Food & Wine in France
What first-time visitors get wrong about food and wine in France is the assumption that it will simply happen to them – that they can wander into any restaurant at 2pm, point vaguely at a menu, and emerge having had a transformative experience. France does reward the curious and the prepared with a generosity that few countries can match. It quietly punishes the indifferent. The country that gave the world haute cuisine, the sommelier, the concept of terroir, and the two-hour lunch has very firm opinions about when you eat, what you eat it with, and whether you have earned the right to comment on the cheese course. Approach it properly – with research, with humility, and ideally with a very good villa kitchen and a market run at dawn – and France will feed you better than anywhere else on earth.
Why French Regional Cuisine Is Not One Thing
The single greatest misconception about food in France is that there is such a thing as “French food.” There isn’t, really – not in the way there is Italian food or Thai food. What exists instead is a federation of intensely regional cooking traditions, each with its own ingredients, techniques, obsessions, and frankly its own sense of culinary superiority over the others. Provence cooks with olive oil, tomatoes, garlic, and the kind of sun-addled confidence that produces ratatouille and bouillabaisse. Burgundy is entirely devoted to butter, cream, wine, and the slow braise. Alsace has choucroute and flammekueche and a Germanic directness about portion size that the rest of France regards with quiet suspicion. The Basque Country wraps everything in Espelette pepper and considers itself categorically different from both France and Spain, which is essentially correct.
Normandy, meanwhile, gives you apples, Calvados, cream so thick it barely pours, and a soft-rinded cheese so assertive it effectively announces itself when you enter the room. Brittany offers the finest oysters, the most committed salted butter, and crepes so thin they are more concept than food. Lyon – which has a reasonable claim to being the gastronomic capital of a country of gastronomic capitals – is all about bouchon culture: pig’s trotters, quenelles, andouillette, and a particular kind of no-frills excellence that celebrity chefs have spent decades trying to reverse-engineer. For luxury travellers who want to eat seriously in France, the first decision is not which restaurant to book. It is which region to go to.
Signature Dishes Worth Crossing a Region For
Certain dishes justify itinerary adjustments. Bouillabaisse in Marseille is not a fish soup – it is a liturgy, served in two courses with rouille, croutons, and an almost ceremonial insistence on which fish belong in the pot. Eat it at the port, from someone whose grandmother made it the same way. In Périgord, foie gras done properly is a revelation – not the factory-produced stuff exported everywhere, but the real article, served with a slice of toasted brioche and absolutely nothing else competing for your attention. In Brittany, a plateau de fruits de mer – a cold, mountainous arrangement of oysters, langoustines, crab, whelks, and sea urchins – is the kind of lunch that reorganises your priorities.
Duck confit in Gascony. Cassoulet in Castelnaudary, where locals will tell you, with complete sincerity, that cassoulet from Toulouse or Carcassonne is a different dish entirely and not to be encouraged. Tarte Tatin from the Loire, ideally eaten warm, barely an hour from the oven, with crème fraîche so cold it fogs slightly in the summer air. And the baguette: not glamorous, not regional, not complicated – and yet a perfectly made one, eaten within twenty minutes of leaving the boulangerie, is one of the great food experiences money cannot actually buy. The best ones are free. That is very French.
Food Markets: The Real Entry Point
Every French town worth visiting has a market, and the market is where you understand what that town eats – not the tourist version, but the actual version. In Provence, morning markets in villages across the Luberon and Var fill with local producers selling lavender honey, tapenade made the day before, fromages so fresh they come wrapped in vine leaves, and tomatoes in varieties you will not find in any supermarket on earth. The market in Apt is considered one of the finest in the Vaucluse; the one in Arles, held on Saturday mornings and sprawling along the boulevard des Lices, is an occasion rather than a chore.
For luxury travellers staying in a villa – particularly those with a serious kitchen and the intention to use it – the market is not a tourist activity. It is the foundation of the day. Go early, go with a basket rather than a bag, and try to have at least a general plan before you arrive, otherwise the abundance becomes paralysing. The cheese alone requires decisions. There is a reason the French build their lunch around what they find rather than what they planned – it produces better food and a considerably better morning.
Truffles: Seasonal, Transformative, and Worth the Detour
The Périgord and the Vaucluse are the two great truffle territories of France, and if you are visiting between November and March, black truffle – Tuber melanosporum, the Périgord truffle – deserves your full attention. The truffle markets of Périgeux, Sarlat, and Lalbenque are among the most serious food experiences France offers: quiet, purposeful transactions between producers and buyers, conducted with the gravity usually reserved for property deals. Visitors are welcome to watch, smell, and buy, though you should know that attempting to bargain is considered eccentric.
Truffle hunting experiences are available across both regions and are significantly more enjoyable than they sound. A dog, a patch of oak woodland, a cool morning, and the moment the truffle comes out of the ground: it smells immediately and forcefully of itself, which is to say of everything wild and earthy and slightly scandalous about French cuisine. Several estates in the Vaucluse offer private hunts followed by a truffle-led lunch on site – a half-day that uses your afternoon rather well. These experiences require advance booking and are, emphatically, not cheap. They are worth it entirely.
Wine Regions and What They Actually Taste Like
Food and wine in France cannot be separated, and the wine map is as regional and opinionated as the food. Bordeaux produces the world’s most discussed red wines – structured, age-worthy, built around Cabernet Sauvignon on the Left Bank and Merlot on the Right – and the great châteaux of the Médoc and Pomerol are genuinely worth visiting for the architecture and the theatre as much as the wine. Burgundy is the opposite: intensely focused on Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, producing wines of extraordinary subtlety from plots sometimes barely the size of a decent kitchen garden. Understanding why a Gevrey-Chambertin and a Vosne-Romanée taste so different despite being made from the same grape a few kilometres apart is the kind of puzzle that keeps serious wine people cheerfully occupied for decades.
