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10 Common Ordering Mistakes People Make in Paris Restaurants

The other night I was sitting at Le Garde Robe, minding my own business, trying to get down a glass of natural wine. Being seven oโ€™clock, naturally, in addition to being thirsty, I was starving, too. And the lack of food (and sulfides) must have started affecting my brain because I started thinking about how I often hear tales from visitors, such as when theyโ€ฆ

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Apple Spice Cake

Recently I ate at one of those small neighborhood restaurants whose fame spreads beyond the quartier and people come from other neighborhoods, as well as from other countries, to eat at because it is trรจs reputรฉ. Le Repaire de Cartouche (99 rue Amelot) is one of those restaurants in Paris. Itโ€™s known for very good food and an especially compelling wine list. The prices arenโ€™tโ€ฆ

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Paris Gastronomy Tour

Doing a culinary tour in Paris is always fun, because not only do I get to meet some new people and make new friends (importantโ€ฆsince the old ones keep deserting me), but I get to revisit my favorite places in Paris. And this week, we made a detour in Lyon as well. So there was a lot more to see, and eatโ€ฆ Lyon is aโ€ฆ

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Where to Find the Best Steak Frites in Paris

Alec Lobrano has been writing about the food in Paris for over two decades, and was the Paris correspondent for Gourmet magazine. When his book, Hungry for Paris came out, I immediately opened to page one and read it cover-to-cover. Heโ€™s one of the best food writers of our generation and each chapter tells the story of one of his favorite restaurants in Paris. Andโ€ฆ

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Crepes Dentelles

When I worked at Chez Panisse, we had a customer who would come for dinner several nights a week and eat downstairs in the kitchen. Jean lived by herself in San Francisco and took a cab across the bridge to Berkeley for dinner once or twice a week. When the waiters knew she was coming, theyโ€™d set up a small table next to the pastryโ€ฆ

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Cognac

How does Cognac get to thisโ€ฆ โ€ฆfrom this? I didnโ€™t know, but I was determined to taste as many glasses as I could to find out. The first thing I was asked before heading down into my first Cognac cellar during my recent visit was, โ€œAre you afraid of spiders?โ€

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The Coopers of Cognac

Earlier this week, I woke up in a small town, smelling of something. It wasnโ€™t anything bad. In fact, it was pretty good: sweet, caramel-like, and roasted, with a vague, but lingering aftermath of alcohol following it. It wasnโ€™t something I was used to, but Iโ€™d tasted so many Cognacs this week in the town of Cognac, that it was literally wafting out my poresโ€ฆ.

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Le glaneur

There is a French term, un glaneur, which describes a person who who glanes. If you donโ€™t have any idea what that means, youโ€™re not alone. I had to look it up in my French dictionary and there it was, just above the word glander, which they translated as, โ€œto fart around.โ€ Thereโ€™s a heckuva lot of French verbs out there, and Iโ€™ve been tryingโ€ฆ

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Antiquing Outside of Paris

Iโ€™m sure Iโ€™ve caused more than my share of near automobile accidents when I see a signpost by the edge of a road pointing towards a brocante or Depot Vente. After slamming on the brakes, I do a San Francisco-style U-turn, backing up to head into the parking lot. (The week I moved to San Francisco, my roommates, who were natives, told me; โ€œWhenever youโ€ฆ

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