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Cold Toast

The French are known for their fine cuisine. Their lavish lunches and sumptuous dinners are legendary. But breakfast, or le petit dรฉjeuner, might seem to getย short shrift, to the dismay of travelers coming from places where breakfast is a more elaborate affair.ย I remember as a touristย in France, I felt so French having a baguette or croissant for breakfast, smearing jam and butter on either, enjoyingโ€ฆ

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Lโ€™imprimerie Bakery

[UPDATE: Gus retired from the bakery in 2025 and passed along the bakery to other owners.) Iโ€™m often dismayedย when I take a trip back to the U.S. and people tell me theyย wonder why they canโ€™t get good food where they live, like they have in France. While itโ€™s certainly true there arenโ€™t bakeries on every street corner in America (I think people would miss allโ€ฆ

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In Praise of Sesame Baguettes in Paris

I suppose Iโ€™m doing all those things the diet-police are advising against โ€“ namely having fat and carbohydrates for breakfast in lieu of โ€œhealthierโ€ options, like having a bowl of kale-flecked quinoa or downing a cilantro smoothie. But as much as I like fruits and vegetables (and herbs), the only thing I am able to face first thing in the morning is something a littleโ€ฆ

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How to Find a Great Baguette in Paris

ย  There are a lot of people who come to Paris and canโ€™t wait to get their hands on one of the amazing baguettes that are packed in baskets and lined up on flour-dusted bakery counters seemingly on just every street corner. (And people still ask me why I moved here?) Well I have good news and bad news for you โ€“ there are plentyโ€ฆ

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La baguette

Some time ago I switched my allegiance to grainy bread. Perhaps it was because I was thinking, โ€œIf Iโ€™m going to eat all this bread around here, I should at least be eating grainy bread.โ€ Or perhaps I got bored with the one-note flavors of white bread, and began enjoying the fuller flavors of whole grain loaves. But over the last few weeks, while Iโ€™veโ€ฆ

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Sunday Paris Market

Summer was kind of a bust in Paris this year. True, I did spend three weeks away. But from what everyone told me, Paris was just like the city I came home to; gray and overcast. One of the rewards of living in Paris is summer. After surviving the bleak, cold winter, the payoff is sitting in outdoor cafรฉs drinking cold rosรฉ in the heatโ€ฆ

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La crise de la baguette

A while back, a food editor in the states asked me to send him daily some ideas for articles that I might want to write-up for them. I thought about it for quite a while, then sent a response for an article with recipes for using up leftover bread, which I tentatively titled: The French Bread Crisis. They kindly responded, thanking me for the idea,โ€ฆ

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The French Bread Machine

I was a little surprised when I moved to France and learned that bread machines were popular here. I was equally surprised to see a generous selection of frozen breads at Picard, the chain of stores that spans across France which sport a comprehensive, and somewhat impressive, selection of frozen entrรฉes, appetizers, main courses, and fancy desserts. Out of curiosity, Iโ€™ve tried a few things,โ€ฆ

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Jโ€™Go

I vaguely remember my first visit to Jโ€™Go. I think it had something to do with a wild night at the bar, and involved French rugby players drinking Armagnac shots off my belly. But unless someone has photo proof, Iโ€™m going to just assume that my memory may be off. (It very well may be, if it involves my having a belly concave enough toโ€ฆ

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