to bag a table beside the window – you’ll end up with a ringside seat for the Eiffel Tower’s hourly light show. Teddy Wolstenholme
Address: 1 Avenue de Versailles, 75016 Paris, France
Website: restaurantlogre.fr
29. Amarante
Dish to order: foie gras
Christophe Philippe’s Amarante celebrates French cooking as it should be: ingredient-focused, rich and traditional. He knows his audience. If you like your meat lean, use of butter restrained and steak well-done, his website warns, this isn’t the bistro for you. Luckily for those of us whose eyes sparkle at the mention of foie gras and fraise de veau (part of the calf’s intestinal membrane), that means there’s a slightly higher chance of bagging one of Amarante’s 21 red leather seats. Not all dishes are big on offal, but all are big on flavour. You might savour a tender beef cheek with sweet, fresh peas, roast chicken with celeriac or pigeon and boudin noir (black pudding). Follow their suggestions for a unique bottle to match your choices, and you won’t be disappointed. You can walk off lunch, or dinner, with a stroll around the neighbouring Port de l'Arsenal.
Address: 4 rue Biscornet, 75012 Paris
Website: amarante.paris
30. Robert et Louise
Dish to order: leg of lamb
It would be easy to walk straight past Robert et Louise’s unassuming entrance on the Marais’s Rue Vieille du Temple if it wasn’t for the smell of wood-fired meat wafting from the red gingham curtains. This restaurant has been here for more than 60 years, and although the eponymous Robert and Louise have moved on, their daughter Pascale and her husband still run the show. Inside, copper pans hang from wonky shelves above a huge stone fireplace in the centre, and mismatched wooden tables become communal at busy times. This restaurant might be featured in every travel guide going, but it remains low-key, rustic French cooking at its best; start with a plate of garlicky snails before beef rib, entrecôte, lamb leg or veal, grilled and salted over a smouldering wood fire. Portions are hearty – and reasonably affordable for the Marais location. Teddy Wolstenholme
Address: 64 Rue Vieille du Temple, 75003 Paris
Website: robertetlouise.com