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A dish by Kyan Khojandi and Eloy Spinnler at Colère

A dish by Kyan Khojandi and Eloy Spinnler at Colère

Nell Giroir | 5/13/25, 5:05 PM

Eloy Spinnler teams up with Kyan Khojandi to create a vegetarian, spicy and seasonal dish, to be discovered at Colère. All profits will be donated to the Linkee association.

Since the beginning of May, the Colère restaurant (2 toques) in Paris has been offering a new dish: "Liane Khojandi". A four-handed collaboration between chef Eloi Spinnler and multi-hatted comedian Kyan Khojandi, this vegetarian stew inspired by the Iranian flagship dish ghormeh-abzi, blends childhood memories with a commitment to solidarity. All profits go to Linkee, an association that fights student poverty.

An angry Franco-Iranian dish

Originally from Iran, Kyan Khojandi chose to revisit one of his favorite dishes, ghormeh-sabzi - literally "herb stew" - alongside Eloi Spinnler. An emblematic recipe of Iranian cuisine, the chef has adapted it to the spirit of Colère une cuisine: expressive, spicy and? on the plate, we find a generous base of herbs and seasonal vegetables - leek, asparagus, red onion, black garlic, kidney beans, peas, parsley, chives, mint, chard? A blend of spices (sumac, fenugreek, Espelette pepper, lemon powder, zaatar...) is added for a vibrant, colorful dish that evolves with the seasons. Together, they create the complete recipe on the chef's YouTube channel.

A committed dish to benefit students

Named "Liane Khojandi", the recipe also has a cause. All profits are donated to Linkee, an association that fights food waste and redistributes food baskets to students in precarious situations. The chef and comedian, both patrons of the association, have created a sincere, generous and supportive meal, to be enjoyed on the Colère menu until the end of the summer.

