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Weekend Links & Holiday Recipes

Winter is just about here. And no, it doesnโ€™t have to suck. True, thereโ€™s not much โ€“ if any โ€“ snow in Paris โ€“ which is something I miss. (When weโ€™ve had it, it makes Paris more luminous and pretty.) But thereโ€™s no shortage of cold. In addition to being the time to unpack all oneโ€™s winter gear, and sadly pack up the t-shirts andโ€ฆ

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Sain Boulangerie

I was expecting something a little different when I took a stroll over the Sain boulangerie, a bakery Iโ€™d heard about, which was on my list of bakeries in Paris to visit. My friend Romina of Les Madeleines bakery was is in town, and sheโ€™s always up to visit new places, or places new to us, so I arranged to meet her there. I figuredโ€ฆ

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The French Bastards

When the bakery sign went up, I thought, โ€œWell, thatโ€™s rather audacious. I wonder what itโ€™s going to be?โ€ A bakery had been in that space, which had once been a pretty good, but had slid in quality, until one day, the doors closed for good. Itโ€™s a bummer to see a place decline but exciting when something better opens in its place, which happenedโ€ฆ.

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Le Petit Grain

A few months ago, I started following an interesting-looking Instagram account of a bakery in Paris that was making all their breads using natural leavenings, rather than commercial yeast. I didnโ€™t know anything about it, but not only were they showing impressive loaves of just-baked breads, but they were also experimenting with croissants made with levain (sourdough). The results looked promising. After they opened, Iโ€ฆ

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Maison Landemaine Bakery in Paris

Itโ€™s a great day when a new bakery opens up in your neighborhood. I donโ€™t mean to brag, but there are six bakeries in my neighborhood. One of those โ€œgreat daysโ€ was when a particularly lame bakery closed, and a really good one opened up in its place. And although I donโ€™t like seeing people go out of business, another bakery that was, for lackโ€ฆ

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Panifica bakery

UPDATE: Panifica has closed and a new bakery (thatโ€™s good!) has opened in its place. I used to cross Paris to buy a loaf of bread. That was when I was more of a dรฉbutant and kept a list of bakeries that I wanted to visit, and Iโ€™d make it a point to check off as many as I could, to try their bread. Butโ€ฆ

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Chambelland Bakery (Gluten-free) in Paris

Iโ€™m not gluten-free, but I am a bread-lover. (fyi: I also like boulangeries, too.) And am happy to come across any kind of bread packed with grains. But I donโ€™t think all bread needs to have wheat in it. Other grains and starches โ€“ from buckwheat and rye, to cornmeal and rice flour โ€“ all make excellent breads, in the right hands. In addition toโ€ฆ

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In Praise of Sesame Baguettes in Paris

I suppose Iโ€™m doing all those things the diet-police are advising against โ€“ namely having fat and carbohydrates for breakfast in lieu of โ€œhealthierโ€ options, like having a bowl of kale-flecked quinoa or downing a cilantro smoothie. But as much as I like fruits and vegetables (and herbs), the only thing I am able to face first thing in the morning is something a littleโ€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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