Art Hotel
Address: 98 Rue d’Hauteville, 10th Arrondissement, Paris, France 75010
Tel: 01.45.23.85.00
Cuisine: Kosher Breakfast
Supervision: Beth Din de Paris
Auberge de La Bayre
Address: 55 Chemin du Tir-Aux-Pigeons, Aix-les-Bains, France 73100
Tel: 04-79-35-69-42
Supervision: Beth Din de Aix les Bains
Beit Loubavitch
Address: 25 Rue Riquet, Paris, France 75019
Tel: 01.40.36.93.90
Supervision: Chabad-Lubavitch
Hotel Aida Opera
Address: 17 Rue Du Conservatoire, 9th Arrondissement, Paris, France 75009
Tel: 01.45.23.11.11
Supervision: Beth Din de Paris
Hotel Apha
Address: 11 Rue Geoffroy, Marie, Paris, France 75009
Tel: 01.48.78.09.16
Supervision: Unknown – Check Kashrut!
Hotel Lebron
Address: 4 Rue Lamartine, Paris, France 75009
Tel : 01.48.78.75.52
Fax : 01.49.95.94.64
Supervision: Beth Din de Paris
Hotel les terasses d’Eze
Address: 72 Route de la Turbie, Nice, France 06 360
Tel: 04-92-41-55-55
Fax: 04-92-41-55-10
Email: info@terrasses-eze.com
Website: http://www.terrasses-eze.com/
Supervision: Beth Din de Nice
Jewish Resources for your visit:
- France’s highest point, also the highest point in Europe, is Mont Blanc, at 15,771 feet (4,807 meters) high.
- With at least 75 million foreign tourists per year, France is the most visited country in the world and maintains the third-largest income in the world from tourism.
- French toast was originally called pain perdu (lost bread), and the first written mention of the dish comes from the court of Henry V of England. The Oxford English Dictionary mentions the first use of the name “French toast” was in 1660 in a book called The Accomplisht Cook.
- There is only one stop sign in the entire French city of Paris.
- Europe’s largest canyon, the plunging Gorges du Verdon—also known as the Grand Canyon of Verdon—slices a 16-mile (25-km) swathe through Provence’s limestone plateau.