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Making Comte Cheese

I was recently joking that when Iโ€™m forced to wake up very early in the morning Iโ€™m not sure if I should feel sorrier for myself, or for the people around me. So when my friend Jean-Louis, who works with the people who make Comtรฉ cheese finally gave in to my incessant pestering to join him for a visit, I was excited when after threeโ€ฆ

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Brie

This week I watched a television program on the phรฉnomรจne of locavorism in France. Being a resolutely agricultural country, the French are no strangers to being connected to the earth and to farming. But those days are waning and the announcer went to a supermarket in Paris and came out with a basket containing just a couple of items in it. (One was pain Poilรขne.)โ€ฆ

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Rue Montorgueil and Les Halles, Paris

You might not remember the days before the internet, but when we used to travel somewhere, weโ€™d ask a friend to scribble down a list of suggestions. And weโ€™d often be asked to do the same in return. Then when computers became widely used, other โ€˜favoritesโ€™ lists started circulating, including suggestions posted in online forums and in blogs. So think of this list as myโ€ฆ

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Bleu de Termignon

One thing Iโ€™ve learned in France, is that if someone whoโ€™s an expert tells you to eat somethingโ€”you should eat it. (Except squid, of course.) When I lead tours, right before I place their hand on the bible, I make guests promise that if I tell them they have to try something, they will. Itโ€™s not that Iโ€™m on commission, itโ€™s just Iโ€™ve sifted throughโ€ฆ

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French Onion Dip

A few weeks ago, I made plans to meet my friend Terresa in Pigalle, to check out a new รฉpicerie (specialty food shop). I donโ€™t know if youโ€™re familiar with Pigalle, but the area has a certain well-deserved โ€˜reputationโ€™ and if youโ€™re a middle-aged man walking around by yourself in the evening, casually looking in the windows of the cafรฉs and bars, donโ€™t be surprisedโ€ฆ

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Saint-Marcellin Cheese

If you go to Lyon, youโ€™ll find Saint Marcellin pretty much everywhere. Itโ€™s the best-known cheese from that region, and the user friendly-sized disks are inevitably piled high at each and every cheese shop you step in to. Locals bake them at home and slide the warm disks onto salads, and Iโ€™ve not been to a restaurant in that city that didnโ€™t have Saint Marcellinโ€ฆ

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Comtรฉ

Thereโ€™s sort of some rhyme and reason to my cheese-buying habits. One fromagerie might have the most amazing butter, so Iโ€™ll trek over to the place St. Paul to buy a packet of it. But if I want a round of Selles-sur-Cher, Iโ€™ll go to the fromager at the marche dโ€™Aligre who always has beautiful ones on display. For St. Nectaire and Cantal, Iโ€™ll onlyโ€ฆ

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I Heart Neufchatel

Neufchรขtel got a makeover when it crossed the Atlantic, to the states, where itโ€™s used to refer to low-fat cream cheese, which bears no resemblance to true Neufchรขtel, a cheese that certainly doesnโ€™t fall anywhere near that category. The cheese is from Normandy, a region that few would argue produces the best cheeses in the world. Camembert, Livarot, and the especially creamy Brillat-Savarin are someโ€ฆ

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Caille

The yogurt aisle in any French supermarket is the largest, longest, most well-stocked aisle in the store. (Wine, I think, runs a close second.) While thereโ€™s a disconcerting number of dubious treats there (coconut macaron or lemon madeleine-flavored yogurt anyone?) the simplest varieties are wonderful. Iโ€™m hopelessly boring, but I like whole milk plain yogurt, which is my afternoon snack. I eat it with driedโ€ฆ

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