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Natural Wine Bar & Artisanal Ice Cream
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Paris, France

Folderol

CuisineWine Bar
Executive ChefJessica Yang & Robert Compagnon
Price≈$20
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceCasual
NoiseLively
CapacitySmall
Opinionated About Dining

On a quiet stretch of Rue du Grand Prieuré in the 11th arrondissement, Folderol occupies the kind of address that Paris does better than almost anywhere: a bar serious enough to reward planning but low-key enough to feel like a discovery. Positioned among the 11th's most deliberate drinking destinations, it draws a crowd that plans ahead and arrives with intent.

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Address
10 Rue du Grand Prieuré, Paris, Paris, France
Phone
+33 1 43 55 02 57
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Folderol restaurant in Paris, France
About

Folderol is a bar at 10 Rue du Grand Prieuré in Paris's 11th arrondissement.

Paris's 11th arrondissement has been the city's most consequential neighbourhood for independent bars for over a decade. The shift started with a generation of bartenders who trained abroad or under French cocktail pioneers and returned to open tight, focused rooms on streets like Oberkampf, Ménilmontant, and Grand Prieuré. What distinguished these spots from the earlier wave of American-style speakeasies was discipline: shorter menus, cleaner technique, and a customer base willing to book days in advance for a seat at the counter.

Rue du Grand Prieuré, where Folderol sits at number 10, is part of that geography. The street connects the Oberkampf corridor to the quieter residential blocks east of the République métro, and it has accumulated a density of bars and restaurants that reward the kind of visitor who maps a neighbourhood before arriving rather than wandering in search of an open door. Folderol's placement in this stretch is less coincidence than category signal: this is where Paris's more considered bar program finds its natural home.

Approaching the Address

The physical approach to bars like Folderol matters as much as what happens once you are inside. Rue du Grand Prieuré is narrow by Parisian standards, the kind of street where a taxi drops you at the corner and you walk the last fifty metres past parked scooters and lit apartment windows. The building frontages here are modest, and addresses do not announce themselves. Finding number 10 without prior research is the sort of thing that separates a planned visit from a lucky stumble.

This is, in the context of the 11th's bar culture, deliberate positioning. The neighbourhood has consistently rewarded venues that require a minimum of intent from guests. The bars here do not rely on passing foot traffic from tourists moving between landmarks. Their regulars are Parisian or Paris-literate, and their occasional visitors are the kind of traveller who looks up an address before leaving the hotel.

The Booking Logic

Paris bars at this tier increasingly operate with some form of capacity management. That might mean reservations for a portion of seats, a walk-in policy that runs out by a certain hour, or simply a room small enough that arriving after ten on a Friday guarantees a wait.

The 11th's bar rooms, as a category, tend toward the compact. Capacity at venues in this tier often runs between twenty and forty covers, meaning that even moderate demand creates real constraint. The practical implication for any visitor is the same: treat this as a reservation-first venue until you know otherwise. Arriving without a plan on a Thursday or Friday evening is a gamble, and losing that gamble means finding yourself on Oberkampf looking for an alternative rather than at the address you intended.

Paris Cocktail Bars and the comparable set

To understand where Folderol prices and programs against, it helps to map the tiers that now define Paris cocktail. At the upper end sit hotel bars and destination rooms with international recognition and pricing to match. Below that sits a cohort of independent bars with critical recognition, tight menus, and a local-first audience. Below that again are the neighbourhood wine bars that have started adding serious cocktail lists to stay competitive.

The 11th's independent bar cohort is where Folderol fits most naturally. This is not the tier of €22 clarified Negronis served on ice carved to order. It is also not the tier of house wine and an afterthought spirits shelf. The programming in this middle band is increasingly sophisticated, bartenders in these rooms often have Michelin-adjacent dining experience or competition records, but the pricing and atmosphere stay accessible enough that regulars come twice a week rather than twice a year.

France's broader bar scene reflects this pattern across cities. La Maison M. in Lyon, Coté vin in Toulouse, and Bar Casa Bordeaux in Bordeaux each occupy analogous positions in their respective cities: serious enough for the travelling drinker, embedded enough to anchor a local crowd. Papa Doble in Montpellier and Au Brasseur in Strasbourg extend that pattern into the French regions. Even internationally, the comparison holds: Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu and Le Café de la Fontaine in La Turbie show how the neighbourhood-serious-bar model travels across different geographies. Paris's 11th is simply the densest concentration of this format in France.

What to Know Before You Go

Paris bars in the independent 11th cohort tend to run from early evening through late night, with the sharpest demand between nine and midnight on weekends. Arriving before nine on a weekday is the surest way to secure a seat without a reservation. The nearest métro stops servicing this part of the 11th are Oberkampf (lines 5 and 9) and République (lines 3, 5, 8, 9, and 11), both within comfortable walking distance of Rue du Grand Prieuré.

Know Before You Go

  • Address: 10 Rue du Grand Prieuré, 75011 Paris, France
  • Neighbourhood: 11th arrondissement, between Oberkampf and République
  • Getting There: Métro Oberkampf (lines 5, 9) or République (lines 3, 5, 8, 9, 11)
  • Booking: Walk-ins are welcome.
  • Leading Timing: Weekday evenings before 9pm for reliable walk-in access
Signature Dishes
Olive oil ice creamPistachio ice creamIce cream cakes (gâteaux glacés)Handmade waffle cones
Frequently asked questions

The record

Recognition history

Dated appearances from independent guides and award organizations, with the underlying list record or original source where available.

  1. Opinionated About Dining Newly Added European Restaurants

    Opinionated About Dining

  2. Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Recommended

    Opinionated About Dining

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Lively
  • Trendy
  • Cozy
  • Whimsical
  • Low Profile Address
  • Energetic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Casual Hangout
  • After Work
  • Late Night
Experience
  • Standalone
  • Design Destination
Drink Program
  • Natural Wine
Sourcing
  • Natural Wine
Views
  • Street Scene
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacitySmall
Service StyleCasual
Meal PacingStandard
Visit details

Current opening hours

Monday
4–11 PM
Tuesday
4–11 PM
Wednesday
4–11 PM
Thursday
4–11 PM
Friday
4–11 PM
Saturday
4–11 PM
Sunday
4–11 PM

Hours can change for holidays and private events. Last verified .

Casual, buzzy neighborhood ice-cream-and-wine bar with a handwritten menu, standing-room feel, and a lively crowd of locals and visitors lining up for inventive house-made flavors and natural wines.