Things I Bring Back to France from America

No matter how many wonderful the foods, and other things, are in France, when I go back to the States, there are some things that Iย bring back to France with me. When I go to the other way, to the U.S.,ย I pack things that I have a hard time living without or to give asย gifts. Friends or hosts might get a loaf of Poilรขne bread, a French cheese thatโs elusive outside of France, a packet of salted butter, fleur de sel (French sea salt), Parisian chocolates, and for extra-special friends, a baked-the-same-day croissant. (Depending on my flight plans. And how much I like the person.)

When I go the other direction, Americaย to France, I packย certain things that I either canโt live without,ย because I havenโt found an equivalent, or I need (or like) to have them in my kitchen. For other room in the house, I stock up on unscented items. I, and my sensitive skin, and nose, arenโt fans ofย scented or over-scented items. (I once even saw vanilla-scented papier toilette. I like vanilla and all, butโฆ) And yes, thatโs me opening laundry detergents and smelling them in the supermarchรฉ aisles. Iโm waiting for the day I get busted (or however you say that in French) for doing that.
While I was packing my suitcase after a recent trip, I thought Iโd share some of the things that were goingย back with me. I hadย a few books, snack-sized zip-top bags (which I once bought by mistake, but are great for small bits of things), and Tomโs toothpaste (I once ran out and used Romainโs toothpaste, which I found out was fennel โ yuckโฆ). I had the usual tangle of electronic cords and adaptors, which I finally organized by buying a cable organizer. I know, I know โ Marie Kondo says not to buy organizers, but until they come up with a single cord and plug that works for everything (โฆplease! And now thereโs a movement to replace all our USB cordsโฆoofโฆ), I needed a better way to make sure I didnโt leave a cord behind, going in either direction.
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Spring-Loaded Ice Cream Scoop: The French love ice cream โ whatโs not to like? So why couldnโt I find spring-loaded ice cream scoops in various sizes for cookies? I didnโt get it until one of the clerks at MORA told me, โBecause the Frenchย donโt make cookies like youย do in the U.S.โ Oops. Got it. He was right. While the French make cookies, they donโt really do cookies where theย dough is dropped; theyโre usually rolled and cut out. The size thatโs available in France is used for scooping ice cream, like those restrained scoops at Berthillion,ย that make you want to order a triple, even though thatโs trรจs Amรฉricain.
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Sturdy Rubber Gloves: I love to cook and I love to bake. I do a lot of both, especially when Iโm testing recipes. One thing I donโt love are all the dishes, a by-product of what I do. Consequently my hands are often in a sudsy sink and I wear rubber gloves because all the soap and hot water isnโt good for them. Iโve bought the regular or โcheapโ rubber gloves for $1/โฌ1, which only lastย a couple of weeksโฆif Iโm lucky. The thick industrial-strength blue gloves that cost about ten times that, donโt wear out, but are so thick itโs hard to get a good grip on things. These neoprene gloves I found at Home Depot are perfect, and not too expensive. I think theyโre worth their weight, in rubber.
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Baking powder: I get a lot of questions about levure chimique, French baking powder โ but I donโt use it. Iโve familiarized myself with every other French baking ingredient but baking powder is my blind spot.ย It comes in little packets which are great for French recipes, which often call for โ1 packet of levure chemique,โ rather than a specific gram or cuillรจre ร cafรฉ (coffee spoon) measurement. I pick up tins of aluminum-free baking powder, which Iโve seen on the shelves at Le Grande รpicerie. But I find it easy to put a tin or two in my suitcase, just to be sure.
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Stone Ground Corn meal: In parts of Europe, people do use corn meal โ the Italians cook upย polenta and the Basque make taloa, a tortilla-like flat breadย โ but in general, itโs hard to find stone ground corn meal for corn breadย with the hearty taste of corn meal, like the bag I picked up in Virginia, on the left. I may try my hand at taloa with it, too.
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Dried fruits: I get terrific dried fruits in France; dates from Iraq, Tunisia and Jordan, prunes from Agen, and white figs from Turkey. Iโve been hooked on California dried apricots ever since I found out how to raid the box my family always had in the pantry that my motherย poached and served with chicken and rice. I love the tanginess of the California ones, which are less-sweet than their counterparts from elsewhere. I also like the concentrated flavor of dried Black Mission figs, which go particularly well in tapenade.
