Plate With A View: Jules Verne Paris
Saturday 10 July 2004
Most visitors to the Eiffel Tower refresh themselves at one of the cafés on the 187ft-high first level. If, however, you want your cuisine to be as
haute as the view, the Michelin-starred Jules Verne takes you up 376ft via its own private lift into a refined world of starched tablecloths, sommeliers, an army of waiters, and, most importantly, mesmerising views.
THE PLATE
Most visitors to the Eiffel Tower refresh themselves at one of the cafés on the 187ft-high first level. If, however, you want your cuisine to be as haute as the view, the Michelin-starred Jules Verne takes you up 376ft via its own private lift into a refined world of starched tablecloths, sommeliers, an army of waiters, and, most importantly, mesmerising views.
The menu, designed by head chef Alain Reix, is adventurous and presented with exquisite care. Dishes include warm lobster fricassee, scallops, veal sweetbreads, foie gras with langoustines, steamed crab with shrimp cream, charolais fillet of beef, turbot, swordfish. The chef in charge of desserts does magical things with chocolate, ice cream and crêpes. But choose wisely as you are asked to order dessert at the start.
THE VIEW
The interior is a bit on the austere side, with everything in grey and black. But with Paris and its environs at your feet, you won't be paying much attention. The north-west side of the restaurant will give you far-reaching views of the Palais de Chaillot, the Trocadéro gardens, the Arc de Triomphe, Hausmann's 19th-century Parisian architecture and, further westwards, the Bois de Boulogne and La Défense. A table on the north-east side gives you a wider view of the Seine and the eastern side of Paris stretching towards Sacré Coeur.
THE BILL
If you're feeling flush, then by all means order à la carte and pay at least €50 (£35) for a main course. The set lunch menu is more reasonable - the bill for two (including a bottle of water and coffees) came to €122 (£87). Booking well in advance is essential: at least two weeks for lunch and up to four months for dinner.
Jules Verne, Eiffel Tower, Paris 75007 (00 33 1 45 55 61 44; www.tour-eiffel.fr)
- 1 The 50 Best spas
- 2 The ten best islands in Europe
- 3 The 10 best suitcases
- 4 Grotty no more: How Lanzarote upgraded its appeal
- 5 Where's hot: The Mediterranean islands
- 6 Traveller's Guide: Montenegro
- 7 100 things to do before you die, 1-50
- 8 The ten best city beach breaks
- 9 48 Hours In: Verona
- 10 Room Service: Gstaad Palace, Switzerland
- 1 $4,000 golden vibrator stolen in Brazil armed robbery
- 2 Bethesda confirms Skyrim Dawnguard DLC with announcement trailer
- 3 Laurie Penny: Shame has become our stick for beating the poor
- 4 Supervolcanoes that could destroy humanity 'may explode sooner than scientists thought'
- 5 The Cable News Nightmare: CNN (and Piers Morgan) in audience crisis
- 6 Class A drugs 'should be decriminalised,' says former drug advisor Professor David Nutt
- 7 Owen Jones: It's time to demolish the myth about Tony Blair
- 8 The jousting accident that turned Henry VIII into a tyrant
- 9 Room Service: Gstaad Palace, Switzerland
Experience the Heineken Hub
Get free wi-fi and exclusive i content while you enjoy a tasty pint of Heineken at participating pubs.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
A home to be proud of with Halifax
Download the Halifax's brilliant, free new Home Finder app, and take all the pain out of finding your dream home
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
Day In a Page
Teenage kicks: Twitter and the 'bling ring' gang
Moveable feasts: Festival grub goes gourmet
'My own Diamond Jubilee': 60 years in same job
How Lanzarote upgraded its appeal
Next in line – but public just can't warm to idea of Charles in charge
Nothing's sacred: the illegal trade in India's holy cows








Comments