For a style of Marseille, and how its culinary heritage is formed by the ocean, there are few locations like Le Petit Good Passedat. Because it opened on the water’s edge in 1917, the restaurant has served refined variations of bouillabaisse and different native specialties. However within the arms of Gérald Passedat, the present chef and grandson of the unique founder, it has taken seafood to new gastronomic heights—and earned its third Michelin star in 2008.
Once I arrived for lunch on a sunny autumn day, I used to be struck by the setting: an all-white eating room constructed over the rocky shoreline, with a curved wall of glass that offers the place the texture of a luxurious liner crusing on the Mediterranean. After taking my seat by the window, I ordered the eight-course “Passedat” tasting menu.
Anaïs Boileau
Every dish informed a narrative. The amuse-bouche had a seafood broth that was as blue because the cerulean waters exterior. The chef’s signature dish was steamed sea bass topped with ribbons of zucchini and cucumber, served over a flavorful base of untamed fennel, tomatoes, lemon, and a contact of truffle. Passedat named the dish after his grandmother Lucie, who was raised in Quercy, a area identified for its farming and truffle searching.
“It’s a couple of lifestyle that goes again to the area’s roots and embraces native merchandise,” Passedat informed me on the finish of the lunch service. He added that he sources 70 varieties of seafood for his menus, together with monkfish, scorpion fish, and lobster caught off Marseille’s rugged coast. “I’ve labored with the native fishermen for a few years.”
Courtesy of Domaine de Montine
All this may increasingly clarify why his restaurant is highlighted by the Vallée de la Gastronomie, or the Valley of Gastronomy, a food-and-wine path created in 2022 to advertise the storied culinary heritage of three areas of France. The 385-mile path traces a thousand-year-old commerce route between Marseille and Dijon that passes by Lyon, arguably the capital of French gastronomy. Foodies and wine lovers can select their very own journey, with some 500 stops to select from, together with eating places, wineries, inns, farms, markets, bakeries, chocolatiers, creameries, museums, castles—even a snail breeder. The path celebrates family-run companies and small-batch artisans that guests won’t in any other case encounter.
With solely three days to spare, I centered on the decrease half of the path. I started my gastronomic street journey in Marseille, the place I wandered by slender streets till I reached the Outdated Port, the town’s historic coronary heart. Boats swayed mast-to-mast and fishermen offered their catch within the fish market. The motion principally takes place round 8 a.m., when the market opens; I arrived later within the morning, however regardless of the hour, crates piled excessive with sardines, purple mullet, and sole nonetheless lined the stone-paved waterfront, just a few toes from the place the fishermen had moored their vessels.
From left: Tree4Two/iStock/Getty Photographs; Anaïs Boileau
The next day, I drove north for an hour, on winding roads flanked by yellow fields of late-fall grapevines, till I arrived at Château La Coste, simply exterior Aix-en-Provence. The five hundred-acre property features a sculpture park, an artwork gallery, an natural vineyard, and an opulent 28-suite resort, Villa La Coste.
I had gone there to have lunch at Hélène Darroze à Villa La Coste, one in all six eating places on the property. Housed in a glass pavilion, the house overlooks fields of natural vineyards, olive groves, and patches of woodland interspersed with installations by art-world heavyweights resembling Louise Bourgeois, Frank Gehry, and Yoko Ono.
Darroze, a French chef who additionally runs Michelin-starred eating places in Paris and London, had crafted a menu wherein the area’s greens have been solid in starring roles. I ordered a six-course menu, “A Stroll into the Gardens of Provence,” that included a mousseline of carrots topped with carrot crisps, served with tandoori-spiced shrimp in a cubeb-pepper sauce. One other dish featured a medley of tomatoes from the château’s backyard—as a jelly and a compote, in addition to candied, dried, and sliced uncooked—alongside a goat-milk cheese garnished with fish roe from Martigues, a city close to Marseille.
From left: Richard Haughton/Courtesy of Le Petit Good Passedat; Juliette Charvet
After lunch I drove north previous the Luberon mountains to Domaine de Montine, a family-run wine property close to the medieval village of Grignan. The property has a truffle orchard and a farmhouse resort, the place I spent a restful evening after sampling a few of its wines with native cheeses. Within the morning, I visited a century-old truffle market in close by Richerenches. Held each Saturday between November and March, it’s cut up into two sections: a public space that takes over the principle road, and a wholesale-only space on a aspect road.
I used to be accompanied by Jean-Luc and Rémi Monteillet, whose household personal Domaine de Montine. They gave me a glimpse into the secretive world of “black gold” buying and selling, mentioning negotiations happening out of automotive trunks. Earlier than leaving the market, we stopped at a meals truck. I ordered a corn velouté soup, which was hearty, heat, and perfumed with truffles.
Again on the property, Rémi and I went truffle searching with Sydney, a boisterous Australian shepherd that bounded forward of us, sniffing underneath neat rows of oak bushes. Each time she frantically began to dig, we caught up together with her and thoroughly unearthed the dear mushroom utilizing a small hoe. We stopped after she discovered 4 walnut-size items. No one may come right here with out tasting the property’s truffles, so I had a decadent lunch of chestnut soup and cheese ravioli, each topped with truffle shavings, which I savored on the resort’s sunny terrace.
From left: From left: Courtesy of Michelas St. Jemms; Bernhard Winkelmann/Courtesy of Hélène Darroze
My closing cease took me one other hour north to Domaine Michelas St. Jemms, a small however prestigious wine property in Mercurol-Veaunes, a commune within the northern Rhône Valley. Once I arrived, a tasting led by Sébastien Michelas, who runs the vineyard along with his three sisters, was underneath approach within the cavernous cellar. Michelas moved from barrel to barrel, drawing wine and passionately describing the strategy and terroir at every cease.
His enthusiasm was infectious, his tales evoking the rugged hills, the generations of winemakers, the soil itself. Standing amid stacks of dusty bottles and getting old barrels, I savored the Viognier and the Syrah. Their advanced layers lingered on my palate, a closing tribute to the various flavors of Provence and the Rhône.
Plan Your Personal Culinary Journey
The Vallée de la Gastronomie lets meals lovers plot their very own culinary journey between Marseille and Dijon. Listed here are 4 extra of our picks.
Escargot des Restanques: Be taught all about heliciculture, or snail breeding, at this family-run farm in St. Remèze. Jars of Burgundy snails are prepared for buy.
Ferme du Brégalon: This small goat farm in Rognes grows its personal animal feed and makes cheeses utilizing conventional strategies.
Les Ateliers Weiss: Craft your individual sweet bars and nibble to your coronary heart’s content material at this venerable chocolate manufacturing facility, based in 1882 in St.-Étienne.
Moulin Saint Michel: This historical mill in Mouriès has been making olive oil the identical approach since 1744. It additionally sells tapenade, jams, and different native merchandise.
A model of this story first appeared within the December 2024 situation of Journey + Leisure underneath the headline “Of Land and Sea.”