Showing posts with label La Grande Epicerie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label La Grande Epicerie. Show all posts

Paris in Love:a memoir

 'I walk through the streets and enjoy listening to wild chattering French with the same level of understanding that one has glimpsing a row of sparrows crowded on a telephone line. Are these people really talking, or are they just singing to each other? They look far too elegant and sophisticated to be uttering the half-assed things people say to each other in New York.'
 This is one of many vignettes from Eloisa James new book I can't put down,
After a series of crisis author James insists her Italian husband, Alessandro and two children, Anna (11) and Luca (15) pull up stakes in New Jersey, sell off everything and take off for a year's sebatical in Paris. Most entries are short, yet they paint an unforgettable picture of Parisian daily life that makes you feel you're there with her whether you've ever visited or not. I've tried to match up photos to her inimitable words. I'm smitten. I think you will be too.
 James scatters throughout mini weather reports seen from her window.
'My study looks directly onto the gray slanted roofs of the other side of rue du Conservatoire. I love watching rain pour over the slate, creating dark rivers that sheet down the gutters. The cat who lives opposite, whose owner puts her out on the little balcony when she cleans the apartment, is not enthusiastic about the rain.'
 '...I sallied forth to La Grande Epicerie on rue de Sevres and bought three different kinds of chocolate: Zanzibar's orange en robe (twists of rind with delicious coating), Cote d'Or's citron gingembre (a bar with ginger and lemon peel), and Michel Cluizel's noir aux ecorces d'orange (a dark bar with tiny chunks of orange). Anna and I had a tasting test. The winner was Cluizel's chocolat noir. It's astounding:deep and rich, with a silky melt.'
 'There is a bakery down the street from Anna's school, on avenue de Villars, where there is always a line. They specialize in little fruit tarts. The most beautiful one has figs sliced so thin as to be translucent, then dusted in sugar. Luca's favorite looks like a tiny version of the Alps: small strawberries, each one sitting upright and capped in a drop of white chocolate.' 
 'My personal favorite has sliced apricots arranged in overlapping patterns, like crop circles in an English field.'
 'Yesterday I went with a friend to the Musee Jacquemart-Andre, the home of a nineteenth-century couple who were passionate art collectors. The collection is spectacular: the bath alone was worth the price of entry...'
 '...If you're planning a trip to Paris, this museum is a must-see - the cafe is catered by a fabulous patisserie, Stohrer. Nicolas Stohrer worked in Versailles as pastry chef to King Louis XV; he's famous for creating the beloved baba au rhum (rum cake). Diet suspended for the occasion, I had it, and I think he'd be proud.'
 'I've discovered at least one secret of thin French women. We were in a restaurant last night, with a chic family seated at the next table. The bread arrived, and a skinny adolescent girl reached for it. Without missing a beat, maman picked up the basket and stowed it on the bookshelf next to the table. I ate more of my bread in sympathy.'
 'My mother placed white sugar right next to crack cocaine in the catalog of the most dangerous substances known to man (not that she knew what crack was, but you get the idea). To this day my idea of heaven is a handful of small marshmallows: pure undiluted, bad-for-you sugar in a form that could never be mistaken as healthy. I have found a supplier here in Paris, which is akin to a junkie discovering a private poppy field'.
 Photo by Mes VitrinesNYC
'My favorite Galeries Lafayette window is set with an exquisite dinner party scene: crystal chandeliers, fabulous dishes, tiaras scattered among the plates, wine glasses draped in pearls-all of it being enjoyed by assorted marionette bears. One has a wineglass in each paw and a tiara tipped over one ear. He raises the glasses drunkenly, toasting all the children outside the window'.
 'My cocottes will remind me that food is meant to be served to others, to be beautiful, to be original (even violet-colored), to be dreamed over. They will remind me that indulgence is not a virtue we should keep for the holiday season alone, and that saving time - when it comes to food - is more sinful than virtuous'.
'The impetus to move to Paris - to sell the house and the cars and simply fly away -  sprang from my mother's death and my own brush with cancer. But I wonder if I would have acted on the idea without the lessons learned from Rose.
So this book is my phone call - not from the top of the mountain, or even the top of the Eiffel Tower: the "here" is negotiable.
It's so beautiful here.
You must come before you die'.
Please read Eloisa James, Paris in Love.
Let me know if you love it as much as I do.

