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Le 6 Paul Bert

[Update: 6 Paul Bert is now closed. The restaurant is currently a pop-up space, featuring different chefs, known as Le Bistrot Tontine. Visit them on Instagram to find out the latest news about chefs cooking there.] Itโ€™s rare that I find a restaurant where I wouldnโ€™t change a thing. I donโ€™t consider myself picky or a tough customer (others might say otherwise); itโ€™s just myโ€ฆ

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East Side Burgers: Vegetarian Burgers in Paris

Two trends have swept across Paris over the past few years, which, paradoxically, are somewhat at odds with each other. Who would have predicted a decade ago that hamburgers and vegetarianism would both be buzzwords on the Paris food scene? One of the good things about the burger movement is that instead of the wan, overpriced (โ‚ฌ15 and up) burgers that had been served inโ€ฆ

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Shang Palace

Quite a while back, I worked at an Asian restaurant in San Francisco. The food was amazing. Fresh shrimp were cooked up, chopped, then smeared on bread, then deep-fried for shrimp toast. All the dumplings had freshly cooked ingredients in them โ€“ no canned peas or frozen shrimp. And each one was hand-rolled. All the meats were well-sourced and cooked daily, then shredded for fillingsโ€ฆ

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Noglu, Gluten-Free Restaurant in Paris

A long-lost acquaintance of mine got in touch with me a few months back. And I donโ€™t know if there is a French name for phone-tag, or playing the game via e-mail, but we finally fixed a date once the long summer of vacations, closures, and hectic schedules of the rentrรฉe (the annual September return to Paris) were all finally behind us. Laurent, who runsโ€ฆ

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Disneyland Paris

Iโ€™ve lived in Paris for nearly ten years, which some folks think is a magic kingdom in itself. And although Iโ€™ve been to the Louvre, Rungis, the Musรฉe dโ€™Orsay, and the crazy-giant Tati store at Barbรจs, Iโ€™ve not been to Disneyland Paris โ€“ until now. Iโ€™d been to the one in southern California as a kid, back when Disneyland featured things we never dreamed ofโ€ฆ

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Philou

[UPDATE: Philou closed in 2019 and a new restaurant opened in its place, Lโ€™Angรฉlus du Canal.] I always want to put Philou in my Paris favorites list. Itโ€™s got so much going for it; a friendly staff, itโ€™s just enough out-of-the way that it attracts a good mix of mostly people who live in the neighborhood with others who come from other parts of theโ€ฆ

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Agen

I recently had lunch with someone whoโ€™d just moved to Paris. I gave her some places to check out and a few tips about living in her newly adopted city, including navigating some of the ups and downs, and what to do when city life became overwhelming. But shortly after we parted, I realized that Iโ€™d forgotten to tell her my most important piece ofโ€ฆ

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French weekend

Like New Yorkers, Parisians swear they would never live anywhere else. But once the summer โ€“ or the weekend โ€“ rolls around, everyone canโ€™t wait to make a sortie toward the nearest exit. After fighting the usual traffic to get out of the pรฉriphรฉrique, we took an exit and were shortly in the countryside, where the skies are big and clear, youโ€™re surround by wheatโ€ฆ

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Les Vacances

The French really have it right with the five weeks of paid vacation a good number of them get a year. Itโ€™s a great way to truly relax and one week isnโ€™t enough. I know, because my stingy boss (โ€ฆand that would be me) limited my vacation to a measly seven days. But for that one week, I took part in the annual mass exodusโ€ฆ

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