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Maxim's or La Tour d'Argent, Allard or Les Lyonnais, Le Bistrot de Paris or Les Petits Pavés don't (or don't any longer) need us to boast that they're Parisian. Others, such as Lucas Carton, le Grand Véfour, Denis, Lapérouse, le Vivarois, le Relais des Pyrénées, for various and complex reasons, are denied the felicities of the great vogue they are the first to deserve. Others, from Lasserre to Mère Michel, via Prunier, Ledoyen, Drouant, Jamin, Garin, Galant Verre, La Grille, Les Anges or La Marée, have acquired the kind of serenity that comes with approaching perfection. Often opulent, almost always complete, they are above fashion. None of these will be the "new" restaurants of the fall season. The expression may sound sophisticated. Why "should" we go to certain restaurants just because we're back from vacation? Well, if you don't "have to", you do. Every year, around October, stars start to shine that owe nothing to Michelin. All the larks flock to them. For us, who don't judge restaurants by the shape or reputation of their customers, it's clear - or at least it's easy to guess - that a score of small restaurants will be making or re-making a name for themselves. Here, we'll just look at those who also know how to serve good food. Le Duc, a prince of seafood The great originality of Le Duc is the variety and craziness of its seafood platter. Instead of offering the classic assemblage of calibrated oysters, beautifully opened clams and oversized raw mussels, Mr. Minchelli has imagined transporting us to a harbor bistro, although the restaurant's elegant decor, all varnished wood, is more reminiscent of a large ocean-going captain's cabin.he serves a large bouquet of everything that has just arrived for him from the island of Ré (where his brother runs another "Duc", in La Flotte). Oysters, of course, flat and Portuguese, cockles, clams, mussels, clams, barnacles, razor clams, the improbable poussepied, which looks like a cluster of turtle legs, periwinkles, sea snails, edible crab, trilliums, shrimps, prawns, and more.trilliums, shrimps, langoustines, spider crabs, and even shellfish that are virtually unknown, such as slender lavagnons or pretty sea almonds. These seafoods are presented à la diable on goémon, with a rare diversity, generosity and freshness. We'll let you open most of them with a scaling knife (we'll give you a little help). But there are too many and they're pretty expensive.Instead, share this platter with two or three guests and save your appetite for the fried red mullet, grilled fish and exquisite clams with thyme. Drink white Bandol (and, as an aperitif, the famous Pineau des Charentes) and write a check for a good thirty francs per person. 243, boulevärd Raspail (XIVᵉ) Serves until 10:30 p.m. Closed Sundays. La Mazère, truffles until dawn Even if it wasn't the successor to the excellent "Florence" on rue de Ponthieu, even if it didn't offer the same extraordinary specialties as "Chez Proust" on rue des Martyrs, truffles, foie gras, cassoulet, confits, even if it didn't fall in love with the local cuisine.even if it didn't come just at the right time, after the demise of "Berkeley", to soothe the aching feet of businessmen on the Champs-Elysées, Roger Lamazère's new restaurant could only be the big event of the fall season: a good, luxurious, elegant restaurant, it's open until 2 or even 3 in the morning. By 11 p.m., neighboring Lasserre, Ledoyen and Taillevent have closed their shutters, and poor millionaires are wandering aimlessly after exclusive films. Lamazère, who is from Toulouse, and therefore cut to the bone, and, what's more, accustomed - in Proust's words - as he was when he was an "itinerant magician", to living at night, is not afraid to offer a real "supper". 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For example, a very fine veal terrine served with an exquisite cressonnette (sour cream with watercress), or petits gris in a fricassee with herbs, coq au vin served with tourtou (a buckwheat pancake from the Limousin region), or sole in red wine, stuffed with a mushroom duxelle. Usually - and except at Lasserre - we shun duck à l'orange, but here, with its tray of mashed peas, it's simply admirable. Nor should you overlook the very simple filet of beef with green pepper: the meat is melt-in-the-mouth, tasty and the slightly creamy sauce is discreet and truly remarkable. Finally, the warm apple tartelette is one of the best pastries you can eat in Paris today. The morgon from Augris is a natural and, in the end, the only fault of these "Belles Gourmandes", adopted by the businessmen and publishers of Boulevard Saint-Germain, is that the price of their favors quickly exceeds 45 F. 5, r. Paul-Louis-Courier (VIIᵉ). Serves until 10:30 pm. Closed on Sundays. 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L'archestrate, in search of lost cuisine The prize for originality this season in Paris undoubtedly goes to the young Alain Senderens, who opened an astonishing little restaurant behind the Fontaine de Mars a year ago. The unpronounceable name Archestrate comes from the unlikely first great chef of Pericles' Greece. 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Another day, it'll be pretty red mullet, or a pike or a hare; but each time, the product will be of the best provenance and prepared with all the love of which an old-school cook is capable. In the cubbyhole that serves as her kitchen, Mme Cartet also prepares large tarts that don't look like much, but that bring back memories of grandmother's pies from the very first bite. 62, rue de Malte (XI°). Closed on Sundays. Quai d'Orsay, we'd kiss the boss When we predict that Quai d'Orsay will become a trendy restaurant, we come across like the marshalsea. This summer, the little terrace was packed to the rafters, and all Parisian gourmets were making a note of it in their address books. The fact remains that we were the ones who discovered it, so it was a bit of an initiation. In addition to our duty, we have the right to talk about it here. Mr. and Mrs. Bigeard have created something quite remarkable on the site of an old chauffeur's bistro. 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For the Sèvres-Babylone district's writers, publishers and journalists, who, as everyone knows, often have good taste, there's a good reason for this: Martin Cantegrit, ex-patron of the "Décaméron", had the good idea of hiring the former chef of the "Bourgogne".And so, in this very comfortable and charming room, decorated in Empire style, Messrs. the editors invited their beloved authors to dine on the exquisitely delicate oeufs en meurette and sweetbread puff pastry, the turbot with beurre blanc, worthy of that at the "Mère Michel", the côte de béchamel, and the "Mourvèdre". Mère Michel", the rib of beef with its rare taste of real meat, and the chocolate profiteroles that round off a perfectly balanced menu. Last but not least, the wine list will delight wine lovers and wine seekers alike. 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