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Hazelnuts and Pecans: Iโve not understood why weโre so close to North Italy, where spectacular hazelnuts are grown, but they elude meย in Paris. The hazelnuts (and pecans) Iย often come acrossย are not super-fresh. And thereโs nothing worse than biting down on a funky hazelnut. Jacques Genin offered to sell me some hazelnuts, but since weโre frenemies โ he once tried to strangle me โ I decided it safer to bring some back in my suitcase.
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Rancho Gordo Beans: We get wonderful dried beans in France, although theseย heirloom beauties from Rancho Gordo really are special. The Christmas Limas (shown) cook up plump and meaty. For those who want to tackle cassoulet (such as the recipe in My Paris Kitchen), their cassoulet Tarbais beans are excellent, and more affordable.
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Masking Tape: Along with Sharpies, no restaurant cook is ever without masking tape for labeling containers. Itโs kind of pricey in France, and Iโve had to track it down. (Things often have a specific use in France, and youโre only supposed to use something for that one particular use.) I go rogueย and use it for labeling things. Someone gave me a โspecific useโ labelmaker for my birthday a few years back in Paris, which was perhaps a subtle hint to fall back into lineโฆ
Chipotle: Americans love smoky flavors. The umami flavor of smoky, smoldering chipotle is something that I crave, more than other chile sauces. And the French are getting into the action now, too, but Iโve not seen chipotles.ย You can buy dried chilis in Arab and African markets, but they donโt have the same flavor as chipotles. At the register, I get warnedย not to buy them because they are pimentรฉ (spicy), which I have to explain that thatโs what Iโm buying them for.ย Believe it or not, Iโve never used the ones in the can, but saw David Leite make Chipotle Maple Barbecueย Sauceย from of them, and thatโs on my docket for this summer.
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Sorghum Syrup: Iโm not too familiar with this. A nice fellow brought me a tiny, unmarked bottle (behind) at a book event, then another friend gave me some that she used for a catering project where she mixed it with butter for people to slather on warm corn bread. Iโve had Alice Medrichโs sorghum ice cream with sorghum peanut brittle bookmarked from her book, Flavor Flours, for a while now. Now that I have the syrup (and I bought some sorghum flour, too), I think Iโll be churning that one up in the future. (And just to raise eyebrows, Iโll label the container with my masking tape.)
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Non-Stick Spray: I donโt turn my nose up at this non-stick spray, well, it works really well for bundt and kugelhof pans. Some recipes just work better if the pan is sprayed with non-stick spray. We just need to deal with it. Curiously, the only place Iโve seen this in Paris is at G. Detou, sold as a product thatโs geared toward professional cooks. A neighbor in Paris told me that spraying vinegar on wooden planters outside will prevent dogs from tinkling on them. Where do I find spray vinegar?
[Update: Thereโs a discussion in the comments, and links, as to whetherย aerosol cooking oilsย are allowed on planes.]
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Quarter Sheets: Anyone who has worked in a restaurant immediatelyย knows what a half-sheet is. In cookbook lingo, technically, theyโre jelly roll pans. But I donโt know anyone who has made a jelly roll since the late, great Marion Cunningham passed away. Flat, rimless baking sheets are what most people think of when you say โbaking sheet.โ But without the rim I find them hard to handle. (They donโt use the same half-sheet pan in France that they do in America.) And anyone whoโs worked in the panic of a restaurant kitchen know something you donโt have a good grip onย means disaster lurking ahead.ย However, in all those years, I never knew what a quarter-sheet was, until I saw them at a restaurant-supply shop in New York. Romain, my Frenchman, instantly bought one. On the nextย trip, I bought two.
Related Links
Ingredients for American Baking in Paris
Food Gifts to Bring French People from America
10 Things to Bring Back from Your Trip to Paris
10 Goofy Things Youโll Find in a French Supermarket
The Rules: Bringing Things Home from France



















