Crêperie de St-Germain

St-Germain & Les Invalides


Scoffing a finger-licking crêpe in the street, slathered in warm chocolate Nutella or sweet crème de marron (chestnut paste), is a Parisian essential. Street stands are like gold-dust these days: make a beeline for this delightfully retro, racing-green kiosk in front of Église St-Germain des Près. It's cooked up large, thin pancakes to a faithful crowd for the last 20-something years.

In winter, order a beaker of vin chaud (mulled wine) for good measure.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby St-Germain & Les Invalides attractions

1. Église St-Germain des Prés

0.02 MILES

Paris’ oldest standing church, the Romanesque St Germanus of the Fields, was built in the 11th century on the site of a 6th-century abbey and was the main…

2. Musée National Eugène Delacroix

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In a courtyard off a tree-shaded square, this museum is housed in the romantic artist’s home and studio at the time of his death in 1863. It contains a…

3. Église St-Sulpice

0.2 MILES

In 1646 work started on the twin-towered Church of St Sulpicius, lined inside with 21 side chapels, and it took six architects 150 years to finish. It's…

5. Le Bateau Ivre

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Arthur Rimbaud's 1871 poem Le Bateau Ivre (The Drunken Boat), depicting a fantastical and frightening sea voyage of a sinking boat from the first-person…

6. Georges Danton Statue

0.26 MILES

On Carrefour de l’Odéon, a statue of Georges Danton, a leader of the Revolution and later one of its guillotined victims, stands head intact.

7. Académie Française

0.29 MILES

The French language and all its nuance are guarded with care by 40 Immortels (Immortals) of the French Academy, founded by Cardinal Richelieu in 1635. The…

8. Bibliothèque Mazarine

0.29 MILES

Within the Institut de France, the Mazarine Library is France’s oldest public library, founded in 1643. You can visit the bust-lined, late-17th-century…