Review of Le Cagnard restaurant in Cagnes-Sur-Mer (Côte d'Azur)
by Andy Hayler
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Food Rating: 7/10
Last visited: January 2001
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Le Cagnard is set in a beautiful 14th Century building perched on a hillside overlooking Nice, a 15 minutes cab ride from Nice airport, in the middle of a very well preserved mediaeval village. If you are driving in your own car be aware that the streets are extremely narrow, and judging by the various marks on the very solid stone walls of the town, a number of drivers take the corners too quickly. The dining room is in two parts, the main room with a view overlooking a little terrace on which you can eat in the summer. Service is very friendly and relaxed. Warm slivers of foie gras were excellent (8/10), a difficult dish to do well, and here it was very well done indeed. A risotto of langoustines had pleasantly cooked langoustines but a rather runny risotto (6/10).
The cheese board is extensive, with a fairly conventional selection in generally good condition, though an Époisses was distinctly unripe (7/10). A lemon soufflé was cooked a little too heavily and so had started to hint at lumpiness, while the outside was just a little too stiff (4/10). Better was an excellent, simply cooked sea bass that I sampled (8/10), while at lunch the following day there was an excellent salad of langoustines. Culinary trends have reached even here, with a variety of exotic flavours in the salad that worked well enough but were in total too many to be harmonious (7/10, but would have been 8/10 if they had just left some of the salad elements out). A poulet Bresse was better, cooked to a lovely brown colour and carved at table, served with a simple gravy of the cooking juices and some root vegetables; as usual, less is more (8/10). A wine list features plenty of choice from Provence and Bandol, and a wide selection of burgundies.


Le Cagnard is set in a
beautiful 14th Century building perched on a
hillside overlooking Nice, a 15 minutes cab ride
from Nice airport, in the middle of a very well
preserved mediaeval village. If you are driving in
your own car be aware that the streets are extremely
narrow, and judging by the various marks on the very
solid stone walls of the town, a number of drivers
take the corners too quickly. The dining room is in
two parts, the main room with a view overlooking a
little terrace on which you can eat in the summer.
Service is very friendly and relaxed. Warm slivers
of foie gras were excellent (8/10), a difficult dish
to do well, and here it was very well done indeed. A
risotto of langoustines had pleasantly cooked
langoustines but a rather runny risotto (6/10).