Restaurant in Paris, France
Pêche
100Pearl PointsLow-pressure Paris

About Pêche
Pêche is a practical Paris 17th choice for an easy weekday lunch or dinner rather than a destination splurge. Book it for low-pressure dine-in plans; cross-shop Rooster if you want a more clearly defined modern-cuisine experience or need stronger occasion credentials.
For Pêche in Paris, the verified planning details are direct: it is open Monday to Friday for lunch and dinner, closed Saturday and Sunday, lists a smart-casual dress code. Treat it as a practical weekday option rather than a page with confirmed claims about cuisine style, chef profile, awards, pricing, or menu format.
A practical Paris pick for weekday dining
The case for planning a visit is strongest when the timing works with its weekday hours: Monday to Friday, 12–2:30 PM and 7–10:30 PM. Because no verified neighborhood, address, cuisine, price, or menu details are available here, plan around the confirmed basics and check the venue's own channels before making the meal a centerpiece of the day.
Do not assume takeaway or delivery. Those services are not verified here, so confirm any current ordering options directly with the venue or a platform at the time you plan to eat.
Who should go, who should cross-shop
Choose Pêche for a weekday lunch or dinner in Paris when the confirmed hours and smart-casual dress code fit your plans. Cross-shop if you need a clearly documented cuisine, a published chef story, award-backed certainty, a known price point, or detailed dietary information before committing. In that case, compare it with Rooster, Bolea, Chez Léon, Le P'Tit Musset, or Écume, depending on what kind of meal you want.
For broader planning, use our full Paris restaurants guide alongside other dining options. If dinner is only one piece of the trip, pair the search with other Paris plans.
Quick reference: choose Pêche for a weekday meal in Paris; cross-shop if cuisine detail, awards, price, menu format, or off-premise certainty matter.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Pêche good for a special occasion?
That depends on what you need confirmed before you go. Pêche is in Paris, is open Monday to Friday for lunch and dinner, lists a smart-casual dress code. If you need more verified detail for an occasion, cross-shop Rooster or Écume.
Is lunch or dinner better at Pêche?
Both are supported by the verified hours. Pêche is open Monday to Friday from 12–2:30 PM and 7–10:30 PM, it is closed Saturday and Sunday. Choose lunch or dinner based on your schedule, then confirm current details with the venue before you go.
What should a first-timer know about Pêche?
Treat Pêche as a weekday restaurant, not a weekend plan, since it is closed Saturday and Sunday. The verified details here are limited to its Paris location, weekday lunch and dinner hours, smart-casual dress code. The main decision is timing.
What should I order at Pêche?
No specific dishes, cuisine, or menu format are verified here. Check the venue's official channels for current menu details before deciding what to order. For another option to compare, consider Bolea or Chez Léon.
Is Pêche good for solo dining?
The verified details do not confirm a seating format or service style, so do not assume counter seating, a particular pace, or a specific room setup before checking with the venue. If the weekday lunch or dinner hours suit your plans, confirm current details directly before you go.
What are alternatives to Pêche in Paris?
Use Le P'Tit Musset or Rooster if you want another restaurant to compare while planning. Bolea, Écume, Chez Léon are also sensible cross-shops depending on what details matter most to your meal. Pêche is the pick when its verified weekday hours and smart-casual dress code fit your plans.
Does Pêche handle dietary restrictions?
Dietary-restriction handling is not verified here. Check the venue's official channels before you go if allergies, intolerances, or other dietary needs are important to your meal.
Location
127 Rue Cardinet, 75017 Paris, France
Compare Pêche
| Venue | Location | Cuisine | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pêche | Paris | , | , |
| Le P'Tit Musset | Paris | , | , |
| Rooster | Paris | Modern Cuisine | €€€ |
| Bolea | Paris | , | , |
| Écume | Paris | , | , |
| Chez Léon | Paris | , | , |
How Pêche Paris compares with similar nearby venues.
Where to look if you cannot book
Try Rooster if a defined Modern Cuisine format and €€€ positioning are useful filters. Try Le P'Tit Musset or Chez Léon if the decision is driven by Paris availability and neighborhood convenience rather than a specific cuisine brief.
How Pêche compares in Paris
Pêche is the lower-pressure choice in this set: easier to justify for a weekday meal than for a major occasion. Rooster has the clearer positioning because its Modern Cuisine and €€€ tier set expectations before booking. If a diner wants a more defined culinary brief, Rooster is the cleaner pick; if convenience and a calmer plan matter more, Pêche makes sense.
Le P'Tit Musset, Bolea, Écume, Chez Léon are better used as cross-shops when location or availability drives the decision. With limited public positioning across several of these peers, the practical move is to compare live menus, reservation slots, neighborhood fit rather than assume one is the stronger meal.
For value, Pêche works only if the address fits the day; Rooster is the more transparent choice when price tier and cuisine category matter. For ambiance, choose Pêche when the goal is a quieter local dinner; choose a peer when the group needs a more clearly signposted restaurant identity.
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