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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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Le Soleil cocktail

Thankfully, we are over that brief period of the year when the only fruits at the market are apples and pears, with a few persimmons and quince thrown in for good measure. I like those fruits very much but as winter descends and the skies turn grey (and stay that way) for the next few months, nothing brightens things up like a bowl of tangerinesโ€ฆ

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El Presidente cocktail

People sometimes pick up vermouth blanc, called bianco vermouth in Italian, and donโ€™t realize until the open the bottle that the vermouth is sweet, when they thought they were buying dry vermouth. Donโ€™t worry if it happened to you; it happened to a friend one mine too, who happens to be a notable spirits writer. On the upside, youโ€™ve now got one of the principalโ€ฆ

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The White Lady cocktail

Itโ€™s no secret that Romain has fallen in love with the Rosemary Gimlet. Heโ€™s featured in Drinking French sipping the drink. But Iโ€™ve been trying to shake things up, so to speak, and get him to branch out to similar cocktails. And the White Lady is a good one, especially if rosemary isnโ€™t available. But itโ€™s an equally bracing gin and citrus cocktail, thatโ€™s easyโ€ฆ

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Pegu Club

Invented in Burma, at a British club called the Pegu Club, this tropically-tinged cocktail found its way into the Savoy Cocktail Book. Itโ€™s pleasantly tangy and fruit-forward. The ingredients come together in the glass, resulting in a savvy cocktail with gentle citrus notes. One sip and youโ€™ll understand why itโ€™s still a cocktail classic!

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French Manhattan

Someone told me that โ€œcocktailsโ€ is one of the most used search terms right now on the internet. Sometimes I feel like Iโ€™m in the right place at the right time. Other times, I feel as if things might go the other way. Right now, I feel a little bit of both. When my planned book tour was nearing the start date, the news cycleโ€ฆ

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Drinking French: Paris Book Launch at WHSmith

Iโ€™ll be at WHSmith in Paris next Thursday, celebrating the release of Drinking French: The iconic cocktails, apรฉritifs, and cafรฉ traditions of France, with 160 recipes on February 27th. The event will be from 6 to 7:30pm and include a talk, book signing, and a French cheese and spirits tasting, as well.

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The White Lady cocktail

I sometimes joke that if I ever wrote a book devoted entirely to cocktails, itโ€™d be called โ€œBrown Drinks, Upโ€ because I tend to order whiskey-based cocktails when I go out, and prefer those on the bitter end of the spectrum, to boot. My favorite trend in the cocktail world is to put a little picture of the type of glass next to the cocktailโ€ฆ

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Strawberry Margaritas

The seasons seem to start a little earlier in France than elsewhere, or maybe thatโ€™s just me. I tend to want to jump the gun as soon as I see strawberries or cherries at the market every spring. But I know that if I waitย a few weeks, theyโ€™ll be a lot more abundant, and a lot better. Not to mention less-expensive, too. Once they goโ€ฆ

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