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Zahav

I didnโ€™t believe them when they told me, but when I was in Washington, D.C. a few months back, when having dinner with my friends Carol and Joe, they swore that if I stopped at Zahav in Philadelphia on the way back, that Iโ€™d have a life-changing experience. While I wish that at least several times a day Iโ€™d have a life-changing experience (sometimes Iโ€ฆ

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Charlottesville, Virginia

I have to admit, itโ€™s been a bit difficult to blog while Iโ€™ve been on the road. Much of it is that I have a little MacBook Air computer that I got specifically for travel, whose lightness has saved my back, but the tiny screen makes it hard to write on since I can only see a few sentences/thoughts at a time. In addition toโ€ฆ

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Ovenly

Sometimes when Iโ€™m doing events, such asย meet-ups and booksignings, people will kindly bring treats for me to eat. Itโ€™s always nice when people think of me, and my sweet tooth, when Iโ€™m on the road.ย However thereโ€™s nothing worse than trying to carry on a back-and-forthย withย someone who is chewing on food when youโ€™re not doing the same. It just doesnโ€™t work. My least favorite moment whenโ€ฆ

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Eating Around Queens

One of the things about discovering new places to eat in an unknown city is that you spend a lot of time getting around, figuring out how to get from Point A to Point B, then to Point C, and so forth. Sometimes people are kind enough to suggest places that sound good. But when you look at the map, theyโ€™re an hour or moreโ€ฆ

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Mile End Deli

One of the few English words that my French other-half has mastered is โ€œpastrami.โ€ Which in his defense, is just fine because most Americans that speak little, if any French, can easily say baguette, croissant, tarte au citron, and macaron before they head to France. Seems like both cultures knows where their priorities lie! So when I hear โ€œDaveed, je veux du pastrami,โ€ I lookโ€ฆ

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Chez Dumonet

One of my downfalls is that I do not have a photographic memory. Sometimes I go out to eat and the next day, I have less of a recollection of what I ate (and drank) than some of my esteemed colleagues who write about restaurants so eloquently do. (My memory is gradually been replaced by the camera on my phone.) In this case, as soonโ€ฆ

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Rodel Sardines

I know. Itโ€™s hard to get people excited about tinned sardines. Iโ€™ve eaten them casually for most of my life and never gave them all that much thought. But with sustainability issues and delicious spreads that you can make with the flavorful fish โ€“ and the fact that they make an almost instant lunch โ€“ Iโ€™ve found myself making sure that I always have aโ€ฆ

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Dessance

Like Espai Sucre in Barcelona, I wasnโ€™t sure that I wanted to eat at Dessance, in Paris. Itโ€™s not that I donโ€™t love dessert (which is a good thing because I think itโ€™s a little late to change careersโ€ฆ), but because the idea of an all-dessert menu โ€“ or as Dessance calls it, a meal featuring cuisine du sucrรฉ โ€“ just didnโ€™t appeal to meโ€ฆ.

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Les Sources de Caudalie

I went to les Sources de Caudalie over a decade ago with the intention of bringing a group of guests there. While it was, indeed, a lovely place, it wasnโ€™t really near anything, so folks wouldnโ€™t be able to go out explore on their own unless they had a car. However, it is smack-dab in the middle of Bordeaux wine country, on the Chรขteau Smithโ€ฆ

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