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The best sandwich in Paris, at Le Petit Vendome

It wasnโ€™t so long ago that if you were walking down the street, or eating in public in Paris, you might get tsk-tskโ€™d. When I first started coming to Paris, I was warned about getting disapproving stares if you were standing on the sidewalk, jamming food into your craw. Croissants, I noticed, were given a pass, because they were just too good to wait untilโ€ฆ

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Restaurant Astier

Whatโ€™s not to like about a somewhat out-of-the-way bistrotiรจre like Astier, serving examples of classic French cuisine, keeping the torch alive of a genre thatโ€™s become harder to find done right? The pre-fixe menu at Astier is a little gentler at โ‚ฌ35, and you can choose from four of five selections in each category. There are more extensive selections on the ร  la carte sideโ€ฆ

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Mexican Restaurants in Paris

People are surprised that there is a craving amongst a certain crowd (namely transplanted Californiansโ€ฆbut with a growing number of Parisianย locals) seeking Mexican food in Paris. Like any city with an international population, a variety of ethnic food and places are welcome. Parisians, notably the younger set, are becoming more adventurous about Latin American foods and the quality of Mexican places is getting better, includingโ€ฆ

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Princess Crepe

{UPDATE: Princess Crรชpes closed in September 2019.} I wasnโ€™t on planning on going to Princess Crรชpe, which Iโ€™d passed a while back and was intrigued (for lack of a better word) by their unusual look. Well it was โ€œdifferentโ€, as my mother used to politely make me say when something was out-of-the-ordinary. If we were in Harajuku, itโ€™d fit right in. But in Paris, thisโ€ฆ

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8 Things About Hotels Iโ€™d Love to See Changed

Iโ€™ve worked in the service industry since I was sixteen years old and realize how hard the work is, and how much the people who work in it are undervalued and generally underpaid. On a recent trip I stayed in quite a few hotels, a different one every day for a week, and realized they could be doing a few things that would make thingsโ€ฆ

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Smittyโ€™s Market Barbecue

Someone had asked me how to get a lot of comments on a blog last week. So I answered that it was pretty simple: โ€œPut up a recipe with corn syrup in it.โ€ Since Iโ€™m in Texas, however, thereโ€™s another way to rile up the masses and that is to write up a barbecue joint. Honestly, there is nothing that divides Texans or Kansas City-folkโ€ฆ

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Bubbaโ€™s Fried Chicken

The hardest part about traveling and teaching classes, which Iโ€™m doing this week in Texas, is that Iโ€™m not on vacation and hence thereโ€™s almost no time to do all the things in the various cities where I am that people tell me I should do. Or I should rephrase that and say that I donโ€™t have the time to eat all the things thatโ€ฆ

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The Arnold Palmer

Proof that American imperialism isnโ€™t always a bad thing, the Arnold Palmer is a good example of American ingenuity. I first came across this drink just a few years ago, when reading A Passion for Ice Cream by Emily Luchetti. She talked about this mysterious drink with an off-beat name, one named after a famous pro golfer, which was said to be his favorite post-golfโ€ฆ

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Food Blogger Camp 2011

Iโ€™m beginning to think we should have our next Food Blogger Camp in some dark, gray place (like my apartment in the middle of the winter, back in Paris) instead of alongside a gorgeous sunny beach in Mexico. Because as much as we were all having fun learning about food styling and photography, and talking about the nature and intricacies of blogging, thereโ€™s also aโ€ฆ

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