Example combination
The Left Bank, eaten properly
Saint-Germain and the Latin Quarter sit shoulder to shoulder along the Seine, and together they hold some of the oldest food streets in Paris. This is the flat combination: no hills, no stairs, an easy pace with a seat at every stop. If anyone in your party thinks food tours mean forced marches, start here.
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Act one
The Latin Quarter's market streets
Students have eaten cheaply and well here since the Sorbonne opened in the 13th century, and the quarter still runs on market streets where the cheese, the bread and the roast chickens face each other across the cobbles. Market life trades on Sundays too, which matters more than most tour companies admit.
Your seated stops here: [named Latin Quarter stops to fill once the route exists, never invented].
Act two
Saint-Germain, where food gets serious
A short walk or one metro stop west and the register changes: legendary cafes, chocolatiers with waiting lists, and cheesemongers whose cellars are worth the trip alone. Saint-Germain is where Parisians shop when the occasion matters.
Roffy picks the independents over the famous names with tourist queues: [named Saint-Germain stops to fill once the route exists, never invented]. The hot dish lands mid-tour, dessert closes it, coffee at the table.
Fancy a glass with that board? Wine here is on your tab at cellar-bar prices, no tour markup, and Roffy knows what to order where. The honest why is on the FAQ page.
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