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Monthly Archives: April 2011
The photograph I didn’t take
It was winter and we were walking back to our rented apartment in the 14th arrondissement from Monoprix, with a borrowed buggy filled with basics – toilet paper, dried pasta, yogurt. We traipsed down a road called rue Campagne Première. … Continue reading
Jules Verne in the Métro
As a young boy, I longed to live in the fantastic worlds of Jules Verne, to explore the depths of the ocean in the Nautilus with Captain Nemo. I had not told Philippa this, but as we set off to … Continue reading
Posted in Paris history, Paris metro, Paris museums
Tagged Antoinette Lesueur de Pérès, Benson Bobrick, Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers, François Schuiten, International Exposition of 1900, Jules Verne, Labyrinths of Iron, Les Cités Obscures, Musée des Arts et Métiers, Paris in the 20th Century, Paul Séjourné, Pont Antoinette, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
8 Comments
Nine minutes, twenty-one seconds
A recent New York Times article pointed out that the traditional division of Paris into Left Bank / Right Bank might be giving way to a more East-West distinction. (Some people will say that has long been the case.) And … Continue reading
Posted in Paris gardens, Paris history, Paris maps
Tagged Charles Perrault, Claude Perrault, François Arago, Giovanni Domenico Cassini, Greenwich Mean Time, Institut d’Astrophysique, International Meridian Conference, Jan Dibbets, Jean Prouvé, Map Addict, Mike Parker, Paris Mean Time, Paris Meridian, Paris Observatoire, Paris observatory
3 Comments
Notre Dame du Travail: more than meets the eye
If I had to pick only one place to visit on a trip to Paris, it would be Notre Dame du Travail. What makes it so special? It starts with the eye, but there is more than meets the eye. … Continue reading
Posted in Paris churches, Paris history, Paris quartiers
Tagged 14th arrondissement, Eiffel Tower, Exposition of 1900, Father Soulange-Bodin, Gare Montparnasse, Gare St-Lazare, Jules Astruc, Napoleon III, Notre Dame de Plaisance, Notre Dame du Travail, Paris architecture, Paris bridges, Paris urban renewal, Plaisance quartier, Structural steel
14 Comments
Leeks Vinaigrette
I have my favourite French food writers, but among my best-loved cookbooks are those by Canadian food writer Lucy Waverman and the English Nigel Slater. Recently, I came across the following words by Slater that got me thinking: Sourness in … Continue reading
Posted in Paris food, Paris markets
Tagged Alberto Herráiz, Anne Willan, Banyuls vinegar, Beauvau market, Editions de l'Epure, La Varenne, Laura Calder, leeks vinaigrette, Maille, Martin Pouret, Molly Wizenberg, Montorgueil market, mustard, Nigel Slater, Orleans, Restaurant Fogon, sherry vinegar, vinegar
1 Comment




















