French Food, Wine & Café Culture
What to actually eat, which wine region means what, and how to skip the tourist-menu traps.
French food culture runs on rhythm as much as flavor: a coffee standing at the bar costs less than sitting down, lunch (12–2pm) is the best-value meal of the day via the fixed-price menu du jour (roughly €15–22), and dinner rarely starts before 7:30pm. Must-try dishes: a proper croissant (not from a chain), steak-frites, a real French onion soup, and regional specialties like Provençal ratatouille or Norman cider and camembert. Wine-wise, know your regions by name, not grape — Bordeaux, Burgundy, and the Loire Valley each mean something different on a label.
French food culture has more unwritten rules than almost anywhere else in Europe, and most of them exist to protect a genuinely good meal from being rushed. Here's what to order, how the café and bistro system actually works, and the wine-region shorthand that'll make you look like you know what you're doing at a wine shop.













































