Restaurants & Nightlife
The city of
Restaurants
- Brunel
Info: This flower-filled, French cuisine restaurant is in the heart of
Location: 46 rue de La Balance
- Christian Etienne
Info: The stone house containing this restaurant was built in 1180, around the same time as the Palais des Papes. Its dining room contains early 16th century frescoes honoring the marriage of Anne de Bretagne to the French king in 1491.
Location: 10 rue
- Hiely-Lucullus
Info: Before the arrival of Christian Etienne , this Relais Gourmand property reigned supreme in
Location: 5 rue de la Republique
- La Fourchette
Info: This bistro offers creative cooking at a moderate price, although it shuts down on the weekends. It has two airy dining rooms with large bay windows that flood the inside with light.
Location: 7 rue
- Piedoie
Info: In an intimate yellow-and-ocher-colored dining room behind the city ramparts, this place is the creative statement of its namesake, Thierry Piedoie, a chef who takes his food seriously.
Location: 26 rue des Trois-Faucons
Nightlife
- Woolloomoolloo
Info: Winning the award for most unpronounceable name is Le Woolloomoolloo, which means "black kangaroo" in an Australian Aboriginal dialect.
Location: 16 bis rue des Teinturiers
- Bokao’s Café
This restaurant and disco is an alternative to Woolloomoolloo.
Location:
- Le Grand Café
Info: Behind the Palais des Papes, this restaurant-bar-cafe lies in an entertainment complex in a former military supply warehouse.
Location: La Manutention
- L’Esclav
Info: This is the most viable option for lesbians and gays, as the bar and disco are the focal point of the city’s gay community.
Location: 12 rue de Limas
