When we first drove through the Arc de Triomphe, I said to myself, “This is where everything ends.” Even though I come from a city with a chaotic traffic system like Istanbul, I had never seen anything this wild. For a while, sitting in the car, I couldn’t quite understand how we made it through — or how we suddenly found ourselves heading into the calm streets of the 16th arrondissement.
As we drove through the streets of the 16th with the real estate agent who was showing us apartments near my daughter’s school, I realized this was not the Paris I had seen before, nor the one I had imagined. There were few restaurants, almost no bars, limited social diversity — it felt much more like a residential area. My first impression was, honestly, rather negative.
But after moving in, things slowly changed. The presence of Bois de Boulogne, the swimming pool in Dauphine, Le Petit Marquise’s croissants, Béchu’s traditional baguette, Androuet’s cheeses, Fred of Paris 16, Sébastien from Paul Chêne, Didier — the wine expert at Saint-Vincent — and, most importantly, the calm and safe streets my daughter and I walk every day on our way to and from school… all of this made me fall in love with the 16th.
Later on, when Noir opened and Furkan & Zeynep came back, it felt as if nothing was missing from the neighborhood anymore. That was until Belén — something we didn’t even realize was missing, simply because she had never been part of our lives before 😁
It turns out that with Belén, nothing would be missing in our neighborhood at all.
On Rue Gustave Courbet, a street we very rarely went to for burgers, and more often stopped by just to drop my daughter off at her jewelry workshop (now closed), a small shop suddenly began to show signs of life. And then, almost just like that, with its green façade and the big smile inside, Belén entered our lives.
à empoter, s’il vous plait ! (photo by: Amber)
From the very first moment, a customer-plus-friendship relationship formed naturally. I was hooked from day one. With my first bite of empanada, I was instantly transported back to my childhood — to my grandmother’s kıymalı puf börekleri. That onion, that minced meat 😋
no comment !!! (photo by: Amber)
Then came a spinach pastry made with puff pastry, and once again I was back in my childhood — this time at my aunt’s kitchen, watching her roll out spinach börek by hand…
As for croissants, I had always kept my distance because of À la Petite Marquise — until I tried Belén’s signature zahter croissant 😂😂 Now I sometimes catch myself craving a zahter croissant out of the blue in the late afternoon.
croissant au zaatar ! (photo by: Amber)
Recently, we celebrated Belén’s first year — a year built on hard work. She didn’t turn me down and gave me a small interview so my followers could get to know her better.
Please, read on:
PBW: When and how did your culinary journey begin?
BG: My journey kind of started unofficially when I was growing up in Argentina — food was everywhere, part of daily life, family, memories… all that 🍑👩🍳.
But officially, it started when I moved to Paris at 30 years oldto go to culinary school.
That’s when I really said: okay, this is my path now.
PBW: How did you decide to open your shop in Paris? Did you have fears? Who supported you?
BG: I realized Paris had become truly home after having my son ❤️.
As a family we decided we were staying here, and suddenly opening in Paris made sense — even though my original plan was actually to open in Buenos Aires.
Was I scared? YES 😅.
Paris is intimidating. The level of pastry here is insane.
I kept wondering if I could really make it here.
That self-doubt and imposter syndrome followed me for years — always thinking I wasn’t ready, that I still needed to learn more.
Then one day, I just let go and went for it.
And honestly everything happened so fast once I found the space that I didn’t even have time to overthink 😂.
My biggest supporters? My husband (who’s been telling me to open since the day we met 🤣💛), my son, and my amazing friends who always lift me up.
happiness (photo by: Amber)
PBW: Why the 16th arrondissement?
BG: Because it’s where I live and where I built my Parisian life 🏡💚.
It’s a neighborhood I know really well.
When I opened, there really weren’t many modern or “cool” pastry places around — mostly traditional shops.
I felt my concept would fit perfectly.
Also, being close to the Eiffel Tower helps bring a nice mix of locals and tourists 👀✨.
PBW: What’s your favorite ingredient to work with?
BG: Honestly… dough 😂.
I know it’s not “technically” an ingredient, but it’s my favoritething to work with.
If I have to pick a real ingredient → vanilla.
If vanilla beans weren’t so expensive, I’d put them in EVERYTHING 😍.
PBW: Is there an ingredient you don’t like but include because customers love it?
BG: Avocado 🥑😅.
I personally don’t love it, and it’s hard to find perfectly ripe ones in Paris.
But customers love our avocado toast, and it’s that “healthier” option among all the buttery stuff… so yeah, it stayed.
PBW: An ingredient from Argentina you’d love to use in Paris but can’t?
BG: YES 😭 → membrillo (quince paste).
You can find it here, but it’s not the same as the Argentine one I grew up with.
I tried using it, but French people found it too sweet, so I kind of gave up.
during an interview (photo by: Amber)
PBW: Would you ever share your “chipas” recipe? 😁
BG: YES I would 😄🙌
Here’s the link! Chipas !
PBW: A product that started small but became essential?
BG: Empanadas!!! 🥟
I NEVER thought they would become such a hit, and now we make a ton.
They were definitely not part of the original “main” plan.
perfect bite ! (photo by: Amber)
Also: our vanilla flan has become huge since September — and I’m super happy about that because I worked on that recipe for a long time. I think we finally nailed it 🎉💛.
PBW: Have you considered hosting workshops?
BG: OH MY GOD YES 😍🎓.
It was in my original business plan back when I thought I’d have 100 m² instead of 34 m² 😂.
I love teaching — I’ve done it before — so it will definitely happen.
I just need to figure out where: here in the shop or in a bigger space one day.
Workshops would be:
🥐 pastry
🍞 sourdough
🥟 empanadas
🍷 wine (obviously)
PBW: Is there someone who inspired you? And what qualities do you want in people you work with?
BG: Yes — many people inspired me:
✨ My aunt, a talented and passionate chef 👩🍳
✨ Julien Boscus, my first “real kitchen” boss — insanely creative, generous with his knowledge
✨ My friend Shaheen from Miel Bakery in London — she showed me it was possible; she absolutely rocks 🤘
Qualities I want in people I work with?
Kindness, passion, curiosity, generosity, attention to detail… AND a growth mindset.
I love people who are always learning.
People who think they already know everything don’t interest me 😅.
PBW: Publications you follow to improve yourself?
BG: I love:
📘 Fou de Pâtisserie
📚 lots of cookbooks — I look through them to see what’s out there and try new techniques
✨ I prefer doing stages rather than reading: I trained at Conseil Bellouet, and next year I’m doing one at the École de la Boulangerie in the south of France because they specialize in sourdough.
PBW: Who are your favorite pastry chefs and pâtisseries in Paris?
BG: My absolute favorites 😍:
🍰 Mori Yoshida — elegant, refined, perfect
🍓 Claire Heitzler — queen of seasonality and fruit
🥐 Du Pain et des Idées — iconic viennoiseries that make everyone happy
PBW: Favorite restaurants? Guilty pleasure?
BG: My favorites in Paris:
✨ Origines
✨ Canailles Pigalle
✨ Bistrot Paul Bert
✨ Le Servan
And my guilty pleasure?
Hot dogs 🌭😂
Every time I eat one I regret it… but also love it.