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Tuck Shop

ย  ย  [Update: Tuck shop has now closed.] There are so many of these places opening in Paris that itโ€™s making my head spin, in a good way. Way back when, in 2008, when I did a post on where to get good coffee in Paris, there were just a handful of places listed. Now I canโ€™t keep up! So along comes a little place,โ€ฆ

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Il Gelato Centogusti

[UPDATE: Il Gelato Centogusti is unfortunately now closed.] Iโ€™m very fortunate to have a gelato guide in Milan, because itโ€™s a rather spread out city. And like many Italian cities, Iโ€™ve found some of the best gelaterias are located farther away from the city center. (Younger, less-established gelato makers canโ€™t often afford to be in the expensive areas.) Unlike other Italian cities, Milan isnโ€™t reallyโ€ฆ

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Tasting Rome: Gelato, Pasta and the Market

Whenever I go to a foreign city, within a few hours of getting oriented, I invariably find myself mentally preparing my move there. I walk around the streets, admiring all the shops and interesting people speaking beautiful languages, and looking up at the apartments with curving iron railings and linens hanging out to dry I imagine myself being a part of it all and makingโ€ฆ

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Rome, Again

Today, Iโ€™ve had gelato for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. And as I write this, itโ€™s only 3pm in the afternoon. It all started on this bright Sunday morning, when I made the onerous hike up to Prati, to Fatamorgana for their daring, wildly-flavored gelati. If you werenโ€™t looking for the place, youโ€™d probably keep going. But being the trooper that I am, in the blazingโ€ฆ

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Rome Booksigning & Get-Together

If youโ€™re in Rome, your welcome to come by and say, and enjoy a glass of wine and a few treats, at a book event and meet-up on Saturday, June 5th. From 6 to 8pm Iโ€™ll be in the courtyard of the Palazzo Santa Croce, vicolo Deโ€™ Catinari, 3 (map) and if youโ€™d like to get a copy of my latest book, Ready for Dessert,โ€ฆ

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Shameless Groveling

Alright, folks. Weโ€™re about halfway through Menu for Hope 6 and weโ€™re almost at the $20,000 mark. Thanks to all of you who contributed to this incredibly worthy cause! However being an overachiever (in spite of what a therapist, or my editor, might say), I think we can do better. Like, a whole lot better. So just to remind you, hereโ€™s a list of aโ€ฆ

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Back to Torino

Wait just a minute. Itโ€™s been about a week since I got back from Torino, and I told you about all the stuff I managed to jam in my craw at the Salone del Gusto, but I also spent a fair amount of time visiting some of the chocolate shops and caffรจs in this great city. Man cannot live by cured pork products and sheepโ€™s-milkโ€ฆ

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Slow Food: Salone del Gusto (Part 2)

Now that Iโ€™ve had a few days to digest everything I tasted at the Salon del Gusto, I thought Iโ€™d show you a fraction of what was on offer. The event was an unparalleled opportunity to sample foods from all over the world, with a focus on Italy, of course, since thatโ€™s where the event takes place. That meant an abundance of cured pork productsโ€ฆ

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Slow Food: Salone del Gusto (Part I)

After returning from my first-ever visit to the Slow Food Salone del Gusto in Torino, Italy, on Monday, I began writing up the event, and looking at the photos Iโ€™d taken. As I wrote, I found myself writing a but at length of what this event was, and wasnโ€™t, and how people (including me) perceive these kinds of events. I didnโ€™t go with any agenda;โ€ฆ

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