Foie gras, beef bourguignon, soufflés & a long regional wine list at a classic, veteran brasserie.
Address and Contact Information
Address: 117 Rue du Cherche-Midi, 75006 Paris, France
Phone: +33 1 45 48 52 40
Website: https://www.josephinechezdumonet.fr/
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Reviews
Everything I ate lines up with what this place is known for, and with what’s on their menu: onion soup gratinée au comté, bœuf bourguignon made with Black Angus cheeks, veal chop with morel sauce and gratin dauphinois, and the Grand Marnier soufflé. The cooking is classic in structure, and then it gets interesting in the details. The bourguignon is the clearest example: the wine flavor is profoundly concentrated—honestly the deepest wine taste I’ve ever had in the dish. That intensity won’t suit everyone, but for me it lands as one of the best versions, full stop.
The veal chop is where the kitchen shows personality: the morel sauce and dauphinois are exactly the kind of richness you expect, but I picked up sweet, Eastern-leaning spice notes—cinnamon, maybe clove—that gave the whole plate a different register and kept it from feeling predictable.
Dessert is the one part that rewards planning: the menu specifically tells you to order hot desserts early, and the Soufflé au Grand Marnier is why. It arrives warm, tall, and brief—one of those desserts that’s great precisely because it doesn’t hang around.
Would I call it perfect? No. The style is unapologetically rich, and if you’re sensitive to heavy sauces and big dairy notes, the meal can feel relentless unless you pace it well. And that’s the point: Dumonet isn’t trying to be everything. It’s guarding a particular Paris—one where you come hungry, order like an adult, and accept that pleasure has weight.
We started with the morel mushroom appetizer, which was phenomenal. Creamy, rich, earthy — basically everything mushrooms dream of being when they grow up. I could’ve stopped there, dropped the mic, and declared victory.
But then came the mains. I had the beef bourguignon, and my wife went with the filet. Both were solid — comforting, traditional, and fine — but that’s about where the fireworks ended. For a restaurant with this much reputation (and this much butter), I was waiting for that “oh my word” bite that never quite arrived.
Don’t get me wrong — it’s good food. It’s just not 180-euros-for-lunch good. You can absolutely find meals in Paris that’ll wow your taste buds and leave you enough cash for a Seine-side bottle of wine afterward.
So, yes, Chez Josephine Dumonet is a lovely stop if you want to say you’ve done it — but if you’re chasing a truly unforgettable Parisian meal, there are better ways to spend your euros (and your calories).
Rating: 7/10 — the morels stole the show, the mains politely attended.
We had a reservation and the waiter decided to sit us on a tiny table next to the door even though there was a better table available, but he claimed it was for 3. All other tables were for 3/4 but only 2 people were sitting on it. We couldn’t fit our plates. We left and that table was still empty.
The artichoke salad was so good. The pigeon Mille-feuille was not my cup of tea. Beware that the pigeon will be served rare. The beef bourguignon was meh.
It’s great to see how much pride the staff here have for their work.