Tasting Estate-grown Coffee at Terres de Café

August 24th, 2011
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Terres de Café at 14, rue Rambuteau
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Back in January, I posted an article about a great blend that I enjoyed called Mélange Parfait Expresso, which I had purchased at Terres de Café located on rue des Blancs Manteaux.

On Tuesday before last I went to their store on rue Rambuteau to see what they were brewing. I learned that they sell an espresso of the day for only 1€, a good price if ever there was one. The coffee on that particular day was Brésil Monte Alegre, an estate-grown coffee from Minas Gerais, one of the 26 states in Brazil.

I purchase a cup at the counter and carried it to one of the two tables on the sidewalk terrace. There, I drank the espresso without adding sugar so that I could distinguish its qualities. I found it to be strong (as an espresso should be), full-bodied, smooth, and fruity with no bitterness. No sugar needed to bring out the flavor!

I returned to the counter and purchased 250 grams of the same coffee, whole-bean, for 7.40€ and took it home to brew it in my French coffee press. I was never able to recapture the full flavor of that espresso using a coffee press—after all, how could I? I was using a different brewing method! But still, I was able to produce a cup of coffee with a strong, pleasantly smooth, slightly fruity, slightly-sweet flavor.

Terres de Café now has a third store, located at
13 rue d’Aligre
75012 Paris
Tel: 01.43.41.88.57

Brézil Monte Alegre Served As Espresso at Terres de Café
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

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What Would You Do If You Could Move to Paris?

August 19th, 2011
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Paris Insights - An Anthology: The Abridged Edition

What would you do if you could move to Paris? How would you spend your time once you got there? Read about one American’s experience in the French capital—learn how he found his calling and opened his own wine shop and restaurant.

This and other fascinating articles about the City of Light are immediately available for the price of a tweet in the abridged edition of Paris Insights – An Anthology.

Want to learn more about Paris? Click here to download the abridged edition of Paris Insights – An Anthology. It costs no more than the price of a tweet!

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Tasting Single-origin Chocolate Ganaches at Debauve & Gallais

August 17th, 2011
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Debauve & Gallais Chocolates of Origin
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

We have long known about the existence of the Debauve & Gallais chocolate shop on rue des Saint-Pères, but not until just recently did we enter to purchase a small (100 gram) sample of their confections.

Spotting five different single-origin chocolate ganaches in the display case, I purchased two of each: Irian Jaya (Indonesia), Principe (West Africa), Caracas (Venezuela), Santo Domingo (Dominican Republic), and Tamatave (Madagascar). That evening, we tasted them.

The chocolates are made from cocoa, cane sugar, butter, and condensed milk, yielding the creamy filling that is called ganache.

While all of the chocolates were rich and delicious, we found it difficult to detect much difference in taste from one origin to another. For me, the Irian Jaya had the strongest chocolate flavor. My partner found the Principe to have a faint fruit flavor. I found the Caracas to be mild with a buttery consistency. My partner liked the Santo Domingo, with its slightly fruity taste and soft, smooth interior. And we both found the Tamatave, from Madagascar, to have the mildest chocolate flavor of the batch.

Founded in 1800 by a pharmacist, Debauve & Gallais has been in business for a very long time. The décor of the shop on rue des Saint-Pères is a beautiful example of Empire style. It was designed by Percier and Fontaine, architects of Napoleon Bonaparte’s country home, the Château de Malmaison.

Enter the shop to see a splendid example of the architecture of that post-Revolutionary era.

But hold on to your purse strings! The ganaches that we purchased cost 140€ a kilo, roughly $90 a pound.

Debauve & Gallais
30, rue des Saint-Pères
75007 Paris
Telephone: 01 45 48 54 67
Open Mon to Sat 9:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.

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Are We the First Anglophones to Review the New Restaurant La Rotonde?

August 15th, 2011
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La Rotonde

La Rotonde
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Are we the first Anglophones in Paris to review the new restaurant La Rotonde? We like to think so! While other reviewers are away at summer camp or lounging on the beach, Discover Paris! is here in the city doing what it does best: discovering Paris!

