Near the Jeppesen Terminal atrium, Pour La France does sandwiches fast
This spot sits pre-security in the Jeppesen Terminal at Denver International Airport, so it works for anyone getting dropped off early or meeting an arrival. You don’t need a boarding pass to eat here, which helps if you’re coordinating with family or a rideshare and want real food instead of grabbing from a kiosk by the TSA lines.
Pour La France runs on a quick-service model: order at the counter, get your sandwich or salad in a few minutes, then grab a seat or take it to-go. Prices land in typical airport range, with sandwiches and salads usually in the low-to-mid teens in dollars and drinks extra. It’s fine for a 20–30 minute stop before heading upstairs to security in the Jeppesen Terminal.
The menu leans on sandwiches, breakfast items, and salads that travel decently through the terminal. Cold sandwiches generally survive a 10–15 minute walk to the A, B, or C train better than anything hot, so think turkey, ham, or veggie if you’re headed straight for the checkpoint. If you need something you can eat standing in a TSA line, stick to a wrapped sandwich instead of anything that needs a fork.
Because it’s in the main Jeppesen Terminal, lines spike sharply in the early morning bank around 6–8 a.m. and again from about 4–6 p.m. when departures stack up. Seating in this part of the terminal fills up roughly 30–40 minutes before those banks, so grab a table first if you’re in a group, then send one person to order.
Practical tip: plan your timing so you finish at Pour La France at least 45 minutes before boarding if you still have to clear Jeppesen Terminal security and ride the train out to gates A, B, or C.