Archive for the ‘Paris Insights newsletter’ Category

In This Month’s Paris Insights Newsletter:
A Palace in the City

Thursday, September 1st, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin
Plaza Athénée

Plaza Athénée
Photo by A. D. McKenzie

In this month’s Paris Insights journalist A. D. McKenzie reports on the new category of hotel in France, the “palace” hotel.

In a special report, we present the Royal Abbaye de Chaalis, located within an hour’s drive of the city. The abbey and its beautiful park were bequeathed to the Institut de France in 1912 with the stipulation that they be open to the public.

And for our Paris, Past and Present feature, A.D. McKenzie discusses the star rating system created by the French Ministry of Tourism.

Our newsletter is published monthly as a downloadable PDF file. It is available only to paid subscribers for an annual subscription fee of $30.

If you are not a paid subscriber and would like to download the newsletter, please click here. Enter promotional code 11473309154 to receive a $5 discount off the price of an annual subscription.

Bonne Lecture!

* * * * * * *

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

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

Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

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!

* * * * * * *

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

Friday, 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!

Paris and its Trees

Sunday, May 1st, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Judas Tree at Champ de Mars

We are pleased to announce that the feature article “Paris and its Trees” for this month’s Paris Insights was written by Jamaica-born artist and writer Alecia McKenzie. She has worked for the New York Times Regional Newspaper Group, the Wall Street Journal Europe, and CBS. Her new novel Sweetheart will soon be published by Peepal Tree Press.

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!

J’aime Paris by Alain Ducasse

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

There are numerous restaurant guides available for the Paris-bound traveler to consult before making that dream trip to the City of Light, but the one that I have found that best describes the city’s culinary scene is the soon-to-be-published J’aime Paris: Mon Paris du goût en 200 adresses, by Alain Ducasse (April 2011, Alain Ducasse Edition).

J’aime Paris is a heavy book, weighing in at 4 lbs! It contains 596 pages, and is illustrated with sumptuous black-and-white and color photographs. Co-written with Frédérick E. Grasser Hermé, it is a lively account in words and pictures of some 230 establishments in Paris. While most of the places described are restaurants, the authors also include numerous marketplaces, kitchenware shops, specialty food shops, bars, bakeries, pastry shops, cheese shops, butcher shops, cafés, and more. The book is a veritable treasure-trove of information on the vast and varied world of gastronomy for which Paris is famous.

Although the brief accounts of each establishment are written in French, in my opinion, an understanding of the language is not necessary to enjoy and to learn from the book. It is amply illustrated with hundreds of photographs. The images by themselves effectively convey the passion that motivates Parisian restaurant and food shop owners, and the rich culture and traditions of the French gastronomic experience.

J’aime Paris by Alain Ducasse
Alain Ducasse Edition
Photographer: Pierre Monetta
Appears in bookshops in April 2011 – 35 €

A full review of J’aime Paris is available to the subscribers of our monthly newsletter Paris Insights.

Access to the newsletter is by paid subscription. Click here to view the announcement of the newsletter that features the book review. Click here to enter a subscription.

Bonne lecture!

* * * * * * *

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

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

The Odyssey of Max McCalman

Friday, April 1st, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Max McCalman
Maître Fromager
(c) Discover Paris!

In this month’s Paris Insights newsletter, we depart from our standard format to bring our readers a special issue on food and the world of cheese.

We had the occasion to meet Maître Fromager Max McCalman last month when he traveled to Paris to accept the “Best in the World Book on Cheese” award at the Paris Cookbook Fair for his book Mastering Cheese: Lessons for Connoisseurship from a Maître Fromager. During the conversation we learned about the fascinating odyssey that led McCalman to his true vocation in life, namely that of a leading American expert on cheeses.

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!

Henry Miller in Paris

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Henry Miller
(c) 1940 Carl Van Vechten

Henry Miller was an angry, turbulent man who went to Paris in the 1930s to devote himself to writing. The shocking novels that he turned out were banned in the United States until 1964. Read our account about the man and his experiences in the City of Light in this month’s Paris Insights newsletter.

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!

Chocolate-covered Cherry Tasting – A Prelude to Valentine’s Day

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Hand-dipped, Chocolate-covered Cherries
By Jacques Bellanger
(c) Discover Paris!

Are we the first persons in all of human history to have organized a blind chocolate-covered cherry tasting? We like to think so! With Valentine’s Day just around the corner, we brought a panel together to sample chocolate-covered cherries from some of the best producers in France: Weiss, Foucher, Jacques Bellanger, Jean-Charles Rochoux, and Michel Cluizel. Learn which confection the panel preferred in this month’s Paris Insights!

Access to the Paris Insights 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!

Pistols, Brass Knuckles, and Daggers

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

Poing Américain with Gun and Dagger
(c) Discover Paris!

While researching the apaches of Paris for our Paris Insights feature article, we visited the Police Museum where we photographed one of the weapons that the they used to commit their crimes. The museum has a display case showing a number of their weapons, including brass knuckles (called poings américains) and a combination brass knuckle, dagger, and single-shot pistol (pictured).

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

* * * * * * *

Like our blog? Join us on Facebook!

Paris Apaches

Friday, January 7th, 2011
Facebook Twitter Linkedin

A little more than one hundred years ago, Paris was seized by a fear of the night. Gangs of young hoodlums were prowling the streets in the darkness, looking for persons to attack and rob, or, in some cases, to kill just for the pleasure of the act.

In this month’s Paris Insights we explore the world of the apaches—gangs of young thugs that seemed to roam the city and attack with impunity.

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!