Skip to content

In and Near Chablis

For a variety of reasons, we decided to extend our twenty-four hour vacation by forty-eight hours. Actually, there were only two reasons: One was that there was a massive heat wave last week in Paris that was roasting us, and everyone else in the city. And two, a friend who lives outside of Paris โ€“ who has a pool โ€“ invited us to come. Soโ€ฆ

7 Shares

Continue reading...

Eating Around London

I never really โ€œgotโ€ London. It was always this hulking city that I struggled to navigate, overwhelmingly large, with a subway system that seemed like a tangle of routes and directions that I just couldnโ€™t unravel. But part of it is my fault as I never really spent a lot of time trying to figure it out. I just accepted defeat early on. So thisโ€ฆ

9 Shares

Continue reading...

Labneh

I have always loved Middle Eastern foods. The fresh vegetables, the liberal use of herbs and seasonings, including a touch of spiciness at times, and the casual way of eating that the food encourages. Meze is the term thatโ€™s used to define all the โ€œlittle platesโ€ that get brought out to begin in a meal, served in little bowls often with pools of olive oilโ€ฆ

658 Shares

Continue reading...

Artichoke Freekeh Risotto

โ€œRisotto,โ€ of course, means itโ€™s made with rice. But โ€œcharred wheat stewโ€ doesnโ€™t sound as appetizing as it actually is. So with the creative culinary expression invokable by quotation marks, Iโ€™ll allying this recipe with itโ€™s Italian cousin, risotto, because itโ€™s made the exact same way. And for those who donโ€™t have freekeh, and donโ€™t want to scope it out, can make it the traditionalโ€ฆ

52 Shares

Continue reading...

Lebanese Meze

The Lebanese are real โ€œsnackersโ€, a point brought home by Mazen Hajjar, the owner of 961, Lebanonโ€™s first (and only) craft brewery that told me if I went into someoneโ€™s home in Lebanon and they offered a drink โ€“ but no bowl of nuts or seeds, โ€œYou should goโ€ฆjust get up and leave immediately.โ€ Fortunately I never had to, because true to his word, eachโ€ฆ

127 Shares

Continue reading...

Lebanese Breakfast

Whenever Iโ€™m at home, all I want for breakfast is coffee, orange juice, and some bread and butter โ€“ and Iโ€™m good. But going to the Middle East, when they start bringing out all the fresh salads, candied fruits and jams (such as eggplant and another made from unripe walnuts, just below) and all sorts of beautiful fresh cheeses and pickles, I am helpless toโ€ฆ

3 Shares

Continue reading...

Mont dโ€™Or

โ€œGoopyโ€ isnโ€™t a word used too often when writing about food. Am not sure why, but perhaps because there arenโ€™t a lot of things that are goopy, that you actually want to eat. Mont dโ€™Or has been called the holy grail of French raw milk cheeses. Itโ€™s goopy for sure, and if that bothers you, well, thatโ€™s something youโ€™re going to have to work onโ€ฆ

367 Shares

Continue reading...

La Ruche qui dit Oui!

The word โ€œnonโ€ is often the response of choice in France. And while it makes for funny snickering from outsiders, chuckling at complicated and arcane bureaucracy, itโ€™s become a serious hindrance to innovation and small businesses, which have been having a particularly tough time lately. And thereโ€™s a younger generation of entrepreneurial talent, who have new ideas and are striving to be innovative and inventive,โ€ฆ

103 Shares

Continue reading...

Jerusalem

I shouldnโ€™t have been surprised when I was talking to someone at the airport, just after my arrival in Israel, who had asked me what I was doing in her country. When I told her I was there to learn about the cuisine โ€“ by eating it, her eyes lit up, and she said โ€“ โ€œWhenever I leave Israel, after my family, the thing Iโ€ฆ

237 Shares

Continue reading...

A

Get David's newsletter sent right to your Inbox!

15987

Sign up for my newsletter and get my FREE guidebook to the best bakeries and pastry shops in Paris...