Skip to content

Arroz con pollo: Spanish Chicken with rice

Every time I go back to San Francisco, there is a crush of people that I want to see. In addition to everyone that I want to catch up with, thereโ€™s also a whirlwind of places I want to go to visit, from favorite taquerias to new chocolate and pastry places. (Not sure what happened in my absence, but the city has really ramped upโ€ฆ

514 Shares

Continue reading...

Kerrygold Ballymaloe Literary Festival of Food & Wine

As I stumble through figuring out how to use the new features after theย site upgrade, Iโ€™ve got a backlog of posts and pictures that Iโ€™ve been anxious to share. It also has taken me a week to recover from my weekend in Cork, Ireland, as a guest at the Kerrygold Ballymaloe Litfest, where I was a speaker in this yearโ€™s line-up. Iโ€™d only been toโ€ฆ

103 Shares

Continue reading...

TGIF (aka DMCV)

Although it doesnโ€™t quite translate, Dieu merci, cโ€™est vendredi โ€“ or as Iโ€™m going to say in English, Thank God Itโ€™s Friday (TGIF), because itโ€™s been quite a week. (On a related note, I was recently informed by a French friend that a 4-day weekend is not a vacation โ€“ itโ€™s just a few days off, or a pont (bridge.) But even though I tookโ€ฆ

1 Shares

Continue reading...

My Favorite Cookbooks of 2009

I have a stack (actually, about four stacks) of cookbooks that arrived this year, many of them riddled with bookmarks for recipes. Some of them I managed to get to, presenting recipes on the blog or baking for friends and neighbors, and a few I didnโ€™t get around to yet. In this yearโ€™s round up, I did sneak in a few recipes from favorite classicsโ€ฆ

10 Shares

Continue reading...

Hidden Kitchen, Chien Lunatique, Spring & Frenchie

Three of the hottest, most sought-after tables in Paris are lorded over by les amรฉricains. A few are part of the โ€œundergroundโ€ dining scene, which seems to be a global phenomenon, another is a one-man show (for now), and the forth is a cozy little resto located in a back alley where a French chef, who trained mostly in America, is combining the best ofโ€ฆ

0 Shares

Continue reading...

Spinach Pie recipe

I donโ€™t know when it took hold, but le Brunch has become popular in Paris. Unlike the Bloody Mary and Mimosa-fueled repasts we had when I lived inย San Francisco, in Paris, the concept is a little different. For one thing, Sundays are blissfully โ€œsacredโ€ and no one seems to want to wake up and go anywhere until โ€” well, Monday. And the places that doโ€ฆ

745 Shares

Continue reading...

Six New Cookbooks Iโ€™ve Just Got to Have

Prior to my trip back to the states this week, I just put in my order for some new cookbooks to schlep back with me. Because of limited space chez David, I have to be somewhat selective about which books I get, since thereโ€™s only so many things I can squeeze in around here. These are the six that made the cut, although Iโ€™ll probablyโ€ฆ

0 Shares

Continue reading...

Thiercelin 1809 Spice Shop

One of the first places I went to in Paris when I was setting up house, was Thiercelin. My friend David Tanis took me there, who is a chef and lived in Paris part-time. And as I roamed through the neat shop, poked in the wooden drawers and sniffed in the jars, I was thrilled to find such a treasure trove of spices and comestiblesโ€ฆ

3 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...