Archive for the ‘Americans in Paris’ Category

Meet Michael D. Poole – Chocolate and Pastry Maker

Wednesday, August 7th, 2013
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Chef Michael D. Poole

Chef Michael D. Poole
Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

Last week, I had the pleasure of meeting Michael D. Poole, firehouse chef from Seattle. He’s in Paris honing his skills on macarons, one of the products that he sells alongside his French chocolates back on the West coast.

Michael has been coming to Paris for a few weeks every year since 2000. He first came to study basic cooking at the Cordon Bleu and continued at that school year after year until he received the Grand Diplôme in 2003. He returns every summer to work with chocolate and pastry makers, learning new techniques and reviewing old ones. He has applied his skills to chocolate making and now sells French chocolates at six different retail outlets in Seattle, as well as on his Web site.

He recently began offering macarons at a couple of the retail outlets, hence his current interest in perfecting his macaron-making skills. This summer he is working at Pâtisserie Chocolaterie Pascal Pinaud on rue Monge, where he has learned to get the consistency he was seeking in his macaron batter (which consists of egg white, almond powder, and powdered sugar). He wanted his macaron shell to be a little bit firmer than what he’s been producing until now. Michael is a perfectionist in his craft and doesn’t stop until he gets it just right. Not that any of his customers back in Seattle were complaining, mind you!

Macarons

Michael’s Macarons
Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

Back in Seattle, Michael offers four different flavors of macaron to his customers: lemon, pistachio, coffee, and chocolate. He will soon add a fifth, orange. Hence, I purchased these five flavors, all of which he had made at Pâtisserie Chocolaterie Pascal Pinaud using Mr. Pinaud’s recipe. I took them home to try. Here are our tasting notes:

  • Lemon – mild, sweet lemon flavor
  • Pistachio – the almond in the macaron is more pronounced than the mild flavor of the pistachio.
  • Coffee – thick, creamy filling; relatively thin lower macaron shell.
  • Chocolate – this macaron felt heavy in the hand due to the density of the flavorful chocolate cream.
  • Orange – this was our favorite. A strong orange taste that reminded me of the Dreamsicle of my youth. My partner declared that it tasted like candied orange.

    All of the macarons had light but firm shells, which allowed us to pick them up without crushing the delicate crust. When bitten into, they were chewy. They all had a creamy filling.

    We think that Michael’s customers in Seattle will be pleased with the new orange flavor that he plans to introduce!

    Check out Michael’s Web site!

    And if you are in Paris, stop by Pâtisserie Chocolaterie Pascal Pinaud to try any of their nineteen different macaron flavors:
    70, rue Monge
    Tel.: 01.43.31.40.66

    Metro: Place Monge (Line 7)

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  • True Love on the Pont de l’Archevêché

    Tuesday, May 28th, 2013
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    California Couple

    A California Couple Locks In Their Love
    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    Yesterday while strolling across the Pont de l’Archevêché I spotted a couple reaffirming their love by attaching a love lock to the mesh of the guard rail.

    They told me that they are from Sacramento, California and that they were near the end of their two-week stay in Paris. Their children had given the trip to them as a gift. What a great idea!

    They also told me that they had been married for 32 years!

    Husband Prepares to Throw the Key

    Husband Prepares to Throw the Key
    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    First the husband threw the key into the river, symbolically locking their love for another 32 years.

    Wife Prepares to Throw Spare Key

    Wife Prepares to Throw Spare Key
    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    Then the wife prepared to throw the spare key…

    Key Has Been Thrown

    Spare Key Has Been Thrown
    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    …it’s gone! With no spare key around, that love has been locked in forever!

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    Tasting Cupcakes at the Paris Cookbook Fair

    Wednesday, March 13th, 2013
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    The Festival du Livre Culinaire was held from February 22 – 24 this year at the Carrousel du Louvre. There were publishers from around the world displaying their culinary books and non-stop conferences and cooking demonstrations for three days.

    Alisa Morov

    Alisa Morov
    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    The first demonstration on Saturday featured Alisa Morov, an American who moved from Los Angeles to Paris in 2002 to found Sweet Pea Baking. Alisa showed the audience how to bake cupcakes. This may sound easy, but according to Alisa, it can be frustrating if you don’t combine the ingredients properly. Baking is chemistry, and Alisa explained how to do it correctly.

    Sifting the Flou

    Sifting the Flour
    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    Alisa said that some people who buy her cupcake cookbook (Sensational Cupcakes, Simon and Schuster, UK) complain that they don’t get good results. She said this is because they combine all of the ingredients at once, rather than following the step-by-step instructions. The trick is to combine the ingredients in stages so that they get a chance to react with one another chemically. And here was her big tip: use real buttermilk in the cupcakes, not a buttermilk substitute, such as regular milk mixed with lemon juice. Buttermilk, she said, is one of the ingredients that helps the cake rise.

