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A Visit to Jacques Genin Chocolate Shop in Paris (Video)

ย  ย  Not longย after Iโ€™d arrived in Paris, I met Jacques Genin. At the time, he was working out of a small workshop deep in the 15th arrondissement. Inside, he and his team of five or so worked in a very tight space: A large table where they worked sat in the center of the room, taking up probably 90% of the space, enrobing machinesโ€ฆ

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A lโ€™Etoile dโ€™Or is Open Again!

[UPDATE: As of September 2022, after 46 years, Madame Acabo has retired and closed her shop in Paris.] When a gas explosionย that happened in the basementย destroyed her shop, many couldnโ€™t believe that one of their favorite chocolate shops in Paris was gone, including Denise Acabo herself. I visited her shortly afterward and she was in shock, missing her store โ€“ but most of all, missingโ€ฆ

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Update: A lโ€™Etoile dโ€™Or

[UPDATE: As of September 2022, after 46 years, Madame Acabo has retired and closed her shop in Paris. Itโ€™s now a branch of the cookie and chocolate shop of Alain Ducasse.] If youโ€™d ever stepped into A lโ€™Etoile dโ€™Or, the candy and chocolate shop located just down the hill from the Moulin Rouge windmill, near Montmartre, it wouldnโ€™t have taken you long to know youโ€ฆ

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Jacques Genin

I first met Jacques Genin a number of years ago when he was (somewhat famously) working out of a battered storefront, on an uninteresting street deep in the 15th arrondissement of Paris. I say โ€œfamouslyโ€ because as he became quite a bit better known, many folks learning about him through Mort Rosenblumโ€™s book, Chocolate: A Bittersweet Saga of Light and Dark. And subsequently, people startedโ€ฆ

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Tel Aviv

Tel Aviv was always hovering something in the middle of the ever-growing list of places I wanted to visit. But in recent years, I kept hearing what a hip place it was, and how it was sort of the โ€œSan Franciscoโ€ of Israel. Stretching along a massive beach, as soon as I arrived in the city, I wanted to ditch my luggage and jump rightโ€ฆ

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Poilane

I donโ€™t think about this so much anymore, but one of the reasons I moved to Paris is that I could, whenever I wanted to, go to Poilรขne and buy myself a nice chunk of pain Poilรขne. Just like that. Although Iโ€™m from San Francisco where there are quite a number of excellent bread bakeries, thereโ€™s something special about the bread at Poilรขne โ€“ itโ€ฆ

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Paris Gastronomy Tour

Doing a culinary tour in Paris is always fun, because not only do I get to meet some new people and make new friends (importantโ€ฆsince the old ones keep deserting me), but I get to revisit my favorite places in Paris. And this week, we made a detour in Lyon as well. So there was a lot more to see, and eatโ€ฆ Lyon is aโ€ฆ

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Lime Meringue Tart Recipe

I once asked a restaurateur, who owns restaurants in European and in America, what he thought was the main difference between the food in American and the food in Europe.ย โ€œEverythingโ€™s isย sweeter,โ€ he replied right away. I thought about it for a moment, and considering everyoneโ€™s got their panties in a knot about all the sweeteners that are dumped into everything from tomato sauce, bottled saladโ€ฆ

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Culture Shock

The โ€œToffee Buzzโ€ Clif bar that I picked up in the states (as a travel emergency ration) versus Salted Butter Caramels from Jacques Genin that my houseguest left for me. I donโ€™t think I need to tell you which one won. But if Jacques is willing to add a salted butter caramel energy bar to his list, Iโ€™m going to stock up on those instead,โ€ฆ

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