
Chez Georges on Rue du Mail is one of the 2nd arrondissement's most committed expressions of the classic Parisian bistro, ranked #228 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list for 2024. Under chef Arnaud Brouillet, the kitchen holds its line on traditional technique while the room itself reads like a lesson in how this format has survived a century of reinvention. Booking windows are tight and the hours are selective, which tells you most of what you need to know about demand.
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- Address
- 1 Rue du Mail, 75002 Paris, France
- Phone
- +33 1 42 60 07 11

The Room That Sets the Terms
There is a particular grammar to a certain kind of Parisian bistro interior, and Chez Georges on Rue du Mail speaks it without hesitation. The address, a quiet street in the 2nd arrondissement tucked between the grands boulevards and the Place des Victoires, sits at a remove from the more photographed dining corridors of the Marais or Saint-Germain. This is not accident. The bistros that have lasted in this quartier tend to operate on the assumption that the guest will make the effort, and Chez Georges is no exception.
The physical environment, all banquette seating, close-set tables, and the low-grade noise of a full dining room, belongs to a format that predates any current trend. It signals a specific kind of hospitality: attentive but not performative, disciplined without being cold. Walking in is less like entering a restaurant than entering an argument about what a restaurant should be, one that the room has already won.
Classic Bistro Cooking and Its Continuing Relevance
Paris has never stopped producing bistro food, but the category has bifurcated sharply over the past two decades. On one side: the neo-bistro wave, small kitchens with short menus, natural wine lists, and chefs who trained under Michelin-starred predecessors and stripped the format back to something more personal. On the other: the handful of addresses that have held the original bistro template in place, doing what the format was designed to do before it became a reference point for younger generations to subvert.
Chez Georges belongs to that second category. Chef Arnaud Brouillet runs a kitchen oriented around classic French bistro technique rather than its reinterpretation. The culinary framework here, built on stocks, sauces, and seasonal French produce prepared with the confidence of accumulated repetition, is what Opinionated About Dining's panel is assessing when it places the restaurant at #228 in its 2024 Casual Europe ranking, a list that rewards exactly this kind of consistency over novelty.
To understand where this sits in the broader Paris restaurant picture: the city's most decorated addresses, among them Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, operate in a completely different register. Chez Georges competes in a different comparable set entirely, one measured by replicability of experience, honesty of ingredient sourcing, and the degree to which the dining room feels lived-in rather than curated.
Chef Arnaud Brouillet and the Weight of the Format
The editorial angle here is not about a chef imposing a personal vision on an inherited space. It is about a chef sustaining a tradition that requires technical rigor to maintain and considerable discipline to resist updating. The bistro format, at this level of seriousness, is harder to execute than it appears. The range of dishes a classical kitchen must produce competently is wider than a tasting menu format demands, and the expectation from a regular clientele, that the dish you ordered last month will taste the same this month, places a specific kind of pressure on the kitchen.
Arnaud Brouillet operates within that constraint rather than against it. The recognition reflects that the kitchen is meeting those expectations consistently. For anyone interested in how French classical training maps onto contemporary bistro cooking, the comparison with the country's haute cuisine tradition is instructive. Restaurants like Troisgros in Ouches, Bras in Laguiole, and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern all represent the formalized upper register of French regional cooking. Chez Georges operates at a different altitude but draws from the same technical inheritance.
How Chez Georges Sits in the 2nd Arrondissement's Dining Scene
The 2nd arrondissement holds a number of addresses that reward the repeat visitor rather than the first-timer on a short itinerary. Within the broader Paris bistro category, Chez Georges shares a peer reference with venues like Au Bascou, which leans Basque, and Repaire de Cartouche, which occupies a similar classic-bistro register in the 11th. Ma Bourgogne and Le Coq et Fils represent the format in other arrondissements. Each of these addresses makes a different argument about what the bistro should be in 2024. Chez Georges makes the most conservative argument, in the leading sense of the word: it is conserving something worth keeping.
The 733 Google reviews averaging 4.5 stars indicate a broad diner base beyond dedicated food tourists. That kind of rating at that volume tends to reflect a room that works across different expectations, not just for those arriving with specific knowledge of the OAD list. It is a signal of operational reliability as much as culinary quality.
For those interested in the wider French fine dining context, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Mirazur in Menton, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or represent how the country's most recognized culinary institutions operate at the opposite end of the format spectrum.
Know Before You Go
Address: 1 Rue du Mail, 75002 Paris, France
Chef: Arnaud Brouillet
Cuisine: Classic French Bistro
Hours: Wednesday dinner only (19:00 to 20:30); Thursday–Saturday lunch (12:00 to 12:45) and dinner (19:00 to 20:30); Sunday lunch only (12:00 to 13:00); Monday and Tuesday closed
Awards: Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe #228 (2024); Highly Recommended (2023)
Google Rating: 4.5 from 671 reviews
Booking is recommended.
Comparison Snapshot
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chez GeorgesThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Traditional French Brasserie | $$$ | ||
| Mori Yoshida | Japanese-French Fusion Patisserie | $$$ | 7th Arr. - Palais-Bourbon | |
| Le Grand Colbert | Traditional French Brasserie | $$$ | , | 2nd arrondissement |
| Astair | Contemporary French Brasserie | $$$ | , | 2nd Arrondissement |
| Le Hibou | French Brasserie | $$$ | , | Odéon |
| Les Poulettes Batignolles | French-Catalan Bistro | $$$ | , | Batignolles-Monceau |
At a Glance
- Classic
- Cozy
- Elegant
- Date Night
- Business Dinner
- Group Dining
- Historic Building
- Extensive Wine List
Warm, traditional brasserie atmosphere with beautiful decor, mirrors, and a convivial feeling appreciated by locals.

