    View from TV Camera

    View from TV Camera
    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    And so we watched as she added flour, baking soda, baking powder, sugar, real vanilla, eggs, butter, buttermilk…all in the correct order…

    Putting Batter into the Cups - TV View

    Putting Batter into the Cups – TV View
    www.DiscoverParis.net

    …and then put the batter into the cupcake pan and pop the pan into the oven. Each cup was lined with a paper cupcake liner. Alisa said that cupcake liners are not necessary with modern non-stick pans, but that people like to peel the paper liner off their cupcake…it’s like opening a gift!

    Squeezing Pastry Bag

    Squeezing Frosting from the Pastry Bag
    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    Then she made buttercream frosting and squeezed the frosting from a pastry bag onto a batch of cupcakes that had already been made (the other cupcakes were still in the oven)…

    Cupcakes by Alisa Morov

    Cupcakes by Alisa Morov
    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    …and distributed them. We each got one!

    The cupcake tasted rich and buttery. It had wonderful flavor but was too rich for my taste. Alisa staunchly defends the use of butter and heavy cream in her cupcakes and frostings, and she made comments during her presentation indicating that these products are not meant to be diet food. I found myself wondering why, in this era when Americans are becoming alarmingly obese from eating fat-filled and sugary foods, Alisa appears to blithely ignore the dangers that fat and sugar pose to health…clogged arteries and diabetes…just to name two.

    As is true for everything, moderation is key to consuming these cupcakes—particularly if you have a weakness for sweet and buttery baked goods!

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    Alexandra Makes Chocolates

    Friday, December 14th, 2012
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    Alexandra Whisnant

    Alexandra Whisnant
    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    Alexandra Whisnant presented her chocolates last night at Mococha, our favorite chocolate shop on rue Mouffetard.

    She tells us that she fell in love with chocolate while studying for her physics finals at university. Her chocolates were sublime! I’m all for science when it can produce results like this.

    Alexandra Whisnat and Marie Gantois, Proprietor of Mochoca

    Alexandra Whisnat, Chocolate Maker and
    Marie Gantois, Proprietor of Mochoca

    Photograph by www.DiscoverParis.net

    Alexandra’s chocolates will be on sale at Mococha through Valentine’s Day 2013. More information about her adventures with chocolate can be found on her Web site Gâté Comme des Filles.

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    Monique Y. Wells on 60 Minutes

    Monday, November 12th, 2012
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    Monique Y. Wells and David McCullough at U.S. Ambassador's Residence in Paris

    Monique Y. Wells and David McCullough at U.S. Ambassador’s Residence in Paris
    Screenshot from 60 Minutes Video Segment

    Just when we were despairing that Discover Paris! co-founder Monique Wells might never get the recognition that she is due, we woke up this morning to a mailbox full of messages from friends in the U.S. declaring that they saw her on 60 Minutes last night. What a surprise! We rushed to our computer and watched the 60 Minute video segment and indeed, there she is at the U.S. Ambassador’s reception that was held on May 25, 2012 for two-time Pulitzer Prize winner David McCullough. Monique had approached Mr. McCullough and asked him to autograph her copy of his book, The Greater Journey — Americans in Paris.

    Monique Y. Wells and Tom Reeves at U.S. Ambassador's Reception for David McCullough

    Monique Y. Wells and Tom Reeves at U.S. Ambassador’s Reception for David McCullough
    Screenshot from 60 Minutes Video Segment

    To top things off, when we closely examined the video segment, we spotted ourselves standing together while we listened to Mr. McCullough’s talk. In this photo he lets out a cheer because he had just kissed British-American film and stage star Olivia de Havilland, who was attending the ceremony. Oh, lucky man!

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    Entrée to Black Paris Blog is One of 10 BEST Paris Blogs

    Saturday, October 27th, 2012
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    Monique Y. Wells’ Entrée to Black Paris blog is finally getting the recognition we believe it so richly deserves – it has been named one of 10 BEST Paris blogs by award-winning travel writer Mike Gerrard!

    Gerrard is a full-time, award-winning author, blogger, and publisher. His numerous publications about Paris include the Top 10 Paris – Eyewitness Top 10 Travel Guide (DK Travel; penned with his wife, Donna Dailey), Colors of Paris (Thunder Bay Press), and Paris: A City Revealed (Metro Books). As a man who knows the city intimately, he recently made his selection of 10 best Paris blogs. We were thrilled to find our blog among them!

    Here’s Mike’s description of Entrée to Black Paris:

    What it is: Monique Y. Wells covers a fascinating niche subject – black history, culture and contemporary life in Paris.

    Why we like it: Specialist passions make for some of the best blogs, and the relationship of Paris with its black population (for better or worse) provides some stimulating reading. Monique doesn’t just cover the well-documented ground of black writers, musicians and other artists in Paris’s past, like Chester Himes and Josephine Baker, but keeps it current by interviewing black chefs, lawyers and other prominent figures.

    Find Mike’s entire list of 10 BEST Paris blogs on the Web site 101 Holidays.

