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Poule au pot

ย  King Henry IV of France promised โ€œa chicken in every pot, every Sundayโ€ to the French back in the 17th century and things havenโ€™t changed much since then. Chicken remains a classic French Sunday meal, as the lines for roast chickens prove at the markets and butcher shops on the weekends will attest to. People in France eat chicken on other days of theโ€ฆ

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Rabbit Pasta with Green Olives, Fennel, and Preserved Lemons

Some people donโ€™t like generalizations, but, wellโ€ฆthatโ€™s a generalization too, isnโ€™t it? However, you sometimes need to paint a picture in broad strokes. And differences which are specific to certain cultures are interesting, which is why many of us travel, to experience them. (Itโ€™s also what makes us all delightfully different.) Most donโ€™t come out of thin air, and often contain a kernel of truth,โ€ฆ

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Tartiflette

One French dish Iโ€™ve not made is Tartiflette. Itโ€™s one of those things that you tuck into after a day of skiing down alps, which I did once with a family of expert skiers, realizing too late that my intermediate-level of skiing was no match for my friends, who pointed their skis straight down the top of the alps and took off. I tried myโ€ฆ

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Classic Salade Nicoise

Authenticity is a broad subject that probably many people agree that weโ€™ll never agree on, since food changes and evolves, as time goes by, and as people cross borders, using what they can get where they live. But I sometimes have an amusing image in my head that the people who are scouring the internet, pointing out inauthentic recipes, are sitting in cafes, eating chickenโ€ฆ

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Radish Leaf Soup

Tough times call for looking at everything in the kitchen as a potential source of food. Iโ€™ve been saving the breadcrumbs on my cutting board and scraping them into pots of soup. I parsimoniously scrutinize every egg I use, counting how many I might need for any upcoming baking projects. Fresh lettuce has become a precious commodity as Iโ€™m trying to only to go foodโ€ฆ

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Cream of Cabbage Soup

When the virus hit, Iโ€™m pretty sure the first thing people didnโ€™t think about stocking up on was cabbage. I only saw the empty shelves of pasta, rice, and toilet paper from photos posted online, taken in the U.S., but I didnโ€™t see any pictures of the empty cabbage bins. Iโ€™ve loved cabbage for a long time, and even my mother shredded red cabbage toโ€ฆ

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Pasta Bolognese

A while back I made Meatballs Subs because I had a craving. Theyโ€™re not that difficult to make and when you make them at home, you can use better ingredients than the versions you get elsewhere. Fortunately, thereโ€™s good bread in France and no shortage of cheese. And meatballs arenโ€™t much of a challenge to make either. (Interestingly, a few weeks after I posted thatโ€ฆ

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Eggplant and Yogurt Spread with Saffron

When Anissa Helou told me she was writing a book on the foods of theย Islamic world, I was surprised, and a little curious. I didnโ€™t know much about the food, but I am always drawn to the flavors, and ingredients used: Lots of vegetables, olive oil, pulses, grains, olives, spices, handmade cheeses and flatbreads, fresh fish, and grilled meats. In short, the kind of foodโ€ฆ

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Farro with Mushrooms and Bacon

A few months ago, I was gifted a very large bag of farro, overย five pounds of it. I never thought I could have enough farro, and sure enough, Iโ€™m almost at the end of it. Farro is popular in Italy, and nowadays, itโ€™s available inย the United Statesย and elsewhere. Itโ€™s a particular strain of wheat, similar to wheat berries, or รฉpautre, in France, known elsewhere asโ€ฆ

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