Restaurant in Paris, France
Cadence
100Pearl PointsLow-Friction Dinner

About Cadence
Cadence is a practical Paris 11th pick for a later dinner or low-key celebration, especially when timing and neighborhood energy matter more than awards or a fixed destination format. Cross-shop Le Chateaubriand for a clearer neo-bistro proposition, or Amâlia if the occasion calls for a more polished modern-cuisine spend.
Cadence is a Paris venue with a casual dress code and verified hours that run later at the end of the week. The confirmed schedule is Tuesday through Thursday from 12–3 PM and 7 PM–12 AM, Friday from 12–3 PM and 7 PM–1 AM, Saturday from 7 PM–1 AM, closed Sunday and Monday.
The clearest verified planning detail is timing. The available facts do not confirm named awards, a chef, a cuisine, a price level, a menu format, or a signature dish. Use Cadence as a Paris option when the confirmed schedule and casual dress code are enough to decide whether it fits the plan.
A later-service Paris choice
Cadence is not a page to overread: the verified information does not establish a cuisine, price level, chef, menu format, award history, or signature dish. What is confirmed is simpler: it is in Paris, the dress code is casual, the hours include midday service Tuesday through Friday plus later evening service on Friday and Saturday.
Because cuisine, price, format are not verified anchors here, the safer way to use this listing is as a practical Paris option rather than a destination built around a specific dish or dining style. If the plan needs a clearer proposition, compare the practical fit against Le Chateaubriand or Amâlia before committing. If timing and a casual dress code are the priority, Cadence can still belong on the shortlist.
Who should choose it over a more formal Paris table
Choose Cadence for a casual Paris outing where the confirmed hours and relaxed dress code are the important facts. Be more cautious if the group needs a published tasting-menu structure, a known price ladder, dietary details, or award recognition before choosing, because those specifics are not verified here.
Quick reference: strongest for diners who value the confirmed schedule, casual dress code, Paris location; weaker for diners who need detailed menu, price, cuisine, or accolade certainty before choosing.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Cadence?
Treat Cadence as a casual-dress-code Paris venue where the main verified planning detail is the schedule: Tuesday to Thursday run 12–3 PM and 7 PM–12 AM, Friday runs 12–3 PM and 7 PM–1 AM, Saturday runs 7 PM–1 AM, Sunday and Monday are closed.
Does Cadence handle dietary restrictions?
Dietary and allergy accommodation details are not verified here. Check the venue's official channels directly before you go.
How far ahead should I book Cadence?
Booking guidance is not verified here. Use the confirmed hours to choose a suitable service window, check the venue's official channels for current reservation availability.
What is Cadence known for?
Based on the verified details available here, Cadence is best described as a Paris venue with a casual dress code, midday service Tuesday through Friday, later evening hours at the end of the week.
Location
117 Ave Parmentier, 75011 Paris, France
Compare Cadence
| Venue | Location | Cuisine | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cadence | Paris | , | , |
| Le Chateaubriand | Paris | Neo-bistro, Modern Cuisine | €€€ |
| Soya | Paris | , | , |
| Amâlia | Paris | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ |
| Le Café de l'Usine | Paris | , | , |
| Alluma | Paris | , | , |
How Cadence Paris compares with similar nearby venues.
Where to look if Cadence is not the right fit
Pick Le Chateaubriand if the group wants a more defined neo-bistro dinner and is comfortable with a €€€ modern-cuisine choice. Pick Amâlia if the occasion justifies a €€€€ table and a more polished dining signal.
How Cadence compares in Paris
Cadence is the lower-friction choice in this set: useful for a later dinner in the 11th when the evening matters as much as the meal. Le Chateaubriand is the stronger pick if the priority is a defined neo-bistro identity and a clearer modern-cuisine frame at €€€. Choose Le Chateaubriand when the meal itself is the point; choose Cadence when timing, neighborhood, a less formal night carry more weight.
Amâlia sits in a higher €€€€ tier and makes more sense for diners who want a more polished special-occasion signal. Cadence is the more casual decision, while Amâlia is the safer spend when the table needs to feel more deliberate. Soya, Le Café de l'Usine, Alluma are worth checking when availability or location is the deciding factor rather than a named cuisine category.
Explore Paris
Save or rate Cadence on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.

