No
bags to pack, no passport needed!
Just a
willingness to travel back in time for a dining experience that transports you
to a French dining car in the 1880s.
As
we made our way up the stairs to genteel Le
Train Bleu, we saw a narrow hallway lined with vintage
train ads from the 19th century.
Stepping into the restaurant – or rather, the
dining car - we were transported into a cozy, dimly-lit atmosphere, adorned
with Victorian lamps and brass luggage racks.
Starched linens covering two rows of
tables, walls and ceilings padded with forest-green velvet interiors, accented
with dark wood panels and round-cornered windows, take
you away from the hustle and bustle of life.
Given choices of anything from
Croque-monsieur, Steak Frites, Salade Nicoise, to American dishes of Maryland
crab cakes, roasted Long Island duck, chopped salads, etc., the cuisine was
delightful.
Le Train Bleu is modeled
after the dining car of the
Calais-Mediterranée Express, a luxury French night express train which ran
between Calais and the French Riviera from 1886-2003. Transporting the upper crust of Britain
during the 1920’s, this train received its name due to the deep blue sleeping
cars. Early passengers included the
Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII, Charlie Chaplin, designer Coco Chanel,
Winston Churchill and writers F. Scott Fitzgerald, Evelyn Waugh and Somerset
Maugham.
Appearing
on the French channel ORTF, a French television series, Le train bleu s'arrete
13 fois (The Blue Train Stops 13
times), which ran between October 8, 1965, and March 11, 1966. Featuring
one mystery episode for each of the thirteen stops of Le Train Bleu between Paris and Menton, based on
short stories by Pierre
Boileau
and Thomas
Narcejac.
Philip
Marlowe comes around after being knocked unconscious and sees a poster
advertising traveling the French Riviera by The Blue Train, in Raymond Chandler’s novel, The
Lady in the Lake (1943).
Also the subject of an Agatha Christie murder mystery
(being a popular European train it’s to be expected), The Mystery of The Blue Train, was published in 1928.
Dining in Le Train Bleu, was truly an escape – so much
so, that sometimes you thought you might have actually felt the movement of the
dining car.
Bon appétit!
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