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Win the Ultimate Gourmet Experience in France for 2 Worth $20,000 from French Tourist Bureau

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Dates

Closing Date 31/07/2017
Draw Date 01/08/2017

Prizes

Description As outlined.
No. of Prizes 1
Total Prize Pool $20,000.00

Entry Requirements

Open To Australia-wide
Entry Limit One per person
Entry Methods Website
Prerequisites n/a

ENTRY

Answer 6 trivia questions and fill out the form.
A1: Cheese cake
A2: Bread dough, butter and sugar
A3: Tahitian raw fish
A4: cannelé
A5: Between the Casino and the Mediterranean sea
A6: Saint Emilion

PRIZE

A French gourmet experience for 2 valued at $20,000, including:
1. Return economy airfares from Australia (departing Sydney) to Paris via Air France, valued at $6,000.
2. A credit of 125,000 Le Club AccorHotels points, providing the winner with €2,500 credit to spend at any AccorHotels in France (two nights each in Aquitaine, Beaune, Bordeaux, Brittany, Monaco and Tahiti).
3. Two Rail passes provided by Rail Europe.
4. Four dinners for 2 as follows:
(a) Dinner including wine at the restaurant “Le Quatrieme Mur” in Bordeaux, valued at €180.
(b) Dinner at the restaurant Loiseau des Vignes, valued at €180.
(c) Dinner at Nobu Restaurant/Fairmont Hotel, Monaco.
(d) Dinner at restaurant TBA.
5. Private winery visits in Bordeaux and Beaune provided by Vintec.
6. Two Monaco Visitors Pass offering complimentary access to some attractions and museums in Monaco, provided by Monaco Tourism.

Related Stores

francealacarte.com.au
francealacarte.com.au

closed Comments

  • +4

    thanks for the answers and posting the comp :)

  • +3

    @gnv9 aka OP, Thank you VERY Much for all the answers :)

  • +3

    Thanks a lot for the answers OP.

  • +2

    WHAT the hell, why do I have to be a Mrs to enter?! I hate forms like this. I am neither a MR or a MRS!

    • +2

      The French are in the process of phasing out Mademoiselle and they've never had an equivalent to Ms. So all women are becoming Madame, which they're translating here as Mrs. The translator hasn't realised that Mrs means married, so it's a bad translation.
      Also, the French don't use Dr, Rev. etc. in a social context (only professionally).

  • +1

    I could do with a trip to France ;-)
    Thanks gnv x

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