Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts

Iron Chef of Iron Chefs

"we should try one michelin star place while we are here" I said unpacking my suitcase in our tiny hotel room in Paris

Hock proceeds to rattle of a litany of choices and possibilities together with a description of the chef's culinary style as well as stating the impossibility of getting a booking at almost all but Joel Rubuchon's which does not take bookings.

"Ok well what is the number of the first one?" Arpege?" He quotes the number telling me there is no way we will get a table for lunch at the last minute.

I call. They have a table. Tomorrow 1 pm. Hock goes into a quiet stupor. His eye lids flutter while the reality settles. He blushes.




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Manaqish Fusion

lebanesetoast

I caught the train to Paris last weekend to visit friends, and was struck again by the decadent approach Parisians have to food. We visited the Saturday morning market on the Avenue de President Wilson in Paris (next to the Palais de Tokyo gallery), where produce was laid out in Bacchanalian abundance. Cheeses, gleaming charcuterie, and piles of wild mushrooms, lobsters and sea urchins.
Avenue de President Wilson, by the way, sounds like the title of a Serge Gainsbourg song.
But Paris has more to offer than traditional fatty cheeses and rabbit terrine.

The most appealing thing to eat on that chilly morning was something labeled as "galette traditionelle Libanaise": the Lebanese breakfast flatbread, manaqish, a cousin of the Australian delight known as meat pizza.

I enjoyed my "galette" smeared with za'atar (mix of wild thyme, sesame and olive oil) - the flavour was breath-fresheningly good. But the winner was my friend's gruyere cheese manaqish - a perfect blend of indulgent Paris luxury and Lebanese flatbread science.

lebanesevendor
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Anyone who follows food writer Jeffrey Steingarten's columns in American Vogue will have often remarked on how odd it is to be reading about his cheese fondue experiments in a magazine that is a pillar of an industry that (whether consciously or not) by promulgating certain body types, implies a much less voluptuous version of what and how much we should be eating.

Last year the New Yorker magazine noted on its website "how bizarre it is that the dean of American food writers should be publishing his scientific food forays amid images of Caroline Trentini jumping in Prada and furs", for a piece about burger science and Heston Blumenthal. (see picture above).

The sometimes gothic or even horrific relationship between fashion and food was highlighted again this week when France's lower house of parliament adopted a measure that makes it illegal to "incite extreme thinness." The law will apply across all media, including magazines, websites and advertising.

The law was supposedly in part a reaction to the recent death of a Brazilian model of anorexia - and by all accounts is largely aimed at the extremely disturbing trend of 'pro ana mia' websites. Ana and Mia are shorthand for anorexia and bulimia respectively. The French Federation of Couture responded defensively, deriding a law that would allow the goverment to decide 'who is skinny and who is not'.

When it comes to the eating disorder websites, health experts say a crackdown will be hard to enforce as well as not necessarily having much effect on preventing the eating disorders.

So, having read this, I naturally went to one of those websites out of curiosity. Blech.... of course, it was disturbing, to say the least. The hints for distraction, deception and purging, were just too pitiful to be repeated here, involving talk of stomach-acid bursts, pretending to be vegetarian, and mind-controlling mechanisms involving food and repulsive visual stimuli.

In general I think mental illness as a whole deserves more sympathy and understanding from society - but these types of eating disorders are somehow much harder to feel sympathetic towards. At once deeply narcissistic and nihilistic: they are a scary reminder of how twisted the human mind can become...


So Coco Chanel isn't directly responsible for eating disorders that are far more complicated than simply feeling guilty for having eaten one too many strawberry-lavendar muffins or a boxful of chocolate eclairs from Laduree in Paris.

But I guess we all know women who never eat a full meal: who often have nothing to eat all day except for one slice of cake and one piece of toast, and temper their moodswings with anti-depressants, cups of tea and/or shopping on their credit card. Or boys who complained when you ate your whole plate full, because they are used to girls who left half their portion for them to consume? And what of Karl Lagerfeld, who reportedly stays trim by simply chewing things up and spitting them out?

Whether you think predigestive regurgitation is sexy or not. The relationship between fashion and food is pretty fucked up.

Girls, will you please just eat your granola?

Or even turn all those obsessive-compulsive controlling impulses into something useful like creating your own sourdough starters from the natural yeasts that hide on freshly milled flour?

Basically, just behave more like Jeffrey Steingarten. As if he was on a south beach diet.
It sounds fantastic when you write it down... but this menu was the budget option.

The above foodstuffs were how I celebrated my birthday on August 2nd in Paris.

Originally I had planned to have a steak-frites meal in a bistro, but it seemed that of the recommended spots, even the Rendez-vous des Chauffeurs (originally a pitstop for taxi drivers) was going to end up costing around 100 euros for four -

So instead, Erik and I wandered down the Rue des Martyrs
to Galeries Lafayette, picking out little things here and there, and ended up at the Luxembourg Gardens for the Moroccan food finale with Rachel, Greg & Tui. It was a fine way to spend a birthday.

