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Coup de Roulis cocktail

This rosy coup holds a drink from Cocktails de Paris, a book of cocktail recipes from Paris, published in 1929. (Itโ€™s available to download* for free here.) I was attracted to it because it called for Cherry Rocher, a French liqueur produced by a distillery that was founded in 1704 and is still making it today. Coup de roulis translates to โ€œstrong blow,โ€ referring toโ€ฆ

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Cherry Poppy Seed Cake

With spring around the corner, all thoughts are turning to fruit, while we wait for stone fruits to arrive. Nectarines, peaches, plums and apricots will soon be at the markets, usually led by cherries, which are often the first to make an appearance. I was leafing through Sweeter Off the Vine, by Yossy Arefi, a book dedicated to using fruit year-round, from squash, pumpkin andโ€ฆ

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Apricot and Cherry Tart with Marzipan Topping

I once told a crowd that I was preparing a dessert for, that I donโ€™t like sweet things. I didnโ€™t realize it would get such a big laugh โ€“ so I guess I should have worked on the delivery of that line a little bit beforehand. But I had to explain that I like things on the tangy and tart side, which is what happensโ€ฆ

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Cherry Mess

Faced with an overload of cherries, I had no choice but to make a mess. On a trip to London, and at a dinner in Paris, I was served a couple of messes, an English dessert that traditionally incorporates whipped cream, crumbled meringues, and berries. But like most messes (present company included), they can often go in unusual โ€“ and unpredictable โ€“ directions. Over theโ€ฆ

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Lemon Yogurt Cake with Apricot-Cherry Compote

Even though we come from different worlds โ€“ my life (in some ways) depends on gluten, and her life (in some ways) depends on avoiding it. But Shauna of Gluten-Free Girl both share a common love of cooking and baking. and thatโ€™s good enough for me. (Iโ€™ve never asked her, but I hope she feels the same.) We met several years ago when I wasโ€ฆ

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Manhattans

There comes a time in everyoneโ€™s life when one needs a Manhattan. During the past few weeks, that time had come for me. Actually, it came for me several times. Iโ€™ve recently been turned on to rye whiskey, and although folks online spoke up about various brands they like when I mentioned my sudden craving on social media, I learned that itโ€™s not something thatโ€ฆ

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Gateau de Savoie

The last copy of The Auberge of the Flowering Hearth that I had, Iโ€™d lent to a good friend who was excited about starting a career in cooking at a local culinary school. I donโ€™t know another book that captures precisely everything I love about cooking, written by a man truly passionate about his subject, and I though heโ€™d like to read it, as itโ€™sโ€ฆ

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Frenchie Wine Bar

I always think that maybe Iโ€™m kind of a loser because I donโ€™t go out and eat as much as people think I do. Ever since I left the restaurant business โ€“ where I worked every single night of every single weekend of my life, surrounded by other cooks (which probably explains why I am a social misfit when I have to mingle with โ€œnormalโ€โ€ฆ

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Recchiutiโ€™s Asphalt Jungle Mix

Michael Recchiuti was recently here in Paris for a few weeks, visiting, and eating his way around town. Because heโ€™s a chocolatier (from San Francisco), of course, he concentrated on chocolate. Interestingly I couldnโ€™t remember how we met, but he recalled the event pretty well. Apparently a group of us had been invited to Robert Steinbergโ€™s kitchen, since he was working on developing ScharffenBerger chocolateโ€ฆ.

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