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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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Rue Montorgueil and Les Halles, Paris

You might not remember the days before the internet, but when we used to travel somewhere, weโ€™d ask a friend to scribble down a list of suggestions. And weโ€™d often be asked to do the same in return. Then when computers became widely used, other โ€˜favoritesโ€™ lists started circulating, including suggestions posted in online forums and in blogs. So think of this list as myโ€ฆ

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Stollen

I rarely make bread for reasons that should be obvious: itโ€™s hard to justify spending the day at home mixing, kneading, and baking bread when you live in a city where thereโ€™s likely at least four very good bakeries within a two block radius. Unless, of course, itโ€™s the middle of winter and the idea of braving 0ยบ temperatures is less-than-appealing. Before the deep-chill setโ€ฆ

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Zimtsterne

This week in Paris we had our first snowfall. I was at the dentist, and when I came out, the sidewalks were damp from the wet rain that had fallen while Iโ€™d had my semi-annual detartrage. Then, as I walked up the rue Montorgueil, the annoying rain turned to little icy bits, then to large snowflakes, dusting everything, from the brick sidewalks, then coating myโ€ฆ

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