Alsace-Lorraine in Paris

- SUBSCRIBE
- ALREADY SUBSCRIBED?
-
SUBSCRIBE NOW TO SUPPORT BONJOUR PARIS
Support us and get full, unlimited access to all our content for a year for just 60 USD.
-
Sign in
Please enter your details below to gain full, unlimited access to Bonjour Paris.
Alsace
and Lorraine. These two regions of France deserve to be discovered.
Influenced by Germany’s customs, the Eastern part of France really has
a different flavour. If your timetable does not allow you to go
and see by yourself, that is a shame. But you can still have a
first glimpse of what you could find there, here—in Paris!
Number
10 of the rue Daviel, in Paris’ 13th arrondissement: welcome to Little
Alsace. A large blue gate opens on a delightful yard full of flowers. A
bench allows the passer by to sit and admire. Around this yard, forty
individual houses give the impression of being miles away from Paris.
These brick and half-timbered houses reminds the bystander of Eastern
France. The doors, shutters and timber are painted bright red, blue,
green and yellow. Who would think that the 13the arrondissement,
disfigured by dozens of huge blocks built in the sixties, would have
preserved such a little paradise?
However,
Little Alsace was not built by immigrants from Alsace. Jean Walter drew
the forty houses up in 1912, for the “Habitation familiale” company.
This new construction was nicknamed “Little Alsace” because the
architect was inspired by Eastern France’s pointed roofs and timber and
brick houses.
But
this is only the start of our trip through Alsace and Lorraine.
No need to go far to have a first glimpse of Eastern France. The first
two stops to be made are at the Maison de la Lorraine and the Maison de
l’Alsace. They provide all the tourist information you need to visit
their region, but they also offer a series of cultural events that will
help you discovering Lorraine and Alsace without leaving the capital.
At the Maison de la Lorraine, you can either go to a literary
conference or see exhibitions of paintings from Lorraine artists. Other
funny evenings are scheduled, such as a diner and floor show, where a
soprano and a pianist gives life to a typical Eastern dinner.
But
the most exciting period to visit the two Maisons is probably
Christmas. The traditions of Eastern France are pretty different from
the rest of the country. Indeed, Lorraine and Alsace were part of
Germany until 1918, and they therefore adopted German customs. The
Maison de l’Alsace welcomes a Marché de Noël, where honey, Bredelle
(Christmas cakes), cinnamon cakes, Kougelhopfs, and famous wines, such
as Gewurztraminer or Riesling can be bought. But December is also saint
Nicolas’s month, the children’s favourite saint. The Maison de la
Lorraine is well-prepared for this event: parades in the Rue de
l’Echelle, concerts and shows for children in the Maison. But other
important dates of the year are to be celebrated, such as the coming of
the beer in March or the end of the mirabelle harvest (a small yellow
prune).
Feeling
like discovering the treasures of Eastern French food? Rush to
“Schmid”, on the Boulevard Strasbourg. Here is where you can find true
sausages from Alsace, the famous “sauerkraut” and all the meat to go
with. Struedels, Linzers, Springzs and Spatzles: all these names may
sound unknown, but they are the cream of Eastern food tradition. As for
restaurants, “Chez Jenny” offers a wonderful interior design, with huge
panels of marquetry representing towns and important figures of Alsace.
To buy food from Lorraine, “En passant par la Lorraine” next to the
Maison is selling the traditional quiches and patés. But the most
delightful place to have a first taste of Alsace and Lorraine is
probably the “Patisserie Viennoise,” Rue de l’Ecole de Medecine, a tiny
“salon de thé,” where one can sip a traditional hot chocolate, and
enjoy a Strudel filled with poppy seeds and morello cherry…
Addresses
Maison de l’Alsace
39, avenue des Champs-Elysées
75008 Paris
01 42 56 15 94
Maison de la Lorraine
2, rue de l’Echelle
75001 Paris
01 44 58 94 00
Charcuterie Schmid Père et Fils
76 bd de Strazbourg
75010 Paris
01 46 07 89 74
Boulangerie Raoul Maeder
158 Boulevard Berthier
75017 Paris
01 46 22 50 73
En passant par la Lorraine
2, rue de l’Echelle
75001 Paris
01 42 60 30 96
39 bd du Temple
75003 Paris
01 44 54 39 00