BREAKFAST
...(and the only real extravagance of the day) was a deluxe bocadillo sandwich from the Galeries Lafayette food hall.

The El Bocadillo
shop there has two different Iberico sandwiches on offer - Jamón ibérico de Bellota
that they use in their deluxe sandwich is 256 euro per kilo. It was about 12 euros for a few slivers of the ham, or 14 euros when sandwiched between tasty but somewhat unremarkable olive ciabatta-style bread, with manchego cheese made from raw manchega sheep's milk and a creamy tomato sauce.

I think that I did actually have this ham before, at a fancy tapas place in Barcelona, but was too tired or drunk to appreciate the high oleic acorn content... This time, I was impressed with the very soft texture compared to lesser forms of Spanish ham, the extreme pinkish-red colour and glossiness, and the intensification of that marmite-ish musky flavour. It was a waste, really, to eat it in the much-too-large baguette. (I prefer the skinny bocadillos they serve all over Barcelona). I ended up picking out the ham and eating the sandwich seperately.
I am not sure if I would spend 14 euro on this sandwich on a regular basis, say if I lived in Iberia or Paris - the much cheaper bocadillos stuffed with ham can be just as rewarding, even if the ham is a little paler and less pliant - but I was glad to try it. Would definitely recommend, in case anyone else finds themselves in a slightly more cash-flushed birthday scenario, to buy 24 euros worth and eat it from a plate with a glass of wine. Apparently, the owners of El Bocadillo have a restaurant in Paris called Bellota Bellota, where you can do just that.

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LUNCH
...was Moroccan takeways for four, and a nice brioche loaf, all from the fancy foodhall at Galeries Lafayette. Unfortunately I didn't write the name of Moroccan place down, but if you are in that food hall it's easy to find.
The great big moist piles of food behind the counter were impossible to resist.
We chose:
- chicken simmered in a stew of rice, peas and tomatoes
- lamb tagine with prunes
- yummy light couscous with saffron
- a tasty oily potato salad with tomato soaked into the potatoes, lemon and something pungent - maybe chopped anchovies?
- amazing, incredibly fresh tabouleh with very large grains, quite firm and a little crunchy

Everything was pungent with the taste of lemon, and very fresh. It was about 30 euros for more than enough food for four. Perfect in the Luxembourg Gardens next to flowers and a pond where children were pushing old-fashioned miniature sailboats with sticks.

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Tui bringing me a flower from the garden, which included silverbeet (or mangold?) as a decorative plant.

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DINNER
... was leftover everything, on the highspeed train back to Cologne, with a few notable additions including non-fat petits suisses
(how can it taste so rich with no fat?), which are like tiny, lactic-yoghurty cream cheeses, but with a texture like a very heavy quark; and some cute & yummy little macaron
s from a bakeries on the Rue des Martyrs, about half way down on the opposite side to Arnaud Delmontel (which was closed for summer holidays). Macarons look way too sweet but they are very light and beguiling, made from egg white, almond powder and sugar, and have this great chewiness when combined with a filling. This other bakery was also very good - it really proved to me that it's true what I've read - one doesn't need to go to a top bakery to have a truly delicious macaron. On another day from the same place we had macaron sandwiches with rose cream and raspberries. Of the mini-sized ones I bought for the train, the violet-flavoured one was my favourite.

The matcha-green tea flavoured one which I bought from Sadaharu Aoki
in Galeries Lafayette earlier in the day was nothing to write home about. It was slightly too sweet and had not enough discernible tea flavour. The too-sweet and too-timid accusations seem to be common when it comes to Aoki. If looking for sweets with traditional Japanese flavours, it seems, you are better to try them in Japan. Although the ice cream 'sando-kun' sandwiches on his website look realllly good.

Another addition to dinner was this DELICIOUS hazlenut and chestnut bread from the same bakery which supplied the macarons, with an EVEN MORE delicious rabbit & apricot terrine, from Françoise Le Carrer's charcuterie and cheese shop, Les Papilles Gourmandes. Basically we were walking past and I thought it would be a good idea to try one of the scary-looking terrines. When she (was it Françoise?) described the flavours, this one sounded pretty good, and it exceeded all expectations. Just because something looks like dogfood doesn't mean it won't taste like heaven!

It was about 5 euros for 100 g. And it was the best thing I ate that day. The best thing I've eaten in ages, actually. Creamy-ish, meaty, sweet bits of apricot, just heaven. I actually found this
recipe which sounds rather like the same dish, but more herby.
As the website says, "Terrines are really just a meat loaf cooked in a bain-marie (a bed of water)." A nice way of putting it, though they look crazier and more chunkily-textured than a meatloaf's reassuringly monotone mince appearance.