La Rotonde is located in a newly-renovated rotunda that once served to house administrative offices of a tax wall that had been built around Paris.

Read our review at the following link: http://www.parisinsights.com/restaurants.php

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Exploring African-American History in Paris with Discover Paris!
By Francine Allen, Guest Blogger

August 13th, 2011
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Monique Y. Wells (left) and
Francine Allen (right)
at Notre Dame Cathedral
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

The Eiffel Tower scales the sky.

Yet, its height is easily matched by depth—the depth of history held by the city in which it stands: Paris.

The buildings and streets of Paris tell a deep and rich history of the African-American experience, a history that Monique Wells and Tom Reeves of Discover Paris! helped me to discover. Their meticulous tour planning enabled me, as a first-time visitor, to travel with ease throughout Paris, learning of African-American history in a context and setting far beyond the U.S. border.

Touring Paris
Initially, the prospect of using the Paris metro system to tour the City was intimidating, an intimidation compounded by my very limited French-speaking ability. However, when Monique Wells walked with me to the metro station soon after my arrival in the City and showed me how to read the metro maps, her quick lesson in metro map-reading made it possible for me during the remainder of my time in Paris to ride the metro confidentially, visiting all of the tour sites outlined in the personalized schedule that she and Tom helped me design. My confidence and comfort level in Paris were further boosted by the fact that the metro system was only a very short walking distance from the quaint and comfortable hotel that Monique and Tom found and booked for me long before my arrival in the City.

After leaving Paris, I traveled to the southern part of France, to the hilltop village of St. Paul de Vence, where novelist and essayist James Baldwin lived and died. Here again, Discover Paris! made my travel to the village smooth, finding drivers who were both punctual and kind as they transported me between the train station and my hotel in Nice, and later, between the train station and the airport in Paris.

Learning of the African-American Presence in Paris
The ease with which Discover Paris! enabled me to travel throughout Paris and to other areas of France allowed me to focus on my primary purpose for visiting the City—delving into the African-American experience in the City. As Monique revealed in her tour, this experience is wide and deep, with building after building in Paris testifying to the black presence in Paris. There stands, for instance, the Casino de Paris where Josephine Baker performed. Then, among the never-ending array of Paris cafes sits the famous Café de Flore where, in one of its upper rooms, James Baldwin wrote Go Tell It on the Mountain. Along a road running by the cabaret Moulin Rouge arises the residence where Langston Hughes lived briefly. Beyond these buildings, there stand other buildings and areas that testify to the many lesser-known African Americans who also lived in the City, opening businesses in Paris at a time when doing so would have been unheard of in the United States.

This legacy, this historical fact of the black presence in Paris is not merely a matter of history. African Americans are still living and working in Paris, as is the case of novelist Jake Lamar. After Discover Paris! set up an interview for me with Lamar, I learned from this Bronx native who has chosen to make his home in Paris that, for him, one main attraction of the City is the love Paris shows the literary artist, regardless of his or her level of notoriety. This stands in contrast, Lamar says, to the U.S., which tends to give greatest attention to the most acclaimed literary artists.

Understanding the Global Nature of the African-American Experience
In creating a uniquely designed tour for me, Discover Paris! helped me to think of Paris beyond mere stereotypical images. Rather, I came to see how the City itself enriches the study of African-American history in three key ways. First, it reveals the very global nature of the African-American experience and the way in which this experience, in order to be fully understood, must be considered, studied, and explored beyond the borders of the United States. Secondly, the City highlights how the global aspect of the African-American experience includes not only Africa but Europe as well. Finally, the City’s history suggests that the pursuit of freedom continues to characterize the African-American experience, whether that pursuit is prompted as it was decades ago by a desire to escape segregation and Jim Crow or whether it is inspired today by the simple pleasure of freely enjoying life in a nation different from one’s birth.

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We wish to thank Francine Allen for contributing this article to our blog.

For information about our African-American history in Paris tours, follow this link.

Tourist or Traveler: Is There Really a Difference?

