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No-Bake Granola Bars

Someone once asked me how I know when to give up on a recipe. Sometimes I realize after a few tries, that I should just forget about it. And others, like the tarte tropรฉzienne in my next book, I made seventeen times until I got it just right. (Because I got a little crazy about getting it just right, including bringing slices around to localโ€ฆ

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La Graineterie du Marche

There are a number of โ€œmust-doโ€ lists in Paris, places where people just have to go while theyโ€™re here. Often people have limited time, and I hear ya, so I might suggest the departments stores on the Boulevard Haussman, Printempts and Galeries Lafayette (although even since Printemps started charging โ‚ฌ1,5 to use the restrooms, Iโ€™m inclined to go to the Galeries Lafayette, just on principle.)โ€ฆ

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Lebanon

UPDATE: My visit to Lebanon was in 2013 and I had a marvelous time visiting. In recent years, a powerful explosion rocked Beirut, and subsequent social and economic changes happened, and I havenโ€™t been back. Before planning a trip, do some reading or talk to a travel professional about visiting Lebanon and what to expect. The Middle East is a pretty fascinating place, and onโ€ฆ

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Al Bohsali: Middle Eastern Pastries

Itโ€™s too bad that so many people are only familiar with Middle Eastern pastries that arenโ€™t so well made. If you sample them far from where they originate, often theyโ€™re made with old or stale nuts, theyโ€™ve sat around too long in plastic packages, or the cheeses arenโ€™t exactly fresh. While itโ€™s true that some of them can be a bit sticky-sweet for Western tastes,โ€ฆ

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Food Gifts to Bring French People from America

Even though globalization has made things pretty available everywhere, and things like Speculoos spread and Fleur de sel can now be found in America, it hasnโ€™t always worked quite the same the other way around. Some American things havenโ€™t made it across the Atlantic and people often think that Americans subsist on junk food because at the stores that cater to expats, and in theโ€ฆ

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French Honey

I had to put a moratorium on jam-making this year because I realized I had enough jam to last a normal person, who doesnโ€™t have a French partner, at least ten years. (Iโ€™m not naming any names, but one Frenchman in particular can go through half a jar at one breakfast alone.) But one thing I canโ€™t make is honey, in spite of the factโ€ฆ

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Vin chaud: Hot Mulled Wine

Yes, itโ€™s winter in Paris. And when the temperature drops, folks move inside the cafรฉs to escape the cold, except for the fumeurs, who are remarkably hardy and seemingly immune to the chill outside, while they puff away on cafรฉ terraces. Weโ€™re all bundled up, shivering on the sidewalks, lured into the cafรฉs with chalkboards scrawled with the words, Vin chaud. Vin chaud (hot mulledโ€ฆ

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Turkey Melon

Not long ago, I mentioned the Lamb Melons I saw at a butcher stand at the Marchรฉ dโ€™Anvers in Paris. Since itโ€™s an afternoon market, I thought it might be fun to mosey over there at my leisure and pick one up for Sunday lunch. However I was surprised to see the market completely packed. Since there are less than a few dozen stands, itโ€™sโ€ฆ

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Pickled Radishes

It always curious to me when I see French breakfast radishesย in the states. I know thatโ€™s the name for them, according to seed packets and so forth. But Iโ€™ve never seen anyone in France eat radishes forย breakfast. Yes, the French do eat a lot of radishes. (In fact, they were one of the first things I wrote about on the site after I arrived inโ€ฆ

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