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Rose Sangria

Summer in France means a lot of things in France. En masse vacations, a blissfully empty Paris, price increases (which happen during August, when everyone is out of town โ€“ of course), and vide-greniers and brocantes, known elsewhere as flea markets, where people sell all kinds of things. If youโ€™re lucky enough to take a trip to the countryside, the brocantes are amazing. But someโ€ฆ

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Negroni Sbagliato Spritz

I donโ€™t know about you, but I canโ€™t think of a better way to relax in the warm weather, than with a refreshing Spritz. I was introduced to the Spritz when I went to coffee schoolย in 2007, in Trieste, Italy. I drank at least six cups of espresso every day โ€“ how could I not? โ€“ surprising even the Italian teachers. And by the endโ€ฆ

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City of Light

Thereโ€™s nothing like an icy cocktail to start off summer, and Iโ€™m considering making this my new seasonal refresher. When the team at Lucques restaurant in Los Angeles presented a menu from My Paris Kitchen for one of their Sunday suppers, head bartender, Christiaan Rollich came up with an inspired cocktail thatโ€™s light, and refreshing, and combines a splash of Lillet, a pour of Frenchโ€ฆ

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RAP Italian Epicerie in Paris

Due to our closeness to Italy, itโ€™s fairly easy to find an Italian รฉpicerie in almost any Parisian neighborhood. (Although locating an authentic Italian espresso is a little more elusive.) Iโ€™m fortunate because there are two excellent Italian รฉpiceries (speciality food shops) close to where I live, but most of the places get their items from a distributor, which means the selection is somewhat narrowโ€ฆ.

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Modica (Sicily)

The good news about my trip to Sicily is that it wasnโ€™t all eating almond cookies and cannoli, looking for parking spaces in Palermo (and paying one of the fellows lurking about to keep an eye on the car), gorging on fresh ricotta, and wiping and everything you possible can in generous drizzles of the amazing olive oil produced there. There was โ€œpastaโ€ โ€“ madeโ€ฆ

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Spritz

Cocktail culture has landed in Paris. It took a while, though. France has always been known for its wine and beer, rather than Torontos, Cosmopolitans, and Martinis. And many of us have memories of trying to explain to a very confused cafรฉ waiter how to make a martini, when they want to serve you a glass of Martini & Rossi (vermouth).

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