-
French visas, EU citizenship case, pension contacts: Updates in brief
Find out about the latest news on Britons living in France attempting to regain their EU citizenship and whether the British pension number has changed
-
French officials consider ideas to help second-home owners
An automatic conferral of long-stay rights may pose legal issues
-
Man shot dead by fellow hunter in southern France
The death of the 73-year-old is being treated as an accident
French restaurant reveals secret of US tourist’s 'best-ever potato'
La Pataterie chain is now trending on social media after the rave review of its Pom’ Au Four Savoyarde. We ask the restaurant about its ‘amazing’ baked potato dish
French restaurant chain La Pataterie is trending on Twitter after an American couple on a visit to France used the platform to praise its “amazing” baked potato dish.
The staff at La Pataterie, a family restaurant whose menu is built on potatoes, whether baked, fried or moulded into a burger bun, are delighted, says their boss.
Having eaten there while on holiday in Arles (Provence) on Monday (September 6), “aspiring potato influencer” Steve Olson posted an eight-tweet-long thread to rave about the restaurant.
Mr Olson’s tweets have since received 22,500 likes and been retweeted 5,300 times, and steakhouse chain Buffalo Grill has now invited him to try out their menu as well.
“This is wonderful news for us,” La Pataterie’s director Sébastien de Laporte told The Connexion. “The whole team are really happy.
“What is really great is the tone of this gentleman’s tweets. They’re joyful, enthusiastic and we find them really heartwarming.”
Mr de Laporte went on to explain the secret behind La Pataterie’s popular potato recipes.
“The potato variety that we use is called Samba and we buy them from a cooperative in Hauts-de-France. You won’t be able to get these potatoes in normal shops because they are very big, and so they are unique!
“The recipe that this gentleman tried was the Pom’ Au Four Savoyarde,” a baked potato served with an assortment of hams, raclette cheese, cornichons and salad.
“It was created in 1996 by La Pataterie’s founder, Jean-Christophe Pailleux, and it is still by far one of our bestsellers.
“So we have a lot of experience of making this dish, and the oven that we use is a bit different to the ones you would find at home.
“It is not a unique recipe, it’s not ‘Michelin star’, but all of our ingredients are of a really high quality and we have this potato cooking expertise dating back to 1996.”
Describing his La Pataterie meal, Mr Olson wrote: “It was amazing.
“That’s a giant baked potato, but a gloriously baked one,” Mr Olson added. “And I don’t know what type, but guessing something like a giant yukon gold steamed and baked to creamy, tender, but still with structure perfection.
“The angels were singing “Bonnie and Clyde” by Serge Gainsbourg and Bardot. Seriously, this was the greatest potato ever made by human hands, and we got it at what I have to assume is the french equivalent of [American casual restaurant chain] “Chili’s”. Words cannot express my amazement.
“I don’t understand how a chain baked potato could be so much better than every other baked potato I’ve ever had.”
What is La Pataterie?
Having opened its first restaurant in Brive-la-Gaillarde (Nouvelle-Aquitaine) in 1996, La Pataterie now has 220 branches across France, employing 2,700 people.
On its website, the chain celebrates its “warm,” “pastoral atmosphere,” which it says offers diners a chance to “journey back into the good old days and detach themselves from the world over the course of a meal.”’
Related stories
French chef serving Michelin quality cuisine to school pupils
Daily lunch voucher limit to stay at €38 to support French restaurants
What’s Your View?: A fair lunch out in France costs at least €13