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Moroโ€™s Noodle Pudding

Iโ€™ve had all three cookbooks from Moro in London stacked up in my apartment for about a year, and havenโ€™t made anything from them. Theyโ€™re very personal cookbooks, the recipes and photos invoking a time and place, with the food arcing between Moorish cooking and the foods of North Africa, along with the Middle East, nodding toward sustainability. I keep picking them up, leafing throughโ€ฆ

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How to Make Clarified Butter

ย  Clarified butter is usedย when youโ€™ll be frying something either for an extended period or over high heat. For those times when you want the flavor of butter, rather than oil, youโ€™ll want to use clarified butterย can stand being cooked longer, and to a higher temperature, than regular butter. Clarifying butter removes the milk solids, which are what causes the butter to burn if cookedโ€ฆ

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Berlin

A few things to know if you go to Berlin. Donโ€™t cross the street unless the crosswalk light is green (youโ€™ll likely get a scolding), hardly anywhere takes credit cards (cash works everywhereโ€”and people are happy to give change), the coffee is great (so drink as much as you can, since youโ€™ll need it), and the city changes quickly, from being gray and bleak atโ€ฆ

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Poached Prunes and Kumquats

Prunes are serious business in France and unlike Americans, it doesnโ€™t take any name-changing to get the French to eat them. Prune fans, like me, are partial to those from Agen, in Gascony, which are mi-cuit; partially-dried. Their flavor is as beguiling and complex as a square of the finest chocolate. Interestingly, the prunes cultivated in California are grafted from the same prunes grown inโ€ฆ

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Bleu de Termignon

One thing Iโ€™ve learned in France, is that if someone whoโ€™s an expert tells you to eat somethingโ€”you should eat it. (Except squid, of course.) When I lead tours, right before I place their hand on the bible, I make guests promise that if I tell them they have to try something, they will. Itโ€™s not that Iโ€™m on commission, itโ€™s just Iโ€™ve sifted throughโ€ฆ

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Banana-Brown Sugar Ice Cream

My recent banana windfall gave me the chance to play around a bit with various banana ice cream combinations. Since bananas are such a natural partner for coconut, I reasoned, โ€œWhy use milk or cream when thereโ€™s coconut milk?โ€ So I reached for a can of coconut. Continuing with that train of thought, I figured itโ€™d be interesting to useย jaggery, raw cane sugar thatโ€™s usedโ€ฆ

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Amnesty Cookies

When I was speaking at the Blogher Food Conference last year, one of the organizers was telling us that on the last day of each month, she carries out what she calls E-mail Amnesty Day. On that day, she deletes all her e-mail in her Inbox, then issues an all-points-bulletin to everyone she knows that if there was anything important in there, to e-mail herโ€ฆ

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Cahors

They say that you know youโ€™re holding a glass of wine from Cahors if you canโ€™t see your fingers on the other side of the glass through the wine. Which is why the malbec wine from Cahors is nicknamed โ€œblack wineโ€. Peer into a glass of it, and itโ€™s easy to see (or should I say โ€˜not seeโ€™) why. I didnโ€™t know much about theโ€ฆ

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