Tasting Summer Strawberries in Paris

July 13th, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Gariguette Strawberries
(c) Discover Paris!

What would summer in Paris be without strawberries? When this succulent, sweet, bright-to-deep-red fruit appears in the markets, Parisians celebrate the coming of longer days, sunny skies and the promise of slipping away for three to four weeks to the beach or to the French countryside.

Our article on summer strawberries appears in the newly-released abridged edition of our book Paris Insights – An Anthology. And now, for the ridiculously low price of a Tweet, you can download the e-book and read 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 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!

* * * * * * *

We participate in Wanderfood Wednesdays. Head over there to explore food from around the world!

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

Celebrating Independence Day at the Ambassador’s Residence

July 8th, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Independence Day was celebrated yesterday at the U.S. ambassador’s residence in Paris. The theme of the party was “California Cachet,” highlighting California as a tourist destination.

Center: Ambassador Rivkin
Left: His wife Susan
Right: His son William

Ambassador Charles H. Rivkin gave a stirring speech (in admirable French) about his hopes for the spread of democracy throughout the world.

Renée Fleming

American opera star Renée Fleming sang “America the Beautiful,” accompanied by the choir of the American embassy, The Dip Notes (not pictured).

Jenna Ushkowitz

Kevin McHale

Jenna Ushkowitz and Kevin McHale, members of the cast of the American television series Glee, each sang, accompanied by the U.S. Air Force band Check Six.

American filmmaker Zachary Taylor and co-founder of Discover Paris! Monique Y. Wells

Hundreds of invited guests, many of them VIP French, including senators and admirals, attended the party held in the garden of the ambassador’s residence.

Corporate Sponsors

French and American corporate sponsors provided accommodation, food, and beverage. Staff members of the American embassy provided various services, including welcoming the guests.

A good time was had by all!

* * * * * * *

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

Big Turnout for Big-Bash Fifth-Anniversary Party Last Night

July 7th, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Last night saw a big turnout for the celebration of the fifth anniversary of the founding of Richard Nahem’s Eye Prefer Paris insider’s guide to the city.

The event was held at Ô Château! wine bar, where Richard provided a generous number of charcuterie and cheese platters.

Richard Nahem and partner Vincent

Among the attendees were several bloggers, including:

Adrian Leeds of Parler Paris
Yetunde Oshodi of Like Home in Paris
Kim Petyt of Parisian Party
Colleen Shaughnessy-Larsson of Colleen’s Paris
Robyn Blaber of A Canadian in Paris
Monique Y. Wells of Entrée to Black Paris

Photographer Meredith Mullins, salon hostess Patricia Laplante-Collins, and chefs Eric Fraudeau and Diane Anthonissen graced the event.

Olivier Magny

Thirza Vallois

Mary R. Duncan

A number of writers were in attendance, including Ô Château owner Olivier Magny, (Stuff Parisians Like), Thirza Vallois (Around and About Paris), and Mary R. Duncan (Henry Miller is under my bed).

And, of course, yours truly, Tom Reeves was there, mingling with the crowd. The abridged version of my book, Paris Insights – An Anthology, is available on-line for the ridiculously low price of a Tweet. To learn more, follow this link: http://bit.ly/moWTFB.

A good time was had by all!

* * * * * * *

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

In This Month’s Le Bon Goût: Les Bistronautes

July 6th, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

From left to right: Benjamin Loiseau, Chef
Cyril Le Gauffey, Manager, Barman, and Co-owner
Sylvin Herrera, Co-owner

Located near the southwest corner of the Luxembourg Garden, the handsome restaurant Les Bistronautes opened its doors just eight months ago. Read our review of this establishment in this month’s Le Bon Goût.

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

* * * * * * *

We participate in Wanderfood Wednesdays. Head over there to explore food from around the world!

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

In This Month’s Paris Insights Newsletter: A Literary Banquet in the Presence of Writers Jim Harrison and Jay McInerney

July 1st, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Le Centquatre
Courtesy of Paris Tourist Office
Photo by Amélie Dupont

The City of Paris regularly sponsors remarkable cultural events, and the third edition of “Paris en Toutes Lettres,” a literary festival held from May 5 – 8 this year was no exception. In this month’s Paris Insights, read about the banquet that was held at Le Centquatre and its guests of honor, American writers Jim Harrison and Jay McInerney.

