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What to Buy When Starting a French Bar at Home

Weeks before Drinking French came out, people were asking me what liquors and spirits to buy in anticipation of the bookโ€™s release. Skimming through the 160 recipes in the book, many of which are for cocktails and apรฉritifs, I offered up tips here and there, suggesting a few essential bottles that could be used for a number of recipes in the book. I also addedโ€ฆ

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Eeyoreโ€™s Requiem cocktail

Named after Eeyore, a character from Winnie the Pooh, like the grey donkey, which Toby Maloney, its creator, calls โ€œthe most bitter character in literature.โ€ In spite of that moniker, this alluring cocktail has an appealing bitterness that I canโ€™t resist. And not to mention the color; if youโ€™re in the doldrums, this vivid Eeyoreโ€™s Requiem cocktail will definitely lure you out of it.

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The Marc Negroni

One of the happiest days Iโ€™ve spent in my life was the one when I landed at the train station in Beaune, hopped in a car with a stranger, who took me to a cemetery out in the middle of nowhere. I found myself facing a large copper contraption spewing steam in the air, surrounded by bins of what looked like the outcasts of anโ€ฆ

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The Hanky Panky

The golden age of cocktails happened during the period of prohibition in America. (So it seemed to have the reverse effect.) During that time, people made their own spirits underground, like bathtub gin, and since the taste wasnโ€™t exactly up to snuff, a good number of cocktails were concocted so that the taste of the main alcohol could be hidden under a few layers ofโ€ฆ

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French Manhattan

Someone told me that โ€œcocktailsโ€ is one of the most used search terms right now on the internet. Sometimes I feel like Iโ€™m in the right place at the right time. Other times, I feel as if things might go the other way. Right now, I feel a little bit of both. When my planned book tour was nearing the start date, the news cycleโ€ฆ

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The Making of Drinking French

A few years ago, after My Paris Kitchen came out, I began thinking about what Iโ€™d write about next. Whenever you have a book come out, the most common question is, โ€œWhatโ€™s your next book?โ€ Sometimes you already have an idea, but other times, itโ€™s nice to sit back and enjoy what youโ€™ve written. I was happy that people took to that book so much,โ€ฆ

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The Shaken Martini

Itโ€™s funny how two ingredients can inspire so much discussion, conflict, anticipation, one-upmanship, derision, desire, ire, and postulating. Yes, Iโ€™m talking about the Martini cocktail. From what kind of gin to use, how much (if any) vermouth is added, whether itโ€™s shaken or stirred, if you should add bitters, and whether an olive or lemon twist is preferred, few seem to agree on what makesโ€ฆ

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Grapefruit Vermouth Marmalade

When I arrived in Paris, I was surprised to see pink grapefruits as objects of such adulation. Mรฉtro billboard ads extolled the virtues of pink grapefruits, with ones from Texas being the most prized. Of course, it was a marketing campaign, but those grapefruits are rather good. When I lived in California, we didnโ€™t just have grapefruits, we had everything, from Oroblancos, to tangelos andโ€ฆ

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Five Favorite Food Addresses in Paris

ร‰pices & Saveurs Although it may seem like your typical Arabic รฉpicerie (food shop), of which there are many in Paris, Iโ€™ve shopped a lot of them and found ร‰pices & Saveurs especially well-stocked. The place is as neat a pin and in addition to the usual line-up of harissas, nuts and dried fruits in bulk, olive oils, and spices, I always findย curiosities on theโ€ฆ

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