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Crispy Baked Tofu

Someday, someone is going set up a camera in my place. At least I hope so. Because over the last three years, I can safely say that the craziest things have happened to me. Iโ€™ve often toyed with writing a book about it, but no one would believe me, and it would quickly get tossed into the fiction bin, dismissed as folly. Oddly, Iโ€™ve beenโ€ฆ

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Chimichurri

Beef is very popular in France. And itโ€™s not just for the taste: on more than one occasion, Iโ€™ve been told I need to eat more red meat by folks concerned about my health. (I guess I need to look in the mirror more often.) I like a good steak every once in a while, and, fortunately for meat-lovers, there are butchers in every neighborhoodโ€ฆ

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Should You Remove the Green Germ from Garlic?

Garlic has a season, and depending on where you live, that season is usually spring through mid-summer. In France, we get ail nouveau, which are heads of garlic that are very plump and slightly soft, whose moist skin is tinged with a bit of pink. As it ages, the garlic becomes more rosy in color, and there is even a special โ€œroseโ€ garlic in Franceโ€ฆ

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Roasted Tomato Soup with Corn Salsa

If I read one more recipe that begins with saying that the recipe is the perfect way to use up the overload of summer tomatoes, Iโ€™m going to scream. Okay, in deference to my neighbors, I wonโ€™t. But to me, there is no such thing as having too many tomatoes. Thatโ€™s just crazy-talk. We donโ€™t have the overload of great tomatoes in Paris that folksโ€ฆ

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How to Prepare and Cook Artichokes

Itโ€™s fresh artichoke season and Iโ€™m finding them piled up at my local market, practically tumbling off the stands. Last week, I stood there, putting one after the other in my market basket, where I took them home to admire the beauties on my kitchen counter. But theyโ€™re not just pretty to look at; artichokes are great in salads, risotto, pastas, and even on open-faceโ€ฆ

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Simplest Beef Curry

Iโ€™d read a rather head-scratching review of a book that I was very fond of from the day it landed in my apartment. Burma: Rivers of Flavor is a cookbook that has been haunting me ever since I opened it up and leafed through the pages. It was written by Naomi Duguid, a seasoned cookbook author who traveled throughout the country before the change inโ€ฆ

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Guacamole

Okay, show of hands โ€“ who likes guacamole more than I do? Okayโ€ฆ Now that thatโ€™s settled, who was more thrilled that I was to score a batch of freshly fried tortilla chips and a big bag of just-about ripe Haas avocados this week? Iโ€™m not asking any more questions, I promise. Because the answers were right here in my kitchen. Although what some peopleโ€ฆ

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Mont dโ€™Or

โ€œGoopyโ€ isnโ€™t a word used too often when writing about food. Am not sure why, but perhaps because there arenโ€™t a lot of things that are goopy, that you actually want to eat. Mont dโ€™Or has been called the holy grail of French raw milk cheeses. Itโ€™s goopy for sure, and if that bothers you, well, thatโ€™s something youโ€™re going to have to work onโ€ฆ

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