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

Bonne Lecture!

* * * * * * *

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

Discover Paris! Visits Brûlerie des Gobelins

June 29th, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Brûlerie des Gobelins
(c) Discover Paris!

We paid a visit to Maxime, manager of Brûlerie des Gobelins, and watched him roast a batch of coffee beans from Kenya. Click on the image of the video below to see him at work!

I initially wrote about the brûlerie for our Paris Insights newsletter back in 2007. Featuring monthly articles on the culture, history, and contemporary life in Paris, the newsletter recounts our endless fascination for this beautiful city. Click here to read abstracts of our recent articles and here to enter a subscription.

* * * * * * *

We participate in Wanderfood Wednesdays. Head over there to explore food from around the world!

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

Peggy and Jeff Love Paris

June 28th, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Peggy Tournigand and Jeff Ruiz
Photography by Alain Elorza

Peggy and Jeff are two provincials who love Paris and love to blog about it. I had the opportunity to talk with them recently to learn about their passion for the city.

Peggy hails from Valance, capital of an administrative département in the south of France called the Drôme. Jeff comes from the Auvergne region in the central part of the country. Although each has an American-sounding name, they are both French! Peggy’s father once worked in England and gave his daughter an English name; and “Jeff” is short for the initials “JF” from his formal name, Jean-François.

Peggy and Jeff met 10 years ago on the Internet, through a Web chat site called CaraMail (no longer in existence). Their coming together over the Internet is yet another example of how the Web is changing people’s lives. Since 2008, Peggy has been working as a safety manager for a large energy company, and Jeff has been self-employed as a Web-site business promoter @ PowerOn.fr.

Having moved to Paris about five years ago, Peggy and Jeff decided that the city had an undeserved, negative reputation among French provincials. Unlike many Americans who view the city as a glamorous, beautiful, adventurous place to visit, Peggy and Jeff’s friends in the provinces thought of the city as being grey, cold, rainy, polluted, traffic-choked, and full of rude people. Not a positive image! Because they now call the city home and have firsthand knowledge of its attributes, Peggy and Jeff decided to start a blog to promote its positive aspects and to counteract its negative ones. Hence, their blog ParisParis.in was born.

The blog is updated almost daily and gives a lot of great information about Paris and its environs. For example, one recent article treated the King’s Vegetable Garden in Versailles, and another featured a video of the organizer of the Festival des Passages that will be held this Thursday and Friday in Paris. Although the blog is in French, non-Francophones will be able to find photographs, Google maps, and Web site addresses that should inspire them to do additional research for interesting things to do in Paris.

Peggy writes 95% of the articles that appear on the blog. The remaining 5% are contributed by friends and persons who love the city. Both Peggy and Jeff view the blog as a “life-changing” event that has brought both of them into contact with persons that they would not otherwise have ever met. More specifically, it recently brought together 112 persons at a Parisian restaurant to celebrate the blog’s second anniversary. (I blogged about this event last Friday.)

When I asked them what plans they have for the future, Peggy and Jeff told me that they will soon open one of the rooms in their apartment in the 19th arrondissement to travelers who seek an accommodation at a bread and breakfast establishment. This will give them additional opportunities to meet new people and provide the guests who stay there the chance to meet two transplanted provincials who are passionate about Paris!

Big Francophone Bloggers’ Meet-up Last Wednesday Night

June 24th, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Peggy and Jeff, two French persons with American-sounding names, are passionate about Paris. They celebrated the second anniversary of their Web site (ParisParis.in) for Francophone bloggers last Wednesday night in grand style. One hundred eleven persons showed up for an evening of wine, great food, conversation, and music.

Peggy and Jeff
Photo by Discover Paris!

Peggy and Jeff thanked everyone for coming to the celebration.

La Bonne Franquette Restaurant
Photo by Discover Paris!

The party was held at La Bonne Franquette.

ParisParis Party Goers
Photo by Discover Paris!

Some really cool people showed up! (That’s me, third from the left.)

Domaine Pascal Brunet Chinon
Rosé de Saignée 2010
Photo by Discover Paris!