August 11th, 2011
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Is there really a difference between a “tourist” and a “traveler,” or is the distinction a superficial, elitist notion? We think that there is a true difference, and we discuss the concept in an essay entitled “Tourist or Traveler” in the abridged edition our book Paris Insights – An Anthology.

And now, for the ridiculously low price of a Tweet, you may download the e-book and read about this and other fascinating things about the Paris that you never knew! Read what is the number one difference between French and American wines in the article entitled “Wining and Dining with Juan Sanchez;” learn about the diversity of worship in the City of Light in the article “Christian Churches in Paris;” and learn why the avenue des Champs-Elysées is an important place in the hearts and minds of Parisians.

Want to learn more about Paris? Click here! (Tourists won’t, we think.)

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In This Month’s Le Bon Goût: Sakebar Youlin

August 10th, 2011
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Kenji Kuribayashi, Chef — Youlin Li, Owner
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Sakebar Youlin is a tiny restaurant located on rue Valette, just down the hill from the Pantheon. We recently dined there and then met the owner and chef to learn more about the inspiration behind the Franco-Japanese cuisine that is served there. Read our review in this month’s Le Bon Goût.

Click here to read a brief summary of the August issue, and here to enter a subscription.

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When East Met West

August 5th, 2011
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Juldeh Camara (left) and Justin Adams (right)
Photography by York Tillyer
Real World Records Ltd

When East met West, there was an explosion of music that brought people to their feet. That is what happened yesterday in the Luxembourg Garden when British rocker Justin Adams and Gambian griot Juldeh Camara performed at the kiosk with bassist William Fuller and drummer David Smith.

Exhorting the audience to “get up and dance,” Adams belted out acid rock and rhythm and blues on his guitar, while Camara responded with his single-string spike fiddle called a ritti. There was improvised call and response throughout the concert, which was a spectacular production of pulse-pounding sounds and rhythms.

The concert is part of a summer program entitled “Paris Quartier d’Ete,” sponsored by the City of Paris.

Adams and Camara will give three more free concerts: this evening at Bercy Village at 7:00 p.m., tomorrow at Jardin d’Eole at 7:00 p.m., and Sunday at Parc de la Butte du Chapeau-Rouge at 6:00 p.m.

Be prepared to get up and dance!

Juldeh Camara
Photography by www.DiscoverParis.net

Justin Adams
Photography by www.DiscoverParis.net

Enthusiastic Audience Responding
Photography by www.DiscoverParis.net

Father and Son Dancing
Photography by www.DiscoverParis.net

Little Boy Clapping
Photography by www.DiscoverParis.net

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Breakfast at Le Comptoir des Saint-Pères

August 3rd, 2011
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Breakfast at Le Comptoir des Saint-Pères
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

As illustrated in this photograph, the standard French breakfast that is served in cafés consists of tartines (buttered bread), croissants, jam, fresh-squeezed orange juice, and coffee. Apart from the orange juice the breakfast is not very nourishing! It is also not cheap: 10.80€ was the price for the petit déjeuner that we had at Le Comptoir des Saint-Pères. (The photograph illustrates three sticks of bread and three croissants because there were three of us at the table.)

Thanks to Doni Belau of Girls Guide to Paris for treating us this morning!

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In This Month’s Paris Insights Newsletter:
When Saint-Germain-des-Prés Was the Center of the World

August 2nd, 2011
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Eglise Saint-Germain-des-Prés
Photo by Howard Morland

From 1945 to 1950, the area bounded roughly by the River Seine to the north, rues du Vieux-Colombier and Saint-Sulpice to the south, rue des Saint-Pères to the west, and rues Mazarine and de l’Ancienne-Comédie to the east was the center of creative and intellectual effervescence that captured the attention of much of Europe and the United States. Our feature article in this month’s Paris Insights newsletter explores this phenomenon and recalls some of the people who were in the forefront of this original movement.

Access to the newsletter is by paid subscription. Click here to view the newsletter announcement. Click here to enter a subscription.

Bonne Lecture!

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