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Le Richer

Iโ€™ve had a swirl of visitors lately, and every morning it seems like I open my Inbox to find more โ€œWeโ€™re Coming to Paris!!!โ€ in subject lines. Iโ€™m not complaining because I love seeing my friends, especially those I donโ€™t see often enough, but the joke about needing a social secretary has become a reality for me โ€“ just so I can get my otherโ€ฆ

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Roam Artisan Burgers, Blue Bottle Coffee & Wooden Charcoal Korean Village Barbecue House

Now I know why they call America โ€“ The land of the free. I had a trifecta on my first day; The (normally pricey) watch repair place fixed my watch for free, with a โ€œMerry Christmas!โ€ as he walked onto the next customer, the mobile phone company not only gave me a new SIM card so I could talk and tweet away (which isnโ€™t free,โ€ฆ

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Ciel de Paris

[UPDATE: As of June 2025, Ciel de Paris has closed.] Most people already know that a good view doesnโ€™t necessarily go hand-in-hand with a remarkable culinary experience. But Iโ€™d gone to Ciel de Paris many years ago and found the food pas mal. And to top it off, it was reasonably priced, which is so often not the case in places that tend to attractโ€ฆ

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Shang Palace

Quite a while back, I worked at an Asian restaurant in San Francisco. The food was amazing. Fresh shrimp were cooked up, chopped, then smeared on bread, then deep-fried for shrimp toast. All the dumplings had freshly cooked ingredients in them โ€“ no canned peas or frozen shrimp. And each one was hand-rolled. All the meats were well-sourced and cooked daily, then shredded for fillingsโ€ฆ

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Fรชte de Charcuterie

Someone recently asked me if people in Paris have started raising chickens in their backyard. I had to pause for a minute, and wanted to remind folks that Paris wasnโ€™t Brooklyn, nor does anyone have โ€“ at least in my circles โ€“ a backyard in Paris. And if they did, they could afford a country house and would raise their chickens out there. But Frenchโ€ฆ

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Poilane

I donโ€™t think about this so much anymore, but one of the reasons I moved to Paris is that I could, whenever I wanted to, go to Poilรขne and buy myself a nice chunk of pain Poilรขne. Just like that. Although Iโ€™m from San Francisco where there are quite a number of excellent bread bakeries, thereโ€™s something special about the bread at Poilรขne โ€“ itโ€ฆ

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Nopi, in London

I was a big fan of Ottolenghi even before I stepped into one of their restaurants. When I got a copy of Yotam Ottolenghiโ€™s first book, I was blown away by the photographs of gorgeous dishes, heaped with generous amounts of fresh chopped herbs, irregularly cut vegetables often seared and caramelized, and roasted, juicy meats accented with citrus or unexpected spices, usually with a Middleโ€ฆ

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Septime

When I go out to eat, itโ€™s usually not with the intention of writing about a place. I go out to eat to have a good time with friends and enjoy the food. (And perhaps a little wine.) But I found that whenever I donโ€™t expect it, I hit on a place that merits talking about. Septime opened and caused a ripple of excitement inโ€ฆ

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Candelaria

Luis Rendรณn is my new favorite person in Paris. And the guy who makes the tortillas is my second favorite (I suppose if I got his name, he might be the first.) But itโ€™s Luis behind the great Mexican fare at Candelaria, a narrow slip of a place in the upper Marais that serves authentic Mexican food. Lately thereโ€™s a new openness, a willingness toโ€ฆ

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