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Shakshuka

Iโ€™ve been meaning to get into the Shakshuka groove ever since I had it for breakfast at Nopi in London, and on my trip to Jerusalem, where this North African dish wowed me โ€“ and my taste buds โ€“ every morning. Although various versions abound, the most widely known Shakshuka involves eggs softly cooked in a hot skillet of spiced tomato sauce. Iโ€™ve had plentyโ€ฆ

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Kimchi Omelet

Hereโ€™s a quick one, which is perfect because itโ€™s precisely the idea of Jaden Hairโ€™s book, The Steamy Kitchenโ€™s Healthy Asian Favorites, which was just delivered to me (I saw a preview and wrote a quote for the book). Itโ€™s full of pretty amazing ideas for quick Asian dishes that can be made with easily available ingredients โ€“ often ones you already have in yourโ€ฆ

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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

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Agen

I recently had lunch with someone whoโ€™d just moved to Paris. I gave her some places to check out and a few tips about living in her newly adopted city, including navigating some of the ups and downs, and what to do when city life became overwhelming. But shortly after we parted, I realized that Iโ€™d forgotten to tell her my most important piece ofโ€ฆ

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Angel Food Cake

Last summer when I was in New York, a French acquaintance sent out a missive, looking for an Angel Food Cake pan in Paris. Iโ€™ve been thinking about making one for a number of years. But there are a number of American baked goods that donโ€™t quite translate, and this classic cake โ€“ made like a big, baked meringue โ€“ wellโ€ฆI was pretty certain thisโ€ฆ

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Tu biโ€™Shvat Cake

Iโ€™ve never given Israeli food all much thought. Sure, Iโ€™d had my fill of falafels and hummus in my lifetime, but there is a trip in my future and I was at a dinner party the other night and the woman hosting us had lived in Israel for a number of years and said it was her favorite place in the world. Other people atโ€ฆ

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Aux Tonneaux des Halles

[Update: Aux Tonneaux des Halles changed owners in 2016. They no longer feature natural wines and theย food on the current menu differs from what is shown and described here.] Every once in a while, it hits me: I need steak-frites. Itโ€™s an infrequent indulgence, but when I do have it, I like my steak with a crisp exterior, pan-seared until saignant (medium-rare), with a largeโ€ฆ

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Chocolate-Prune Cake

A while back, there was a spate of books about how to โ€˜sneakโ€™ ingredients that are โ€˜healthyโ€™ into food for your kids, to trick them into eating better. (Raymond Sokolov wrote an excellent rebuttal to that.) And recently there have been a few books written about how kids in France eat, and behave, better than their counterparts elsewhere. I canโ€™t really comment on them in-depthโ€ฆ

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Sabayon

While theyโ€™re working on my kitchen, I had no idea how much I would miss cooking. Itโ€™s not just because cooking and baking are what I do work-wise, but the ritual of going to the market in Paris and buying whatever catches my eye has become an integral part of my life. When I see lemons from Provence with their leaves attached or the firstโ€ฆ

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