Les Papilles Gourmandes 26, rue des martyrs - 75009 Paris

Bread crust, and delicious rabbit terrine:

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Bread crumb, and delicious rabbit terrine:

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Post script: a recent issue of Japan's Madame Figaro Voyage magazine all about 'rediscovering Paris', started with recommendations for guess where? The area may get more trendy, but let's hope, the shops selling dresses for 50 euros and the meat shop with rotisserie chicken don't disappear.

Rue des Martyrs

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(photo: yet another perfect child on the rue des Martyrs)

They call it the City of Light, or the City of Lovers. Like most major metropoli, Paris sweeps you up in its cliches, squeezes you to its chest, and fills you with a desire to wear ballet flats and eat nothing but white cheese. In the end, that is the best reason to call this the City of Lovers. Because, just like other big cities full of culture, ill begotten charm, stories of red windmills, back allies, seedy underbellies and expensive overcoats, it's full of people who love it.

Most big cities are populated by immigrants and out-of-towners as much or more so than they are by the born & bred. It's a fascinating aspect of NYC for example: to witness the Williamsburg generation, refugees from middle America with their impeccable side-parts and vintage whatever, role playing to within an inch of their lives, the myth of New York as they saw it in "Back in the Days" or "Downtown '81". Be careful what you pretend to be, because eventually it will become you and be tremendously flattering. The beauty of NYC is that the minute one steps into the city one IS a New Yorker. New York mythology is upheld there every second, both by those who were born there and those who are visiting for two days.

So it is in Paris. The moonscape above the Sacrecoeur or the way that walking through the charming white-tiled subways is like following a trail of expensive perfumes through an endless underground lavatory. The ramshackleness of the subways, the people of many nationalities with barely a dime crushed together in a daze. The perfectly coiffured children who actually skip through the streets singing. Then, as if they've jumped straight out of Argent de Poche, they brawl into Arnaud Delmontel demanding pain aux raisins (unglazed swirl of croissant dough, eggy creme patissiere and raisins) and skip away, once more singing. It all inspires an insane (or inane) desire to wear a long coat, have artfully tangled hair and eat terrine of boiled beef parts in jelly.

There are hundreds of wonderfully relaxed-looking Japanese tourists, wearing their favourite fashion items, walking languidly around the Marais and the 1er, having their little moment of 'being Parisian'. There is a sort of Paris-cult in Japan, as I discovered when I lived near Jiyugaoka (Tokyo's centre of froux froux home accessories). One of the finest sights i saw in Paris was a well-to-do Japanese mom feeding her round-faced, pink-dressed 6 yr old a splendid mountain of cakes and the 30 euro set breakfast at Ladurée
, which the child was admirably shovelling into her mouth energetically for the full hour which we were there, eating our violet cream-filled Religieuses
and sipping coffee. Then they departed in a car which was waiting for them outside, armed with goodie bags filled with more cakes in stripey boxes. Next time I plan to visit the famous Pierre Hermé
, though the presentation of his store and the cultishness around it don't appeal to me: his rose cream, raspberry & lychee 'ispahan' (macaroon sandwiches), which he invented, are still tempting.

One thing you notice in Paris is that everyone, but everyone, is constantly eating white bread. From Algerian Muslims in traditional garb, to Sudanese bicycle couriers, every Parisian seems to constantly have a baguette - or as we call them in NZ, 'French stick' - slung over the shoulder. The cheapest supermarkets have great big wire cages full of them by the cash register.

Although to carry a baguette might help to camouflage you, for the non-French it is much harder to fit in or be mistaken for an Algerian Muslim, who can gesticulate in that Parisian way that you never will. Still, it's a simple pleasure to hang out on whichever street you feel you have 'discovered' and eat 'the best' croissant (like one French person said, "It is surprising to see how the Anglo-Saxon are easily amazed in front of nothing. It is only some puff paste cut in triangle and rolled.") Despite the legends of rude Parisian behaviour, all the servers we encountered were really tolerant and even jocular.

For your next taste of big city culture and boulangerie pluralism, the Rue des Martyrs in the 9e is a fine street to visit. In fact, I would recommend staying nearby so that you can start your day here. Extending all the way up to some stairs ascending to the Sacrecoeur, the rue ds Martyrs is home to fish shops, nice-looking charcuterie and the English-style Rose Cafe, which was the only place where we had the famous rude Parisian service we were hoping for. Rue des Martyrs, which I've heard described more than once as 'four blocks of heaven', is lined with delicatessans selling cold cuts and meats encased in aspic, and cheese shops, and bakeries selling various pink & green pistachio dusted items. Not all of them are worth visiting, but it is also home to Arnaud Delmontel, which has a large sign proclaiming 'the best baguette in Paris 2007', and in this case one is inclined to believe them, judging by the queue stretching out the door, the cheap prices, and of course the baguette itself. I took one on the train back to Cologne and Erik and I marvelled at how chewy and aromatic it was, with the nicely singed crust. (Supposedly Jeffrey Steingarten participated in the judging panel of this Parisian baguette grand prix). Oh, and there is a really great Italian fusion store with a few nice wooden tables called epicerie Fuxia
where we had a great spontaneous birthday dinner for Ruth of cold nibbly things, meats, olives, etc and wine, and it was cheap. And the salads looked amazing - huge. The service was a little slow (due to a sudden influx of nighbourhood people filling up all four tables) but very down to earth and kind, like being served by friends.

