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Harvest Tart

I was lucky to be at my friend Kateโ€™s house and extensive fruit and vegetable gardens in the Lot a few weeks back, when the seasons were overlapping. The last of the red peaches were still clinging to the trees, while the branches of the nearby pear and fig trees were filled with wonderful fruit ripe for the picking โ€“ and baking. And I couldnโ€™tโ€ฆ

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Lโ€™ร‰picerie Breizh Cafe

Sometimes I think I am living in the wrong dรฉpartement of France. Donโ€™t get me wrong, Iโ€™m happy to be able to walk out my door and get a baguette Parisienne or a sachet of les macarons, libremente (freely). But Breton food is all the flavors I crave: buckwheat, honey, sardines, oysters, fleur de sel, seaweed, and sparkling apple cider. Oh yes, and butter. Theโ€ฆ

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Peach Shortcake

Shortcake is one of those uniquely American desserts; a big, buttery biscuit floating on top of a cloud of whipped cream and lots of juicy, sweet, summer fruit. Sure, the components may be inspired from other places, but no one puts them together in a way that celebrates summer as we do. One of the high points of my year is when peaches and nectarinesโ€ฆ

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Butterscotch Sauce

Marion Cunningham was a big promoter of American food and cooking, which included some of the peculiarities of our style of eating. There was a funny story recounted by Kim Severson way back in 2001, that when Marion came to France, she insisted on having a cup of coffee before dinner at a three-star restaurant. Which, of course, perplexed the waiter. But Marion always insistedโ€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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Fromagerie Pascal Beillevaire

Iโ€™m not going to say itโ€™s the top reason I live here, but one of the main reasons that I live in France is because of the cheese. Itโ€™s not just that I like cheese โ€“ which I do very dearly โ€“ but it also represents something that France has held on to, and still defies modernization. You just canโ€™t make Comtรฉ or Bleu deโ€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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Mustard Glasses

Itโ€™s been a while since Iโ€™ve visited the jelly aisle of an American supermarket. But one thing I have etched in my memory from my childhood are the glasses with cartoon characters on them. Whatever marketing genius came up with the idea deserves more recognition than I can give here, but as a kid, we had to finish all our milk and โ€œsee Fred Flintstoneโ€โ€ฆ

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