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10 Fun Things to Do When Planning Your Food Trip to Paris

My friend Anne Ditmeyer has lived in Paris for over a decade and not only knows her way around town, but also helps others get around. She offers personalized Navigate Tours, sheโ€™s also launched Navigate Paris Online, to help you plan the perfect trip yourself. On her blog, Prรชt ร  Voyager, sheโ€™s covered everything from the delights (and hazards) of Paris swimming pools, to herโ€ฆ

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Maison Aleph

Iโ€™m always happy to hear of a new pastry shop opening in Paris, especially when it offers something a bit different than the others. Sometimes I go and theyโ€™re interesting. Other times, Iโ€™mย less enthusiastic. I was especially excited when I heard about Maison Aleph, which offers bite-size tastes of the Middle East, referencing French techniques, but creating something completely original.

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Maison Landemaine Bakery in Paris

Itโ€™s a great day when a new bakery opens up in your neighborhood. I donโ€™t mean to brag, but there are six bakeries in my neighborhood. One of those โ€œgreat daysโ€ was when a particularly lame bakery closed, and a really good one opened up in its place. And although I donโ€™t like seeing people go out of business, another bakery that was, for lackโ€ฆ

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Stohrer Pastry Shop

When people ask me โ€œWhy did you move to Paris?โ€ Iโ€™ll usually stop, point to the nearest cheese shop or bakery, and let them figure it out for themselves. There are a lot of pastry shops in Paris, over a thousand of them. But the first was Stohrer, which opened in 1730 by pastry chef Nicolas Stohrer, the pastry chef forย Louis XVย of France and hisโ€ฆ

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The Best Bakeries in San Francisco

Since the time I left, San Francisco has become a much sweeter place. I hope thatโ€™s just a mere coincidence, but I have been surprised at the spate of new bakeries and sweet shops that have sprung up in the last few years. How nice would it have been to have visited them all? However my euro-jeans are starting to buckle under the weight ofโ€ฆ

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Pierre Herme Macarons

One of the things about living in a city like Paris is that you spend a lot of time โ€“ well, dealing with life. Bills to pay, paperwork to do, typos to avoid, stolen bikes to replace, smokers to dodge on sidewalks waving lit cigarettes (I got nailed the other day โ€“ ouch!), or buying a pair of shoes, can easily take up much โ€“โ€ฆ

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10 Ideas for Food Trucks in Paris

Aside from a few crรชpe stands here and there, Paris isnโ€™t a city known for street food. And malheureusement, that Pierre Hermรฉ truck isnโ€™t open for businessโ€ฆalthough wouldnโ€™t that be nice. (However if it was, I would probably race around my house in search of spare change every time I heard it coming toward me, like I did when the Good Humor ice cream truckโ€ฆ

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Favorite Cookbooks of 2011

As 2011 draws to a close, I look at the stack of books that Iโ€™ve collected on my bookshelf (and piled up on my floorโ€ฆand beside my bed, and stacked in my kitchenโ€ฆ) and wonder how Iโ€™m going to cook and bake from them all. I just canโ€™t help it, thoughโ€”I love cookbooks. And these are the books that I couldnโ€™t resist tackling in 2011,โ€ฆ

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Macarons by Pierre Hermรฉ โ€“ Now in English

Ever since I featured a macaron recipe a few years back, readers inquired have about Macarons by Pierre Hermรฉ, the book where the recipe was adapted from. At the time, the book was only available in French. But when I was in New York recently, browsing through the cookbook collection at Kitchen Arts and Letters, I honed in on the English-version of the book, whichโ€ฆ

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