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Why visit an English-style cafe when the small bistro at the bottom of the street makes cheaper and stronger coffees?
Tick a) you're keen on cafes that stock Scottish oat cakes, Neal's Yard cheeses and glass bottles of organic English apple juice
b) you are one of those sick people who prefers soy to normal milk
c) you want to pour the combined soy latte into your glass from a rustic hand-made pottery jug, a procedure known as a 'piggy latte'
d) you're tired of simple carbohydrates and want to eat some overpriced carrot and lentil salad and beetroot and avocado with delicious sour dough made by appointment-only baker Jean-Luc Pouduran and sprinkled with fleur de sel
e) you want to be served by young French-speaking Australian or English girls who have perfected an expression that is half-glacial, half-glazed, as they are given brusque instructions by their boss, a French man who I have read is Rose's husband.

If you ticked 'all of the above' then Rose Cafe is for you! It was the only cafe we found that satisfied some sort of pretentiously casual chic-factor, and let's face it, it's much cheaper to be pretentious at breakfast time. Rose has been running this cafe with her hubbie for a while now, and they have published a cookbook which a fashion editor was telling a colleague about on the phone at the table behind me, when I ate there. The English editor, dressed in Prada for her Parisian moment, lisped vaguely that the book was "marvellous" and contained "wonderful recipes for.... ohh.... you know.... little pies and thingsss." Owch, those syllibant S's! Rose's brother is married to Rei Kawabuko, who presides over Comme des Garçons. It's not really a fancy place though very clean and smart. It has basically the same cute mini lemon meringue pies, quiches and organic salads that these sort of cafes always have, and that our local Metzgerei Schmitz does for 4 euros cheaper, but still, it's Paris. The coffee is warming and good, but don't expect anything up to NZ/Australian/Seattle standards. (The only coffees in Europe I've tasted that met these standards were from Urban Espresso in Rotterdam)

If you go in the late morning, you will find yourself sitting amongst a pleasant hubbub as deliverymen trundle in big boxes of fresh butter and other organic produce. This must be the reason why all the staff seem so stressed yet glazed, or perhaps that is the role they feel compelled to play - tremendously hectic Parisian boutique operation. It's also very charming how they lay out trays on tables at the back of the cafe (see photo above) and one of the kitchen staff, dressed in apron and black leotard top, lays out steaming quiche fillings or little artisan mini-pizzas. Their kitchen must be small? But the effect is very nice, like eating in the kitchen or cooking in the back garden.

By the time you're onto the second coffee, and Rose's husband tells you that if you drink that much coffee you will explode, a line is stretching out the door for people getting their takeaway lunches, yet the cafe interior stays mostly peacefully empty, save for a couple of local middle-aged women with fashionably make-up free faces, jerky movements and incredibly deep voices, or very tall part-Trinidadian gay man with a large, floppy panama hat reading Le Monde, or the English fashion editor effusing over the delights of Rose cafe on her mobile phone.

Rose Bakery
46 rue des Martyrs
75009 Paris
01 42 82 12 80

Gelatinized charcuterie
goodies on the rue des Martyrs:
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Best baguette in Paris from Arnaud Delmontel

(apart from the baguette and pain aux raisins, I also recommend their briochettes, which are either plain or yummy and crunchy with cinnamon and raisins, and a much cheaper alternative to breakfast with Rose. So get a coffee, then walk across the road for a briochette)

The paper bag containing the baguette says something about the breadmaking conforming to "de Pain de Tradition Francaise", using the correct proportions and flour etc, with no additives: only 'farine de froment type 55, farine de blemalte, eau, sel, levure.'

"La saveur d'une bonne baguette doit etre ni fade, ni trop salée, ni acide, pour ne pas contrarier les mets qu'elle accompagne.

La mie d'une bonne baguette a l'ancienne doit etre créme, longue, l'aveolage sauvage et irrégulier, la crout réélle, bien dorée, afin que le caramel de cette croute s'allie á la saveur de la mie..."

"Vous jugerey également la qualité de cette baguette á sa bonne conservation."

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Yet more praline-dusted baked goodies:
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Fromager on the rue des Martyrs:
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