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The Best Way to Use Up Leftover Bread

Iโ€™ve been on a bread-making bender lately, experimenting with various types of loaves. While testing recipes makes me learn a lot about how things work (and what doesnโ€™t!), Iโ€™ve been facing an onslaught of bread. Since Iโ€™m having guests over tonight, and I just made a few trays, I thought Iโ€™d share my favorite way to use up leftover bread. This isnโ€™t great for usingโ€ฆ

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How to Find a Great Baguette in Paris

ย  There are a lot of people who come to Paris and canโ€™t wait to get their hands on one of the amazing baguettes that are packed in baskets and lined up on flour-dusted bakery counters seemingly on just every street corner. (And people still ask me why I moved here?) Well I have good news and bad news for you โ€“ there are plentyโ€ฆ

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Restaurant Alain Ducasse

[UPDATE: The restaurant is no long an Alain Ducasse restaurant.] Uncharacteristically, Iโ€™ll spare you the specifics, but I need to catch up on about 147 hours of sleep. And while weโ€™re at it, I could use a hug. And since the former isnโ€™t necessarily easy to come by here, as is the latter, I was embrassรฉ by dinner at Alain Ducasse restaurant. While itโ€™s beenโ€ฆ

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Kouign Amann at Le Grenier a Pain

Today is election day in France, and la Rรฉpublique has the choice of re-electing the current President, or ushering in a new one. For people who usually have a lot of opinions, my French friends arenโ€™t all that enthused about either one of the fellows. One is hoping to come into office, promising to represent Changement, and the other came into office five years ago,โ€ฆ

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La baguette

Some time ago I switched my allegiance to grainy bread. Perhaps it was because I was thinking, โ€œIf Iโ€™m going to eat all this bread around here, I should at least be eating grainy bread.โ€ Or perhaps I got bored with the one-note flavors of white bread, and began enjoying the fuller flavors of whole grain loaves. But over the last few weeks, while Iโ€™veโ€ฆ

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La Patisserie

When you live in Paris, you tend to stick to pastry shops in your neighborhood. Not that there arenโ€™t โ€œdestination-worthyโ€ places in all twenty arrondissements โ€“ with many notable ones on the Left Bank and in swankier districts. But with young chefs opening bakeries in various neighborhoods, catering especially to locals, one doesnโ€™t necessarily need to go all that far to find extraordinary pastries andโ€ฆ

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Bourke Street Bakery

Wow. I go to a lot of bakeries, but Iโ€™m rarely wowed all that much anymore. Living in France, where there is literally a bakery on every street corner (and a few on each block, in between the corners..), itโ€™s not that Iโ€™ve become blasรฉ. But to me, a bakery is more about just racks or showcases of pastries, lined up, then dropped into bagsโ€ฆ

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La crise de la baguette

A while back, a food editor in the states asked me to send him daily some ideas for articles that I might want to write-up for them. I thought about it for quite a while, then sent a response for an article with recipes for using up leftover bread, which I tentatively titled: The French Bread Crisis. They kindly responded, thanking me for the idea,โ€ฆ

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The French Bread Machine

I was a little surprised when I moved to France and learned that bread machines were popular here. I was equally surprised to see a generous selection of frozen breads at Picard, the chain of stores that spans across France which sport a comprehensive, and somewhat impressive, selection of frozen entrรฉes, appetizers, main courses, and fancy desserts. Out of curiosity, Iโ€™ve tried a few things,โ€ฆ

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