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Weekend Out of Paris

May is the month of holidays in France. There are elevenย public holidays a year, called jours fรฉriรฉs, which we might call โ€œbank holidaysโ€ in the United States. Theyโ€™re official holidays/dates when government offices, schools, banks, and most stores are closed, except for a few supermarkets, convenience stores, and bakeries, which need to follow certain rules as to when they canย close in the summer, so theyโ€™reโ€ฆ

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Les restes

The French donโ€™t really have the same reverence for leftovers that Americans do, which may be a throwback to the time before people had reliable refrigeration โ€“ which still doesnโ€™t explain why nowadays, when they do, some people still keep leftovers like beef stew and roast chicken in the cupboard overnight rather than in the refrigerator. But is mostly because when you dine in France,โ€ฆ

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The Two-Hour Goodbye

I am definitely slowing down, because ever since arriving in France, when Iโ€™m out and about, as midnight approaches, my head starts rolling back toward my neck, which I have to make an effort to snap back when Iโ€™m ร  table or at a party with mes amis franรงaiss. When I was younger, I regularly stayed awake until 2โ€ฆbut usually 3am, with friends and co-workers,โ€ฆ

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Bread on the tableโ€ฆsโ€™il vous plait

One of the things that I see when dining with visitors to France is that right after they pluck a piece of bread out of the bread basket that is invariably set on the table in cafรฉs and restaurants, they start looking around โ€“ a little nervously โ€“ where to put their bread down. While the conversation is going, I sense a bit of multitaskingโ€ฆ

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The Making of My Paris Kitchen

(Photo by Ed Anderson) My Paris Kitchen is finally here! Itโ€™s taken me a few years to get to this day, and I thought Iโ€™d give you a little look behind-the-scenes of how the book was created. Thereโ€™s a certain amount of conversation about blogs versus cookbooks, and since I have a foot in both, I am keenly aware of the connection between the two,โ€ฆ

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Some Thoughts on French Cuisine

French cuisine is, once again, a popular topic of discussion these days. Actually, anything controversial about France seems to foster a lot of heated debates. On one side are the folks decrying French-bashing, complaining that the French are unfairly picked on. Then there are the others who eat up books about how superior the French are, because they are better at parenting, they miraculously stayโ€ฆ

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Belleville Brulerie & Holybelly

UPDATE: SInce I first published this, Belleville Brรปlerie has moved to a large location with a shop. More info at their website. They have also opened a cafรฉ, La Fontaine de Belleville. Hoo-boy, do I remember the bunch of flack (to say the least!) for mentioning way-back-when that the coffee in Paris could use a bit of, um, upgrading. I was recently reminiscing about thatโ€ฆ

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Purple Paris

I was buying a bike recently and, for some reason, the store offered the bike I wanted in two shades: black and prune (plum), one of the many variations on purple (which include, but are not limited to, violet, purple, and magenta) in the French vocabulary. I wasnโ€™t sure I wanted a purple bike, but then I thought about how purple has invaded Paris โ€“โ€ฆ

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ร‰tamine

Sometimes when Iโ€™m asked about what I miss from โ€œhomeโ€ (ie: the US). I might answer dried pluots, crunchy organic peanut butter, aluminum foil that you canโ€™t read the newspaper through, and an unending supply of Sharpies. (Although thanks to a slew of well-meaning friends and other folks passing through, I now have an unending supply of them here in France.) But I no longerโ€ฆ

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