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Le Verre Vole

If you plan on eating at Le Verre Volรฉ (The Stolen Glass) be sure to call first and reserve a spot. Itโ€™s located just next to the Canal St. Martin, a trendy quarter of Paris, and thereโ€™s only seats for about 18 people or so. But unlike New York or San Francisco or Los Angeles, you could call that afternoon and likely get a spotโ€ฆ.

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Lโ€™As du Fallafel

A favorite quick-bite on the streets of Paris, at Lโ€™As du Fallafel. Lโ€™As du Fallafel is one of the few places where Parisians chow down on the street. Beginning with a fork, dig into warm pita bread stuffed with marinated crunchy cabbage, silky eggplant, sesame hoummous, and boules of chick-pea paste, crisp-fried fallafel. Spice it up with a dab of searingly-hot sauce piquante. Lโ€™As duโ€ฆ

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Tuscan and Torino Treasures

Having returned from my trip to Italy, narrowly escaping the hairy fangs of the too-vigilant EasyJet luggage police, I returned with a suitcase full of great Italian foods: chocolates from Amadei, and Domori, coffee (and more chocolate) from Slitti, jars of bittersweet chestnut honey, 12-year old syrupy Balsamic vinegar, luscious sun-dried tomatoes, and of course, bottles of fruity Tuscan olive oil. Fresh Dried-Pasta Iโ€™ve seenโ€ฆ

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Gianduja and Gelato

Here I am in Torino, or Turin, if youโ€™re familiar with the shroud. Being on the road means that Iโ€™m in unfamiliar hotels with less-than-ideal access. When I attempted to change the thermostat in my hotel room, the digital display read โ€˜PARTYโ€™. I donโ€™t know what the โ€˜partyโ€™ mode is, but when I pressed the switch again nothing exciting happened. Iโ€™m leading a fabulous chocolateโ€ฆ

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