Paris has long positioned itself as the arbiter of taste—in every sense of the word. But within a city where Italian cuisine is woven into daily life and Japanese restaurants are regularly awarded Michelin stars, African cuisine has followed a different trajectory: it has long remained associated with community restaurants and street-food formats, and has rarely been framed within the realms of bistronomy or fine dining. In recent years, however, a new guard of chefs has risen to dominate Paris’s restaurant scene, integrating African flavors into the classic French culinary vocabulary.
A new generation of Afro-descendant chefs is expanding the definition of what French gastronomy can encompass. The shift has been gradual, driven by both persistence and demographic reality, with France being home to one of Europe’s largest African diasporas. A generational change is also underway. Younger diners in Paris are more multicultural, globally literate, and curious, their palates shaped by travel, streaming culture, and diasporic music. The appetite for layered identities in the food Parisians eat will only continue to grow.
Below, we spotlight the chefs shaping this evolving Afro-Parisian table.
Étienne Biloa, Touki Bouki
Photo: Chris Saunders
Paris’s Belleville neighborhood has long been shaped by migration—but at Touki Bouki, Étienne Biloa gives that spirit a contemporary voice. His path to gastronomy was anything but linear, moving through music, publishing, and creative production before turning fully to food. For years, he worked behind the scenes as an agent to amplify the voices of Afro-descendant chefs in France, including the stars Mory Sacko and Dieuveil Malonga. Eventually, he stepped forward himself.
Photo: Chris Saunders






