Wednesday, June 14, 2023

Procope

We saved Procope (founded 1686) for last, in part because we thought it might serve for our 55th wedding anniversary dinner. As it happened, we were already in Nancy on June 8th, and decided to have another wedding anniversary dinner there, at Excelsior. Another story, another blogpost. The luncheon repas at Procope was fine. They seated us (eventually) by the street window, and after eating, I took the opportunity to explore the place. For weekday luncheon, they open only the ground floor dining room, but upstairs are at least six more dining rooms. My appraisal: if you don't have time for the Carnavalet, have week-day lunch at Procope and wander the upper floors...there's plenty of Paris history there too. Reservations, even for lunch, a must.

In the Latin Quarter, not pretentious looking at all; our table was
just to the right of the two ladies...

Famous place. Another plaque inside says: "Café Procope. Here
founded Procopio dei Coltelli in 1686 the oldest coffeehouse of the
world and the most famous center of the literary and philosophic
life of the 18th and 19th centuries. It was frequented by La Fontaine,
Voltaire and the Encyclopedistes; Benjamin Franklin, Danton, Marat,
Robespierre, Napoleon Bonaparte, Balzac, Victor Hugo, Gambetta,
Verlaine and Anatole France." Thank you, Wikipedia; which goes on
to observe that the "oldest" bit is not exactly entirely totally accurately
true....

My snails

My coq au vin; once in a lifetime...

Her steak frites; no, it's not BBQ sauce

Her profiteroles; quite good

My espresso, served with a little almond biscuit
on top

At the entry to the dining room, a list of former
patrons of note

Ditto; pretty much a who's who of 18th and 19th
century France; oh, that's my empty chair by the
window: be impressed

Entry and bar

Now venturing into the upstairs dining rooms (some of them)



In the Salon Benjamin Franklin

Not sure who this guy was, but the open collar definitely
suggests a revolutionary

Definitely Voltaire, who said the ice cream was so good it
should be illegal; seriously

Yeah, he really liked the place

Another room

And another

Something to, from, or about Colbert

The abundant paintings were mostly portraits, but occasionally
depicted historic events

The founder, a Sicilian, who wisely Francophied
his name to Francois Procope; otherwise it might
have become known as "Godfather's Gelatos" and
become a chain... 

They say he loved the little mille feuille cream cakes...
story goes he left his hat here in lieu of payment...

She also liked the cakes and wanted everyone to have some

A very late (1793) something from Louis XVI

The great Encyclopedist; not a friend of the King nor of any king


So Revolutionary...

Every wall filled with such ephemera

Downstairs dining room


1 comment:

Tawana said...

What a fabulous place!