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Basil Vinaigrette

My sauce for the summer is Basil Vinaigrette. Donโ€™t get me wrong, I love pesto. But this basil-forward sauce has the punchy flavor of fresh herbs and takes less than a minute to blend together. And unlike its thicker cousin, this vinaigrette can be drizzled over everything, from fresh tomatoes and shelling beans, to risotto or roasted potatoes, and even fresh cheese, like mozzarella orโ€ฆ

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White Vinegar (vinaigre blanc)

The most common bottle of crisp, white that youโ€™ll find in any Parisian apartment isnโ€™t a musky Muscadet from the Loire, or a Petit Chablis from Burgundy. This one comes in a plastic bottle, has a screw top with a little opening just underneath so you can squeeze out a stream as needed, and costs less than a buck. Itโ€™s le vinaigre blanc, and itโ€™sโ€ฆ

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Celery Root Remoulade (Celeri Remoulade)

Iโ€™ve never liked celery. To me, itโ€™s like eating green water held together with a lot of fibers. Unless itโ€™s filled with peanut butter or cream cheese, you can keepย it. The only time I ever buy a bunch is when Iโ€™m making stock, which is a shame, because that only requiresย a stalk or two, and the rest sits in my refrigerator until it wilts andโ€ฆ

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How to Make French Vinaigrette

One assumption that Iโ€™m going to make about the French is that theyโ€™re not afraid to make things au pif, or โ€œby the noseโ€. I donโ€™t know if a precise recipe for sauce vinaigrette actually exists. But if there is, I bet few people follow it very closely. And Romain is no different from his compatriots when it comes to recipes, and rules. They areโ€ฆ

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