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10 Ideas for Food Trucks in Paris

Aside from a few crรชpe stands here and there, Paris isnโ€™t a city known for street food. And malheureusement, that Pierre Hermรฉ truck isnโ€™t open for businessโ€ฆalthough wouldnโ€™t that be nice. (However if it was, I would probably race around my house in search of spare change every time I heard it coming toward me, like I did when the Good Humor ice cream truckโ€ฆ

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Cranberry Sorbet

Every year at Christmas, I make the dessert. With a bakery on every corner in Paris, thereโ€™s not a lot of impetus for the locals to make a resplendent dessert for the traditional dinner. Itโ€™s not that people donโ€™t bake, but with the small city kitchens and all the other stuff that limits time around the holidays, itโ€™s just as simple to head to theโ€ฆ

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Baked Apricot Bars

Iโ€™d been planning for this trip for years, ever since I first laid my hands on a copy of Baked, the cookbook. Quite a few baking books come out and a lot are really good, but this one spoke to me. I mean, each and every dessert sounded like something I not only wanted to bake, but wanted to eat. As in right away. Asโ€ฆ

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Is it Safe to Eat Apricot Kernels?

You might come across a recipe which calls for the use of sweet apricot kernels, that differ from bitter apricot kernels, which are used as a flavoring agent in jams, candies, pastes, custards, and other baking applications. Europeans and others often use them to enhance jams and jellies, putting a kernel is each jar, which isnโ€™t normally consumed. Italians crush them to make the famousโ€ฆ

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Apricot Jam

Americans who visit France are oftenย surprised to wake up in the morning and find themselves with a few pieces of baguette or a single croissant for breakfast. Those are in contrast to our breakfasts, which can be groaning-board sized, featuring some (or all) of the following: Eggs, sausages, pancakes, bacon, oatmeal, cereal, toast, orange juice, and waffles. Donโ€™t get me wrong, I love big breakfastsโ€ฆ

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Washington Post Story & Recipes

I had a terrific time with fuzzy-faced food editor Joe Yonan when he came to Paris recently, and he was such a super dude, that I took him to my favorite market to meet some of my friends and vendors. You can read the story, American Blogger in Paris in todayโ€™s Washington Post.

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We Love Jam

As you can imagine, after living in San Francisco for almost twenty years, I have some pretty wacky friends. While I donโ€™t want to recount everything that happened back in the days of free-love, many of us have grown up and gone on to tastier things. One friend has a wildly successful cheese shop. Another opened a bakery , a chocolate factory, or became wineโ€ฆ

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The Perfect (New) Macaron

One of the great places for lunch in Paris is Cuisine au Bar (8, rue du Cherche-Midi), which has been touted as the French version of the sushi bar. The servers are welcoming and generous, and the tartines (open-faced sandwiches) are the most inventive and marvelous in all of Paris. A dedicated friend of mine lunches there every day. I met Pim for lunch, andโ€ฆ

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