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French Seafood Brasserie
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Paris, France

Vin&Marée

Price≈$50
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium

On the Boulevard Murat in the 16th arrondissement, Vin&Marée occupies a tier of Parisian neighbourhood dining where the wine list and the seafood counter carry equal weight. The address sits outside the Michelin-starred circuit that defines the 8th and 7th, positioning it as a considered alternative to the grand dining rooms along the Seine's right bank.

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Address
183 Bd Murat, 75016 Paris, France
Phone
+33146479139
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Vin&Marée restaurant in Paris, France
About

The 16th Arrondissement and the Neighbourhood Seafood Tradition

Paris has long separated its fine-dining ambitions from its neighbourhood fish restaurants, and that divide tells you something important about how the city actually eats. The grands restaurants, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V, Arpège, operate as destination experiences with ceremony to match. Below that stratum sits a different kind of room: the well-run neighbourhood table where the wine is seriously chosen and the fish arrives from the Atlantic coast without theatrical framing. Vin&Marée is a French Seafood Brasserie at 183 Bd Murat, 75016 Paris, France, with a 4.4 Google rating and average pricing around $50 per person. Vin&Marée on Boulevard Murat in the 16th arrondissement belongs to that second category, and the category itself deserves attention before the specifics of the address.

The 16th is frequently characterised as residential and quiet, which is accurate but incomplete. It has a long tradition of mid-to-upper neighbourhood dining, places that serve the local population rather than tourists or expense accounts, and that tradition shapes what a seafood restaurant here is expected to deliver. The clientele arrives with specific expectations around freshness, wine selection, and a room that functions without formality. The prix-fixe or à la carte divide, the chalkboard specials, the carafe of Muscadet: these are the codes of the genre.

Reading the Room: Atmosphere and Sensory Register

The sensory experience of a good Parisian fish restaurant follows a consistent grammar. There is the briny immediacy of an oyster display near the entrance, the low register of conversation that distinguishes lunch from dinner, the smell of butter and white wine from a kitchen that does not try to hide what it is doing. These are not accidents of décor but signals of a particular dining culture, one in which the fish does the work and the room stays out of the way.

At Vin&Mar;ée, the address on Boulevard Murat, a broad, tree-lined outer boulevard in the southwest of the 16th, sets an immediately different tone from the compressed streets of Saint-Germain or the Marais. The scale of the boulevard creates space and a lower ambient noise level than central Paris dining rooms. For the genre, that matters: a fish restaurant that forces you to shout across the table has already failed one of its primary commitments.

The name itself encodes the program. Vin, wine. Marée, literally the tide, in restaurant French, the daily catch. The pairing signals that the kitchen and the cellar are expected to function as equals, which is the correct ambition for this style of restaurant and harder to execute than it sounds. A cellar stocked with Loire whites, Burgundy Chardonnay, and coastal appellations from Alsace and the Rhône requires active curation, not a standing wine list refreshed annually.

Where This Address Sits Against the Broader Paris Spectrum

It is worth placing Vin&Mar;ée against the full range of Paris seafood and fish dining to understand its position accurately. At the leading end, places like L'Ambroisie on the Place des Vosges treat fish as one element of a classical French menu delivered with three-star precision. Kei in the 1st operates across French and Japanese techniques with similar formality. These are not comparable venues: they serve different functions at different price points with different booking windows.

The relevant comparable set for Boulevard Murat is the network of mid-range neighbourhood seafood addresses distributed across the city's outer arrondissements, places where the fish is market-sourced, the wine is chosen with care, and the room is designed for repeat local custom rather than first-time visitors working from a guidebook. Within that comparable set, location in the 16th carries a specific expectation of polish without pretension. The neighbourhood will not sustain a sloppy operation for long, but it also does not reward unnecessary ceremony.

For comparison at the upper end of French fish-forward cooking, Mirazur in Menton and AM par Alexandre Mazzia in Marseille represent the Mediterranean's most decorated addresses. In the French interior, Flocons de Sel in Megève and Bras in Laguiole show what the destination format looks like at a different altitude, literally and figuratively.

The Wine and Seafood Pairing Tradition in France

French coastal cuisine has always treated wine as infrastructure rather than afterthought. In Brittany, Muscadet sur lie with plateau de fruits de mer is nearly a legal requirement. In Bordeaux, dry white Graves with sole meunière is the local orthodoxy. The Loire produces Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé for precisely the kind of delicate fish cookery that a restaurant with marée in its name should be executing. A restaurant that names itself around the wine-and-catch pairing is making a specific commitment to this tradition, and the cellar selection is therefore part of the editorial statement.

Across the broader French dining tradition, from Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern to Troisgros in Ouches, the relationship between regional wine and regional produce has been a defining characteristic of serious French restaurants for generations. Vin&Mar;ée's name stakes a claim to that tradition at the neighbourhood scale, which is where the tradition is most practically useful to most diners.

For readers interested in how the wine-and-fish pairing tradition translates across the Atlantic, Le Bernardin in New York offers the clearest French-lineage comparison, though at a different price point and with significantly more formal architecture. Atomix, also in New York, shows a different approach to pairing discipline with a tasting format, though its orientation is Korean rather than French.

Signature Dishes
sole bretonne à la planchabar grillé entierplateau royal

At a Glance

Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Classic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Family
  • Business Dinner
Experience
  • Terrace
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Chic and sober decor with contemporary and convivial atmosphere.

Signature Dishes
sole bretonne à la planchabar grillé entierplateau royal