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Butterscotch Bars

Itโ€™s been an interesting year, hasnโ€™t it? Iโ€™ve been on a bit of a bender lately, getting rid of (or at least, reducing) paperwork thatโ€™s been piling up and holds little interest for me.ย I have so much that I had to buy more paper (as in, paper file folders) to store all that paperwork in which seems redundant, but living in a place where paperโ€ฆ

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Beer Tart

I was invited to a lovely lunch at the 3-star restaurant Allรฉno Paris (Pavillion Ledoyen), hosted by Mauviel, a French company that makes copper cookware in Normandy, that one day, Iโ€™m hoping to visit. Although mispronouncing the name when I was introduced to the owner probably didnโ€™t help my chances! Nevertheless, I did my best in the charm department. (Foreigners are often given a passโ€ฆ

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French Sugar

Bakers who tackle French recipes get stumped by the sugars, which donโ€™t necessarily correspond to the sugars available elsewhere. All supermarkets in France carry white granulated sugar and thereโ€™s often unrefined sugars, such as cassonade, which grocers stock and are widely-available. In America and elsewhere, bakers often have to do a bit of hunting around to find the corresponding sugar. French brown sugars are quiteโ€ฆ

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Ingredients for American Baking in Paris

Although we canโ€™t expect things to be like โ€˜back homeโ€™, many of us do miss certain things that we are used to in American recipes. While French has wonderful ingredients, for bakers, it can be a challenge to adapt to new ingredients or ones that behave differently than what weโ€™re used to. Hereโ€™s a list of commonly used baking ingredients and where you can findโ€ฆ

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