    Musicians in the Metro – Part II

    Sunday, July 1st, 2012
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    Don LaRue

    Tim Puckett (left) with his group Don LaRue
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    Antoine Barret

    Antoine Barret
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    In last month’s Paris Insights we looked at the selection procedure that musicians must go through if they want a permit to perform in the corridors of the Paris metro. This month we take a look at two of the musicians, one French, the other American, who went through this process.

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    Bonne lecture!

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    Celebrating the Memory of Carole Fredericks

    Thursday, June 28th, 2012
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    Photo of Carole Fredericks

    Photo of Carole Fredericks

    Carole Fredericks was an American woman who moved to Paris in 1979 and achieved considerable success there as a singer. After her death in 2001, she was buried in the Montmartre cemetery. Yesterday, friends and acquaintances met in front of the apartment building where she lived, at 91bis, rue du Mont-Cenis in the 18th arrondissement, to celebrate her memory.

    Daniel Vaillant - Mayor of 18e Arrondissement

    Daniel Vaillant - Mayor of 18th Arrondissement
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    The Plaque

    The Plaque
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    The mayor of the 18th arrondissement, Carole’s sister Connie Fredericks-Malone, Carole’s brother Taj Mahal, and the master of ceremonies Timothy Ramier, Esq., gave speeches about Carole’s life and how she has been an inspiration for so many. Following the speeches, a memorial plaque affixed to the wall of the apartment building was unveiled.

    Taj Mahal and Connie Fredericks

    Taj Mahal and Connie Fredericks-Malone
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    After the ceremony, a concert in Carole’s honor was given at the Centre Musical Fleury Goutte d’Or – Barbara. Among the performers were her brother Taj Mahal and her sister Connie. It was both a stirring and an inspiring event!

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    Author and Historian David McCullough Feted at the U.S. Ambassador’s Residence

    Saturday, May 26th, 2012
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    Monique Y. Wells and David McCullough at the U.S. Ambassador's Residence in Paris

    David McCullough Autographs His Book The Greater Journey for Monique Y. Wells, Co-founder of Discover Paris!
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    David McCullough, award-winning author and historian, was guest of honor at the U.S. Ambassador’s residence in Paris last night. His most recent book, The Greater Journey, is about Americans who lived in Paris from the 1830s to the 1900s.

    In his speech, McCullough talked about the importance of the Franco-American relationship, asserting that the United States would not have gained its independence without the financial, military, and intellectual support of France. In reference to France’s intellectual influence, he stated the the founding fathers who came to Paris felt at home here because the ideals of freedom were being discussed in intellectual circles at that time.

    A speaker on hundreds of college campuses, McCullough spoke of his dismay that students today are historically illiterate. He talked about the importance of studying history and stated that history is more than just political and military narrative. History covers all human activity, including art, architecture, music, and poetry.

    History, he said, shows that individuals cannot achieve great things alone, that they must work with others in a community. An historian, he said, is forcibly a short-term pessimist and a long-term optimist.

    McCullough came to Paris for the first time in 1961. He loves the city and the research that he performs here. He was particularly proud to announce that his granddaughter, who attended the event, is currently studying French in Paris.

    A film crew from the Public Broadcasting System filmed McCullough’s presentation. Journalist Morley Safer and stage and screen star Olivia de Havilland (who played the roll of Melanie Hamilton in the movie Gone with the Wind) were among the guests.

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    A Day at the Races with Gina Rarick – Part V

    Sunday, May 6th, 2012
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    The 2€ Guichet

    The 2€ Guichet
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    Feeling heady with the possibility of placing a winning bet, I got in line at the 2€ guichet.

    Placing a Bet

    Placing a Bet
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    The gentleman behind the window recognized that I was a novice gambler, and asked me which horse I wanted to bet on. Since I was standing at a 2€ guichet, I decided to place the bet on horse number 2.

    He then asked me whether I wanted to bet that the horse would win or place. I figured that since I was placing a 2€ bet on horse number 2, then I should wager that it would come in second, or “place.” It’s as good a system as any for placing a bet!

    Will This Be the Winning Ticket?

    Will This Be the Winning Ticket?
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    With the ticket in hand, we went off to watch the race on a monitor.

    The Winning Race Number 2 Places Second

    The Winning Race!
    Number 2 Places Second!
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    The Winning Ticket

    The Winning Ticket
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    Number 2 places second! Hooray! Let’s go back to the window and collect our winnings.

    I Won All That!!!

    I Won All That!!!
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    I handed the ticket to the gentleman and he prepared a wad of 100€ bills. He told us to get our camera ready and brought them up to show me. I watched, mouth agape, as he withdrew them after Monique took the photograph.

    It was a good joke! “The hard reality, sir, is that you won six euros…”

    Well, six euros is, at least, three times my wager! What a deal!

    Entry to the Hippodrome

    Entry to the Hippodrome
    Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

    I pocketed my winnings and we left the racecourse. It had been a great day at the races!

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