Champagne is the northern outlier: a cool, chalky region that produces wine unsuited to drinking young and still, so spent centuries perfecting the process that gave us bubbles. The grandes maisons of Reims and Épernay are legendary, but the grower Champagnes – produced by small vignerons from their own grapes – represent some of the most interesting drinking in France right now. The Rhône Valley produces the great syrahs of the north (Hermitage, Côte-Rôtie) and the generous Grenache blends of the south (Châteauneuf-du-Pape). Alsace makes some of the world’s most serious dry Riesling and is almost entirely ignored outside France, which is baffling and convenient in roughly equal measure.
Wine Estates and Cellars Worth Visiting
Visiting a wine estate in France is not the same as a winery tour in most other countries. The best experiences are intimate, unhurried, and tend to involve a great deal of standing in cold cellars listening to someone explain decisions made years before the wine you are tasting was even conceived. In Burgundy, the small domaines of the Côte de Nuits and Côte de Beaune offer cellar visits by appointment – these are working farms, not visitor centres, and the welcome reflects how seriously you take the wines. In Bordeaux, several of the classified châteaux have invested significantly in visitor facilities, with architecture, exhibitions, and tastings designed for a sophisticated audience.
In the Loire Valley, the wine estates of Sancerre, Vouvray, and Muscadet offer a more accessible entry point – prices are lower, domaines are more accustomed to walk-in visitors, and the wines are among the most food-friendly in France. For something more theatrical, the cave-aged wines of Saumur, produced in the tufa rock caves that also store the region’s mushrooms, offer a genuinely unusual experience. Provence’s rosé producers – centred around the Côtes de Provence appellation – have, over the past decade, elevated pink wine from poolside afterthought to serious category, and several estates now offer guided tastings of a range that goes from very pale and elegant to genuinely complex.
Olive Oil Producers and the South of France
Olive oil in France does not enjoy the same international profile as its Tuscan or Andalusian counterparts, which is either a shame or an opportunity, depending on how you look at it. The olive groves of Provence and the Languedoc produce oils of genuine quality, often from very old trees and varieties – Aglandau, Salonenque, Tanche – that are grown nowhere else. The Baux-de-Provence appellation produces oils with a Protected Designation of Origin status, and the mills of the Alpilles are worth visiting during the pressing season (roughly November through January) when the oil comes out green, grassy, peppery, and completely unlike anything that has spent six months in a supermarket bottle.
Several domaines in the region offer tastings alongside their wine, olive oil serving as a kind of afternoon counterpart to the morning’s viticulture. Pair a tasting of freshly pressed oil with local bread, olives, and a glass of something cold and pale, and you have assembled what the region has been offering for centuries – an afternoon that requires very little ambition and delivers considerable pleasure.
Cooking Classes: Learning French in the Kitchen
There is a particular and entirely justified confidence that French home cooks have about their food that you cannot acquire from reading recipes. The most effective way to learn French cooking in France is to cook with someone who learned it from their grandmother, in their kitchen, using their village market and their local producer relationships. Cooking class experiences range from large-group sessions in Paris – competent, well-organised, very much designed for visitors – to genuinely immersive private classes offered by local chefs and home cooks across the regions. In Provence, classes that combine a morning market visit with a four-hour cooking session focused on regional dishes represent some of the best half-days available to a serious food traveller.
In Périgord, duck-focused classes that walk through the preparation of confit, magret, and foie gras are not for the philosophically squeamish, but they are extraordinarily instructive. In Burgundy, classes built around the wine-braised dishes – boeuf bourguignon, coq au vin, oeufs en meurette – teach you not just technique but the logic of cooking with the wine you are also drinking, which once understood changes how you cook at home permanently. For villa guests with access to a professional kitchen, a private chef visit combined with a market run and a cooking demonstration is one of the great upgrades available in French luxury travel.
The Best Food Experiences Money Can Buy
France has more three-Michelin-starred restaurants than any country except Japan, and a meal at the highest level of French gastronomy is an experience that exists almost nowhere else in the world. The service, the precision, the sequence of decisions embedded in a twenty-course tasting menu at a restaurant that has been thinking about food longer than most countries have had governments – it is extraordinary, and it deserves to be experienced at least once without wondering what it costs. That said, the most memorable food experiences in France are not always the most expensive ones.
A dawn visit to a Rungis wholesale market – the vast professional market that supplies Paris’s restaurants – requires an early start, a guide, and insider access, and produces a morning you will describe to people for years. A private dinner prepared at your villa by a local chef using that morning’s market produce, with wines chosen by someone who knows the local producers personally, combines luxury and authenticity in a way no restaurant can quite replicate. A long lunch in a Lyonnais bouchon that starts at noon and ends when it ends, working through the menu with a carafe of Beaujolais that costs essentially nothing and drinks like a minor revelation: this is not available for any amount of money. It requires only that you show up, sit down, and let France do what France does.
For further context on planning your time in the country, our France Travel Guide covers everything from when to visit to how to move between regions without losing half your holiday to logistics.
Stay in a French Villa and Eat Like You Live There
The most complete way to experience food and wine in France is to live within it for a week or more – with a kitchen that invites cooking, a table large enough for a long dinner, and a location that puts you within reach of a real market, a real cave coopérative, and the kind of quiet morning that produces a very good breakfast and a very considered day. A villa in Provence, the Dordogne, Burgundy, or the Basque Country is not merely a place to sleep. It is the infrastructure of a different kind of travel – slower, more deliberate, more deeply embedded in where you actually are.
Browse our collection of luxury villas in France and find the right base for the food and wine journey you have been planning rather longer than you might admit.