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Chouquettes: French Cream Puff Recipe

Dinner in Paris generally starts at 8 pm, especially in restaurants, and I get ravenously hungry between lunch and dinner. Parisians do dine rather late โ€“ often not until 9:30 pm or later, and thatโ€™sย an awfully long stretch. So French people visit their local pรขtisserie for an afternoon snack, known as le goรปter, although nowadays Parisians often call it le snack. Le snack is oftenโ€ฆ

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Galette des rois

Starting in late December, pastry shops in Paris start jumping the gun, and windows and showcases begin filling up with Galettes des rois, or King Cake, in anticipation of the celebration of Epiphany, on January 6th. Because itโ€™s such a popular treat, and lucrative for bakeries, the period of availability seems to extend a few more days every year and itโ€™s not unusual for findโ€ฆ

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Panisse recipe

Way back in 2008, probably before some of you were born, I posted a recipe for Panisses, chickpea flour fritters. They werenโ€™t so well known outside of the south of France, and even in Paris, people donโ€™t really know what they are. So it was fun introducing these Mediterranean specialties to a wider audience, even if some readers were scratching their heads as to howโ€ฆ

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Bijou Cocktail

This cocktail gets its name from the three main ingredients, and their relationship to bijoux, or jewels or gems. The clear gin is like a diamond, the red vermouth is like a ruby, and the green from the Chartreuse is the emerald. The original recipe called for those ingredients to be used in three equal parts but cocktail expert and bartender Dale DeGroff, who resurrectedโ€ฆ

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Crepes Dentelle cookies (Gavottes)

These may be the best cookies in the world. Okay, theyโ€™re not really cookies, per se. At least not in the French sense. Les cookies refers to chocolate chip cookiesย and these ultra-thin, ultra-crisp, and ultra-buttery tasting crรชpes dentelles are so different, yet so good, youโ€™ll find yourself eating your way through several of them in no time. To prove that point, as a courtesy, theโ€ฆ

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The Jockey Club cocktail

When I write a book, Iโ€™m all in. Thatโ€™s why I tend to lean into single-subject books, exploring ice cream, cooking and baking in Paris, and the traditions and culture of French drinks. Each book gives me an opportunity to take a deep dive into something that I love, but also allows me to learn and discover something new. Iโ€™ve always liked the flavor ofโ€ฆ

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Sandrine Chappaz Chocolate

A couple of weeks ago, I took a trip to the Savoie, a region of France that was once a dukedom of Italy. As you travel through France, especially away from the center of the country, you see more influences from neighboring countries, such as in the Basque region, where cornmeal and chile peppers figure into the cuisine. In Nice, pistou and soccaย from Italy areโ€ฆ

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Bonnat Chocolate

I learned about Bonnat chocolate on a trip to Voiron way-back-when, well over a decade ago, when I wanted to visit the Chartreuse distillery, to learn how the mysterious herbal elixir was made. It was an interesting trip, especially because one of the smells coming from the infusing vats filled with herbs reminded me of the smell of some of the herbs youโ€™d smell onโ€ฆ

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Supermoon Bakehouse

When I come to the states, with apologies to all whoโ€™ve urged me to check out a croissant, Kouign amann, or macaron shop, since I can get all those things pretty easily in France, I tend to stick with local favorites. I donโ€™t think anyone from San Francisco is coming to Paris for a burrito, nor in anyone flying over from Brooklyn in search ofโ€ฆ

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