Zürcher Nachrichten - How France fell for reimagined 19th-century workers' canteens

EUR -
AED 4.186669
AFN 72.960328
ALL 94.255884
AMD 419.657752
ANG 2.041067
AOA 1045.383602
ARS 1680.892093
AUD 1.651929
AWG 2.052008
AZN 1.913325
BAM 1.955421
BBD 2.296555
BDT 140.252845
BGN 1.927611
BHD 0.429917
BIF 3386.544306
BMD 1.140004
BND 1.475414
BOB 7.879785
BRL 5.913311
BSD 1.140279
BTN 107.024401
BWP 15.496679
BYN 3.30706
BYR 22344.083799
BZD 2.293216
CAD 1.618424
CDF 2587.80951
CHF 0.921923
CLF 0.026713
CLP 1051.357438
CNY 7.756418
CNH 7.755346
COP 3917.282691
CRC 517.699764
CUC 1.140004
CUP 30.210113
CVE 110.243171
CZK 24.262144
DJF 203.0587
DKK 7.474626
DOP 66.997028
DZD 151.905131
EGP 56.438305
ERN 17.100064
ETB 183.840968
FJD 2.583363
FKP 0.862661
GBP 0.863365
GEL 3.015325
GGP 0.862661
GHS 12.857018
GIP 0.862661
GMD 83.22065
GNF 9991.065557
GTQ 8.699316
GYD 238.643215
HKD 8.939771
HNL 30.509093
HRK 7.528582
HTG 149.031145
HUF 353.84878
IDR 20329.696244
ILS 3.42235
IMP 0.862661
INR 107.588075
IQD 1493.710792
IRR 1567562.878891
ISK 144.005292
JEP 0.862661
JMD 179.585229
JOD 0.808237
JPY 184.334105
KES 147.584718
KGS 99.69345
KHR 4577.113792
KMF 494.761744
KPW 1026.004247
KRW 1749.194087
KWD 0.352877
KYD 0.950258
KZT 553.252881
LAK 25028.154117
LBP 102113.759801
LKR 383.302597
LRD 207.708894
LSL 18.743371
LTL 3.366136
LVL 0.689578
LYD 7.319551
MAD 10.692136
MDL 20.217972
MGA 4822.981574
MKD 61.520302
MMK 2393.38216
MNT 4081.491631
MOP 9.21128
MRU 45.507189
MUR 54.389633
MVR 17.612951
MWK 1977.295212
MXN 19.902084
MYR 4.660108
MZN 72.849706
NAD 18.743371
NGN 1572.1685
NIO 41.961875
NOK 11.31827
NPR 171.241845
NZD 2.018942
OMR 0.4383
PAB 1.140329
PEN 3.888247
PGK 5.003987
PHP 69.87317
PKR 317.346675
PLN 4.288579
PYG 6959.621972
QAR 4.156377
RON 5.2414
RSD 117.397462
RUB 89.916291
RWF 1669.949912
SAR 4.282071
SBD 9.17926
SCR 16.010321
SDG 684.002074
SEK 11.085424
SGD 1.474943
SHP 0.851128
SLE 28.273098
SLL 23905.323832
SOS 651.702402
SRD 42.730735
STD 23595.786842
STN 24.495257
SVC 9.977025
SYP 126.007064
SZL 18.732373
THB 37.917109
TJS 10.553473
TMT 3.990015
TND 3.379794
TOP 2.744857
TRY 53.151613
TTD 7.749364
TWD 36.335928
TZS 2989.873238
UAH 51.181341
UGX 4185.079563
USD 1.140004
UYU 45.773145
UZS 13696.948775
VES 707.661057
VND 29982.112445
VUV 136.744544
WST 3.175479
XAF 655.83002
XAG 0.019311
XAU 0.00028
XCD 3.080919
XCG 2.055002
XDR 0.81676
XOF 655.827144
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.033552
ZAR 18.769954
ZMK 10261.407882
ZMW 20.540383
ZWL 367.080912
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61.3

