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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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Henri Le Roux in Paris

A favorite chocolatier of mine has finally made it to Paris, Henri Le Roux โ€“ although heโ€™s best known for his C.B.S. caramels, which are made in Brittany, a region known for its copious use of salted butter. Whenever Iโ€™ve traveled to that part of France, Iโ€™m always delighted at their lack of restraint, and they use salty butter in everything from buckwheat galettes, toโ€ฆ

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Milan

Even though itโ€™s just next door, every time I go to Italy, I wonder why I donโ€™t go more often. Before I moved to Europe, I used to wonder why Europeans didnโ€™t travel to other countries more often. And now Iโ€™m one of them. I think itโ€™s because just to go anywhere, whether itโ€™s a 45 minutes flight or a 4.5 hour flight, you stillโ€ฆ

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Orange Creme Anglaise

When I started working at Chez Panisse, there was something called crรจme anglaise on the menuโ€ฆand my job was to make it. Of course, I had no idea what crรจme anglaise was โ€“ other than something with a funny name that I got in trouble for pronouncing wrong on several occasions. But I pretended I knew what it was when everyone was talking about makingโ€ฆ

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Cafe Pouchkine

In Paris, a city full of spectacular pastry shops, it really takes something major to grab me by the shoulders and shake me to attention. Itโ€™s not that I donโ€™t appreciate the other ones, but when you see something as jaw-dropping as the pastries at Cafรฉ Pouchkine, you canโ€™t help but stop and stand at full attention.

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Farro Salad with Tomatoes, Mushrooms and Basil

In August, most of the businesses in Paris shut down while a vast number of people take their annual holiday vacations. And in case you think thatโ€™s a grammatical error, in French one says les vacances, in the plural. So if you have a problem with that, I would tell you to take it up with them yourself, but right now most of them areโ€ฆ

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West Country Girl

[UPDATE: As of early summer 2017, West Country Girl has closed.] Thereโ€™s a new girl (and guy) in town. And she owns a small crรชperie which is one of my favorite little addresses in Paris and worth a visit, in spite what some might feel is a relatively obscure address. To me, though, itโ€™s not all that obscure because Iโ€™ve forged a pretty clear pathโ€ฆ

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Mad About (the) Madeleines

One of the main differences between American and French food magazines, and recipes in general, is the level of detail provided in the instructions. For example, if you were to publish a recipe in America that called for a cuillรจre ร  cafรฉ (coffee-spoon) of baking powder, folks would go apoplectic. โ€œHow much is a coffee spoon?โ€ Then there was the infamous question a copyeditor queriedโ€ฆ

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No Foolinโ€™-It Really Is Carrot Cake Ice Cream

When I proposed an article to the Los Angeles Times about unusual ice creams, I was surprised when took me up on it. Yikes! So I went to work, inventing recipes for some new flavors, and adding a tangy twist to a frosty favorite. So no foolinโ€™โ€ฆif youโ€™re looking for some all-new wacky flavors to churn up, head to my article 31 Flavors? Think Outsideโ€ฆ

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