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Best Bakeries in Paris From Why You Can Eat Everything and

This guide turns Why You Can Eat Everything and Stay Thin in France! into a practical bakery & cafe map with 2 saved spots around Paris and Reims. The mapped places include a bakery stop and a winery. Use it to understand the places, dishes, and trip context before saving the map in Varedelo.

LocationParis, France
FocusBakery & Cafe Map
Mapped places2 spots
SourceYouTube video

What this map is good for

  • Planning a bakery stop or short itinerary in Paris.
  • Comparing food stops from a creator or saved local map before you commit time in the city.
  • Saving 2 mapped spots into Varedelo so the list stays usable on the ground.
  • Using the original video as context, then turning it into a clean place-by-place map.
Map of 2 spots from Why You Can Eat Everything and Stay Thin in France!

Featured spots on this map

  • Leonie Bakery
    Bakery in 15 Av. Trudaine, 75009 Paris, France, Paris, Île-de-France, France
    Hours: Hours available
  • Vranken Pommery domain
    Winery in 5 Place du Général Gouraud, 51100 Reims, France, Reims, Grand Est, France
    Hours: Hours available

Food notes from the video

  • cheese
  • coffee

Experiences captured

  • visited Pommery champagne house
  • explored 19th-century underground cellars
  • visited an independent champagne grower
  • shared a group meal in the countryside
  • toured a family-owned cellar dug in the 1950s
  • booked a travel experience through Klook
  • lived in the United States
  • walked through a smoke-free Parisian park

Planning notes for Paris

Paris is a capital city with a documented history spanning over 2,000 years, originating as a Celtic settlement known as Lutetia on the Île de la Cité. The city’s architectural evolution includes the 12th-century Gothic style of Notre-Dame Cathedral, the 17th-century Classicism of the Louvre and Les Invalides, and the 19th-century Haussmann renovation, which established the current system of wide boulevards and uniform limestone facades. Historical landmarks include the Eiffel Tower.

Must-try foods nearby

  • Jambon-Beurre
    The quintessential Parisian lunch: a fresh, crusty baguette sliced open, spread with high-quality salted butter, and filled with slices of 'jambon de Paris' (cooked ham).
  • Croissant au Beurre
    A symbol of French breakfast culture, the 2026 trend emphasizes 'croissants de boulanger' made with high-quality AOP Charentes-Poitou butter.
  • Soupe à l'Oignon Gratinée
    Originally the 'soup of the poor' in the Les Halles market, this classic features slow-caramelized onions in a rich beef broth.
  • Steak Frites with Sauce au Poivre
    The definitive bistro staple. In 2026, the focus is on heritage beef cuts like 'onglet' (hanger steak) or 'entrecôte,' served with house-made.
  • Escargots de Bourgogne
    Plump land snails baked in their shells with a vibrant green 'beurre maître d'hôtel'—a compound butter of garlic, shallots, and plenty of fresh parsley.

When to go: The best time to visit Paris is from late April to early June or September to October, when the weather is mild and the city's parks are in full bloom or vibrant autumn color. Summer (July and August) brings heat and heavy crowds.

Local tips

  • Always initiate interactions by saying 'Bonjour' to shopkeepers and servers to avoid being perceived as rude.
  • Request 'une carafe d’eau' at restaurants to receive free tap water instead of paying for expensive bottled options.
  • Keep your phone and wallet secured in zipped pockets or bags held in front of you to prevent pickpocketing in crowded Metro stations.
  • Signal for your restaurant bill by making eye contact or raising a hand subtly, as servers will not bring it until specifically asked.

What travelers are noticing

  • The opening of the new Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain at Place du Palais-Royal, a major architectural landmark designed by Jean Nouvel.
  • The 'La Caverne du Pont-Neuf' immersive installation by artist JR, which transforms the historic bridge into a 120-meter-long walk-through cave.
  • The rebirth of 'La Main Jaune' as a massive creative hub and concert hall, reviving the legendary 1980s roller disco site in the 17th arrondissement.

Official tourism resource

The official website of the Paris Convention and Visitors Bureau provides essential information for planning your stay, including activities and events.

Paris je t'aime ↗

Planning questions

Where did the creator eat in Paris?

This guide maps all 2 spots featured in the video, with names, addresses, and neighborhoods, so you can plan where to eat in Paris.

What are the must-try foods in Paris?

Creator picks from the video include cheese, coffee. Open the map in Varedelo to see which spot each one is at.

Can I save these spots to use on my trip?

Yes. Open the map in Varedelo to save every spot, get directions, and revisit the guide from your phone while you travel.

Use it on your trip

Save this bakery & cafe map before you go

Keep the mapped spots, creator context, food notes, and planning details together. Varedelo turns the page into a phone-friendly map you can revisit when you are choosing where to go.

Varedelo trip map
2 mapped spots
Bakery & Cafe Map YouTube video Video Map
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