Wine flowed freely.

Salade du Sud-Ouest au Foie Gras de Canard
Photo by Discover Paris!

Traditional and regional French food was served.

Miroir Cassis au Coulis de Framboise
Photo by Discover Paris!

There were several different desserts to choose from.

Second Anniversary Cake
Photo by Discover Paris!

And anniversary cake was served.

A good time was had by all!

* * * * * * *

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

Dodos et Dadas – The Toy Art of Brazilian Artist Delfina Renk Reis

June 23rd, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

The art gallery La Galerie des Petits Carreaux is currently exhibiting the toy art of Brazilian artist Delfina Renk Reis.

Toy Art by Delfina Renk Reis
Photo by Discover Paris!

Reis’ colorful, fanciful dolls represent a synthesis of the familiar child’s plaything with artistic whimsy, resulting in creations that are at once pieces of toy-store merchandise and collectable works of art. Indeed, each doll bears a tag with a unique number.

According to an article in the Rio Times, toy art was invented by Japanese designer Keiko Miyata in 1994. The dolls that she creates tend to be more ferocious looking than those by Reis.

The exhibit “Les Dodos et les Dadas de Delfina” will continue until the last day of June.

La Galerie des Petits Carreaux
43, rue des Petits Carreaux
75002 Paris
Metro: Sentier (Line 3)
Open Tuesday to Saturday from noon to 7 p.m.

* * * * * * *

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

Ile aux Cerfs – An Inexpensive Restaurant in Paris

June 22nd, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

On Saturday, I joined a Francophone group on a walking tour to explore Indian and Pakistani culture in Paris.  For lunch, we went to the passage du Prado in the 10th arrondissement, where a number of inexpensive restaurants can be found.

Ile aux Cerfs
Photo by Discover Paris!

Because of limited space in the small restaurants there, our group split into two.  A number of us ate at Ile aux Cerfs, an establishment that specializes in the cuisine of the island of Mauritius.  Mauritian cuisine is a blend of Indian, African, Chinese, and European influences.

Briani Poisson Capitaine
Photo by Discover Paris!

The menu offers a wide variety of dishes, including goat, fish, beef, and chicken.  Most of the dishes are served with rice and a vegetable.  I spotted Briani Poisson Capitaine, a rice-based fish dish, for only 5.50€.

I was served a portion of perch (capitaine), smothered in long-grain rice flavored with saffron and cinnamon and a “salad” of grated carrot.  The rice was quite savory, the fish was somewhat dry, and the grated carrot was fresh.  In spite of the dryness of the fish, I enjoyed this course.

The most expensive dishes on the menu were 8.50€.  One of my dining companions ordered one of these, the Carri Cabri P.D.Terre Riz Salade, a plate of stewed goat smothered in spicy gravy and served with potatoes, rice, and salad.

Cake Made with Manioc Flour
Photo by Discover Paris!

For dessert I ordered a cake made from manioc flour and dusted with grated coconut.  I wasn’t sure of what to expect, and was quite pleased to discover that it was delicious!  I later found a recipe for the cake on the Internet and learned that it contains not only manioc flour, but also coconut milk and eggs.  It has a silken, gelatinous texture, but because it is dusted with grated coconut, it can be picked up with the fingers to be eaten.  The portion of cake cost only 1.20€.

My total bill, including the fish dish, the cake, and a small bottle of sparkling water (beer and wine are not served here), came to 8.80€.  Quite a bargain for such a filling meal!

The small restaurant is a popular place and by the time we finished our meal many of the tables were occupied.

A confined dining area is one of the first things that one must learn to expect when dining in inexpensive restaurants in Paris.  (I sat elbow to elbow with the dining companions to my left and right during the meal.)  However, the restrictive space at Ile aux Cerfs is compensated by friendly service and a good, inexpensive meal.  It represents a great option for travelers on a limited budget.

Ile aux Cerfs
12, rue du Faubourg Saint-Denis
8 – 10, passage du Prado
75010 Paris
Telephone:  01.44.83.98.20

Metro: Strasbourg-Saint-Denis (Lines 4, 8, and 9)

* * * * * * *

We participate in Wanderfood Wednesdays. Head over there to explore food from around the world!

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!