Example combination
Montmartre and Le Marais, in one tour
Almost nobody offers these two together, because with a group of twelve you cannot. Privately, you can: the village on the hill while the bakeries are still warm, then a metro ride across the city to the Marais for the savory second act.
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Act one
Montmartre, before the crowds
Montmartre was a village of mills and vineyards before it was part of Paris, and the food life on its lower slopes still works at village scale: bakers who know their regulars, a morning market rhythm, small counters where four people is a full house.
The honest part, printed here and not discovered on the day: Montmartre is a hill. There are slopes and stairs. Roffy routes the gentlest line up [exact route and stops to fill once the route exists], takes it slow, and you are seated at every tasting. If stairs are a real concern, say so in the inquiry and she builds a flat tour instead. Nobody gets ambushed by a climb.
Act two
Le Marais, the savory afterlife
A metro ride later you are in the old Jewish quarter: falafel rivalries, aged cheese in vaulted shops, and streets that stay deliciously alive on Sundays when much of Paris shuts. The Marais is flat, dense and made for eating between stories.
Stops here are chosen for a seat and a story: [named Marais stops to fill once the route exists, never invented]. Savory leads, the sweet finish comes last, with coffee at the table.
Good to know: this combination runs best on days when both quartiers' shops trade. Roffy checks opening days before proposing your date, so the plan you approve is the plan that happens.
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