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Sicily

Iโ€™ve been living in what is arguably the center of Europe for a while now (and Iโ€™m certain someone will get out their ruler and argue that technically, I donโ€™t actually reside in the precise center of the continent โ€“ but letโ€™s just go with that for the sake of the story), I donโ€™t visit other countries as often as Iโ€™d like. Itโ€™s so easyโ€ฆ

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Fried Halloumi Cheese

When I was in Beirut, I stayed at a hotel with amazing breakfasts. Although Iโ€™m not one that likes to inflict myself on the public in the early hours of the day (when Iโ€™m not exactly at my best), the breakfasts with their freshly baked Arabic bread and zaโ€™atar-filled croissants helped me make the transition from my blissful slumber, and through that difficult period whereโ€ฆ

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A Visit to Abu Kassem Zaโ€™atar Farm

One thing you learn quickly if you travel to, or somehow explore otherwise, the various cuisines of the Middle East, is that every country, and seeminglyโ€ฆevery single person, has their own idea of what zaโ€™atar is. And theyโ€™re very (very) attached to it. So much so that a chef in a restaurant in Jerusalem rolled up his sleeve to show me a tattoo of whatโ€ฆ

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Grilled Vegetables with Zaโ€™atar Vinaigrette

Thereโ€™s a big difference between lucky and fortunate. Luck is a winning lottery ticket blowing in your window. Fortunate means that youโ€™ve taken the initiative and done something. And because of it, there was a positive outcome. So I would probably say that I was lucky because my mother was a good cook but itโ€™s debatable whether I am lucky, or fortunate, because my partnerโ€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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Kale Chips

Itโ€™s arguable whether Paris is a โ€œcutting edgeโ€ city. With a rich culinary tradition, change comes slowly (and sometimes requires a little coaxing), and the arrival of kale is no exception. Although we can now get kale sporadically in Paris, thanks to The Kale Project, I was fortunate when a friend came to Paris bearing the fruits (or leaves) of crinkly denseness. In a โ€œbeโ€ฆ

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Labneh

I have always loved Middle Eastern foods. The fresh vegetables, the liberal use of herbs and seasonings, including a touch of spiciness at times, and the casual way of eating that the food encourages. Meze is the term thatโ€™s used to define all the โ€œlittle platesโ€ that get brought out to begin in a meal, served in little bowls often with pools of olive oilโ€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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Lebanese Meze

The Lebanese are real โ€œsnackersโ€, a point brought home by Mazen Hajjar, the owner of 961, Lebanonโ€™s first (and only) craft brewery that told me if I went into someoneโ€™s home in Lebanon and they offered a drink โ€“ but no bowl of nuts or seeds, โ€œYou should goโ€ฆjust get up and leave immediately.โ€ Fortunately I never had to, because true to his word, eachโ€ฆ

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