La Grande Epicerie

 Paris People Watching 5.5" x 7.5" 
A terrific place to people watch and perhaps to shoot is La Grande Epicerie...
 The latest of fashion is on display at La Grande Epicerie...
 But I'm attracted to les madeleines...
 Chocolat chaud is always on my browsing list...
 I am mostly a browser at La Grande...what would I do with fresh eggs in my bag?
 But I adore their egg boxes colored just like...
 Macarons!
 Here mini macarons you fill yourself..Hmm...perhaps I could fool Jill that I made these myself :)
 The walls of chocolate bars, the endless array of pastries (and wholesome fresh veggies too btw) could easily drive you to distraction. So many choices...
 La Grande Epicerie has just the thing to help you with your indecision - Delo Destress, whatever that is...
 And for the weight-conscious minceur/diet pills and exercise bands. Everything is thought of here.
I HEART La Grande Epicerie for eye candy and people watching. Have you been here to drool too?

La Grande Epicerie

You might think, being an artist I go to museums in Paris.
You'd be wrong.
I go to La Grande Epicerie De Paris for my eye candy.
I'm stalking the Yuzu Mania gateaux ever since I noticed it in the Paris Patisseries:History Shops Recipes book.
I can't get it out of my head. This big mouth is all too appropriate in the vitrine of La Grande Epicerie.
LA GRANDE EPICERIE Paris

Anyone sporting a red coat is game for me to follow... What with my Paris red obsession...LA GRANDE EPICERIE Paris There's a lot to see in La Grande Epicerie - soooo many works of art.LA GRANDE EPICERIE Paris Et voila - red coat again...
Chasing down some fruits rouge no doubt...
LA GRANDE EPICERIE Paris Whatever does one do with strawberry/fraise-flavored sucre/sugar? Do tell if you know.
LA GRANDE EPICERIE Paris More bottles of mysterious ingredients - blue guimauve-flavored stuff.
French Girl has these sirops sitting atop her fridge. I never got up the nerve to ask what they are.
LA GRANDE EPICERIE Paris At last a study in red I can understand.
So many choices of bread - how does anyone decide? I can not.
LA GRANDE EPICERIE ParisI just browse.
Lovely shell-shaped madeleines.
LA GRANDE EPICERIE ParisAnd of course they have macarons in 20 flavors/parfums!
LA GRANDE EPICERIE Paris Who would not be contented as a chat/cat hanging out in La Grande Epicerie?
BONJOUR LA GRANDE EPICERIE!

Les Fruits Rouges de Juillet

Fruit rouge the, watercolor, 9" x 11"
It's July so you should be eating your fruits rouge... If not, please hightail it over to Gerard Mulot on 76, rue de Seine 75006Nobody does fruit rouge better... Mulot seems to be in love with red fruits and why not..? This is the season. I just had some for breakfast. Did you?

Gerard Mulot's bag/sac is perfectly rouge for your red desserts...
Sadaharu Aoki is no slouch with the red pastry brush, but let's face it, Macha green tea is really his favorite...
Ok, you cannot go 2 steps in Paris without bumping into some red fruits. The new Carette salon de the has a stack of them...
Did La Grande Epicerie have moi in mind with this 'Artistes Fruit Rouge'? But you cannot taste everything...
If you can't get your paws on some fab fruit rouge desserts there is always fraise tagada- no one can put a terrific spin on penny candy like the French.
Not to be left by the rue, Sennelier catches the fruit rouges tendance/trend and goes to town with it...
Naturalment you must be appropriately dressed to eat les fruit rouges.
Yes, you can make do with just a red fleur rouge if you have no red shoes...
And yes, you can get away with just a red scarf if it comes to it...
True, you will have to go to Lyon to this all-red shop to get it, but it's just 2 hours there and back on the tgv, so why not?
Then sit yourself down at this red cafe in the Marais...
With this red book. Don't worry about the content, as long as it's red!
I did exactly this in juin. Granted it was not juillet (the RED month) so no wonder there were a few slipups. I ordered this delicious looking fruits rouges compote at A Priori The. They threw in the gingered brownie as an extra treat and miam-miam!
The tea salon is set outside in the Galerie Vivienne so when I went inside to the loo, naturalment I took all my stuff with me, just playing it safe...
Imagine my surprise when I saw the red faces of the staff, crowded around my little table. They thought I had done a runner! Don't believe anyone who tells you the French don't smile. Ha! There were Big smiles all around when they saw me return to pay the l'addition.
BONJOUR FRUITS ROUGES JUILLET!


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