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Quiche Lorraine

Quiche got a peculiar rap back in the 1980s when eating it was described as something that was not masculine. Iโ€™m not sure where that came from, but in France, everybody eats quiche. As the French debate how to address gender pronouns, in a language where crรจme, baguette, and saladeย are feminine and pรขtรฉ, vin, and quinoa are masculine (although quinoa is a plante cรฉrรฉaliรจre, whichโ€ฆ

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Quiche with greens, bacon and feta

While visiting friends in the countryside toward the end of the summer (โ€ฆis it over already?), I met a woman who grew the most lovely little lettuces, which she sold at the local market. Which was basically a table with several baskets of her stunning greens sitting on it. If you havenโ€™t had eaten lettuce just a few minutes (or even hours) out of theโ€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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Spinach Pie recipe

I donโ€™t know when it took hold, but le Brunch has become popular in Paris. Unlike the Bloody Mary and Mimosa-fueled repasts we had when I lived inย San Francisco, in Paris, the concept is a little different. For one thing, Sundays are blissfully โ€œsacredโ€ and no one seems to want to wake up and go anywhere until โ€” well, Monday. And the places that doโ€ฆ

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