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0410

    22.005

    -0.19%

  • NGG

    -0.6300

    82.79

    -0.76%

  • BCC

    0.4350

    80.195

    +0.54%

  • RIO

    -0.7050

    94.405

    -0.75%

  • BCE

    -0.1400

    23.06

    -0.61%

  • RELX

    0.3750

    31.295

    +1.2%

  • JRI

    0.2050

    12.785

    +1.6%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    18.7

    +3.74%

  • CMSD

    -0.1300

    21.8

    -0.6%

  • GSK

    0.3700

    52.26

    +0.71%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    13.93

    +0.5%

  • BTI

    0.1700

    62.65

    +0.27%

  • BP

    -0.6100

    37.11

    -1.64%

  • AZN

    3.4650

    189.145

    +1.83%

How France fell for reimagined 19th-century workers' canteens
How France fell for reimagined 19th-century workers' canteens / Photo: Fred DUFOUR - AFP/File

How France fell for reimagined 19th-century workers' canteens

So-called bouillon restaurants are mushrooming all over France, reviving a traditional low-cost Gallic meal concept that can compete with fast-food on prices and easily beat it on quality.

Text size:

"It's exploding! 253 bouillon restaurants have opened in France in four years," Bernard Boutboul, a restaurant consultant, told AFP.

"It's an ultra-intensive expansion, driven by a trend of returning to traditions, with the reappearance of iconic French dishes at very low prices."

Created in the 1850s by the butcher Adolphe-Baptiste Duval to fill workers' stomachs with hearty meals, Duval's ran 250 restaurants in the capital by the turn of the 20th century.

That made them France's first mass chain of restaurants, serving traditional recipes at low prices in high-volume and bustling restaurants.

But as eating habits changed, with higher quality and more expensive brasseries dominating the French food market, and international and fast-food trends appearing, the bouillon concept fell out of favour.

Its revival began in 2005 with the resurrection of the Bouillon Chartier, an ornate Parisian landmark that had been slowly fading.

"A bouillon is the gateway to French gastronomy," explained Christophe Joulie, part of the gastronomic family who took over the Chartier.

He modernised the kitchens and put beef bourguignon with macaroni back on the menu.

"For me, you have to be able to have a starter, main course and dessert for under 20 euros," he said.

With its leek vinaigrette for one euro and bills scribbled on paper tablecloths by apron-clad waiters, the restaurant hums with activity as locals and tourists alike pack out its tables, which crucially cannot be reserved.

"In a world where fast food is taking up more space, it's French-style fast food, because we serve a full dish for less than a sandwich at McDonald's," said Joulie.

- 'Dust off' -

Even multi-Michelin-starred French chef Thierry Marx has got in on the act, attracted by the idea of providing quality food at affordable prices.

He has opened a bouillon in a northern Paris suburb.

"In the 1960s, it took the equivalent of an hour of the minimum wage to eat at a bistro," he told AFP. "Today, with an hour of minimum wage, you only get fast food, something from the bakery -- or a bouillon dish."

Other restaurateurs with a keen eye for the market have sensed an opportunity.

"We looked at needs and changing habits and realised there was demand for intergenerational social spaces with no price-based exclusion," Enguerran Lavaud, director of Groupe Bouillon Restaurants, told AFP.

"I wanted to dust off the bouillon -— its mass-market French dishes available from noon to midnight."

Boosted by its Instagram presence, his Bouillon Pigalle now serves 2,300 customers a day, often with long queues along the pavement.

Since 2017, the concept has spread, attracting more and more restaurateurs across France from Angers to Nancy and Toulouse.

Some are adapting the concept.

In the Romainville suburb northeast of Paris, a family of Mauritian origin took over a large brasserie in 2026 to turn it into a "Mauritian-style bouillon".

There is an Italian bouillon in Paris too.

Industry insiders say they do not fear competition around what has become a "bouillon culture".

"But there are bouillons and bouillons: those that can't sustain the low prices over time, and whose menus change all the time, won't make it to 2027 or 2028 because you have to protect the quality of the experience to protect volume — and therefore prices," warned Lavaud.

According to consultant Bernard Boutboul, you specifically need "at least 300 seats and not exceed an average bill of 18 euros".

T.L.Marti--NZN