Skip to content

New York Restaurants and Bakeries

ย  Hereโ€™s a round-up of places I visited recently in New York City. One happy change (which is also happening in cities elsewhere) is the proliferation of excellent bakeries making top-quality artisan bread, as well as bakeries with a global focus. While Americans donโ€™t buy bread daily, as the French do, you can get terrific bread and pastries if you know where to look. Restaurantsโ€ฆ

389 Shares

Continue reading...

Merguez & Pastrami

[UPDATE: In the fall of 2018, Merguez & Pastrami closed, and the space will become Saulโ€™s, a restaurant by the same owner, offering similar specialties.] The most interesting neighborhood right now inย Paris is the 9th arrondissement. Walk in any various directions from a mรฉtro station after you land there, and youโ€™ll find yourself in a completely different neighborhood, whether itโ€™s surrounded by stately buildings onโ€ฆ

248 Shares

Continue reading...

John Brown Smokehouse

I remember being dรฉรงu (disappointed) a few years back when I signed up to go to a barbecue dinner in Paris and I was super-excited to attend. But instead of being served platters of long-cooked meat, I found myself being handed aย plate of a piece of beef cooked on aย regular grill: Iโ€™d forgotten that the word โ€œbarbecueโ€ in Europe usually means โ€œgrilled.โ€ (Shhhh. Donโ€™t tellโ€ฆ

3 Shares

Continue reading...

Homemade Corned Beef

My desert island food is corned beef. Hot, piled up on a sandwich, between two pieces of rye bread withย spicy brown mustard smeared liberally inside, corned beef is the one food that I could find myself being happily enjoying if trapped on a desert island. (With unlimitedย ice-cold pitchers of tropical cocktails, of course.) I also want cole slaw and half-sour pickles, too. Although if truthโ€ฆ

3K Shares

Continue reading...

Mile End Deli

One of the few English words that my French other-half has mastered is โ€œpastrami.โ€ Which in his defense, is just fine because most Americans that speak little, if any French, can easily say baguette, croissant, tarte au citron, and macaron before they head to France. Seems like both cultures knows where their priorities lie! So when I hear โ€œDaveed, je veux du pastrami,โ€ I lookโ€ฆ

12 Shares

Continue reading...

Dining Around New York

The French have their paradoxes and so do Americans. Which was something I discovered over and over again while I was exploring New York with an especially inquisitive Frenchman in tow. There were lots of questions, like when watching television, itโ€™s tricky to explain why thereโ€™s a commercial for people stuffing their faces from all-you-can-eat buffet for $6.99 suddenly followed by an ad pushing low-calorieโ€ฆ

2 Shares

Continue reading...

A

Get David's newsletter sent right to your Inbox!

15987

Sign up for my newsletter and get my FREE guidebook to the best bakeries and pastry shops in Paris...