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How Much Butter Can Be in a Croissant?

Living in France for a number of years, my French has gotten pretty good. As long as Iโ€™m talking about food, that is. Last night I was having dinner at Le Vin au Vert (70, rue de Dunkerque) wine bar with a few friends. One talks really quickly and with the noisy bobo patrons at the surrounding tables, chattering on les smartphones and getting upโ€ฆ

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Apricot, Almond and Lemon Bread

When is a cake not a cake? When youโ€™re in France. These โ€˜cakesโ€™ (pronounced kek) are what we might call โ€˜quick breadโ€™ in the United States, although we usually make them sweet. So Iโ€™ll have to give one to the French and say that theyโ€™re rightโ€”this actually falls more in the category of a cake rather than a bread. People often ask what people inโ€ฆ

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Spritz

Cocktail culture has landed in Paris. It took a while, though. France has always been known for its wine and beer, rather than Torontos, Cosmopolitans, and Martinis. And many of us have memories of trying to explain to a very confused cafรฉ waiter how to make a martini, when they want to serve you a glass of Martini & Rossi (vermouth).

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Lausanne, Switzerland

Everyone has a story about the Swiss, which sometimes ends up with them getting reprimanded for moving something out of the exact place where it belongs. Or arriving 12.5 seconds too late and missing a train. So I was freaking out when I was en route there because I filled out the blank spaces myself on my railpass that asked for my name and passportโ€ฆ

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Marche des Producteurs in Paris

I was actually thrilled to see a market of producteurs that was happening this weekend in Paris. We have some great food available in Paris but I donโ€™t get the opportunity often to meet and shop directly from the people who are producing the food. This is especially true with meat, which is sold by butchers and not the people who raise it, but Iโ€ฆ

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Baked Apricot Bars

Iโ€™d been planning for this trip for years, ever since I first laid my hands on a copy of Baked, the cookbook. Quite a few baking books come out and a lot are really good, but this one spoke to me. I mean, each and every dessert sounded like something I not only wanted to bake, but wanted to eat. As in right away. Asโ€ฆ

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Raclette

Sometimes you wonder if people do eat all the stuff we think they eat in other countries. Do Russian people really eat blini and follow them up with shots of iced vodka? In Hawaii, are people sitting around dipping their fingers into bowls of poi? Do Americans actually eat the skins of potatoes? How many Parisians actually nibble on macarons? And is it so thatโ€ฆ

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Brown Bread Ice Cream

When I was in Ireland, after a wonderful dinner at an old country inn, I was served a big bowl of Brown Bread Ice Cream. I had heard about this unusual ice cream quite a while back and like Grape-Nuts Ice Cream, which is something apparently enjoyed in New England (although I was born and live there for eighteen years and never saw or tastedโ€ฆ

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Making Swiss Cheese Fondue

Iโ€™ve never really had fondue. Well, I am sure that at some point in my life someone dusted off their never-used fondue pot from the back of their kitchen cabinet and melted some stringy cheese in it. But it must not have been memorable because I canโ€™t recall it at all. (Or perhaps a few shots of kirsch took care of that.) Swiss fondue isโ€ฆ

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