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Photo of the Week

Paris Update Centre Pompidou Darren Palmer

Another view of the Centre Pompidou. Photo © Darren Palmer of Paris by Photo.

 

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Paris Update What's New in Paris

RESTAURANT/CLUB/CAFE
Wanderlust:
Finally, part of Les Docks, Cité de la Mode et Design will open to the public on June 6. Brunch on the terrace, take a yoga class, take in a concert or dance all night. 34, quai d'Austerlitz, 75013 Paris.

SHOPS
Stella Cadente:
The designer of very feminine clothing and accessories has a new Paris store that's like a gold-lined tunnel. 102 boulevard Beaumarchais, 75011 Paris.

Ecolo-Chic: Pop-up store in the Marais selling ethically resourced products, from toys and design to organic wine. 90, rue des Archives, 75003 Paris.

SMOKING
A new organization, L'Union pour les Droits des Fumeurs Adultes, has been formed to lobby for the rights of French smokers

JUSTIN ON THE ROOFTOPS
Keep your eyes peeled: Justin Bieber will be filming for the Web TV program live@home in an undisclosed location on the rooftops of Paris on the evening of May 31. Click here to win a pass to the taping.

 

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Paris Update Flash News

CAKE THE WAY WE LIKE IT

Paris Update Merce and the Muse

Goodies on display at Merce and the Muse.

Nowadays, American expatriates in Paris can easily satisfy almost all their nostalgic food cravings, from hamburgers to Reese’s peanut-butter cups or Oreo cookies. Until Merce and the Muse opened in the Upper Marais, however, it wasn’t easy to find good homemade, American-style cakes. The desserts at this homey, flea-market-furnished café are not just good, they are scrumptious and original, made from owner Merce Muse’s own recipes. The other day I shared a slice of chocolate layer cake with vanilla icing and another of pistachio cake with rose icing with a friend, but in truth I wanted to eat all of both of them. 1 bis, rue Dupuis, 75003 Paris. Tel.: 09 53 14 53 04. Open Tues.-Sun. for breakfast, lunch and coffee; brunch on Sunday. Heidi Ellison

 

Paris Update This Week's Events

For full details about an event, click on its name to visit the official Web site (in English when available).

play Art Saint-Germain-des-Prés

>Left Bank gallery walk. Collective opening, May 31, 6pm. May 31-June 3.

play Carré Rive Gauche

>Another Left Bank gallery walk, with 120 participating galleries. June 1-June 3.

play Champs-Elysées Film Festival

>A new Franco-American film festival, presided over by Lambert Wilson and Michael Madsen. Various locations, Paris, June 6-12.

play Chartre en Lumières

> The town of Chartres illuminates its monuments and the cathedral with colorful light installations. Through Sept. 15.

play Designer's Days

>Design shops, galleries, schools and more participate in a city-wide design event. Various locations, Paris, May 31-June 4.

play Festival de l'Imaginaire

> Performances by troupes from around the world, Maison des Cultures du Monde, Paris, through June 17.

play Festival de Saint Denis

> Music festival featuring both stars like Sir Colin Davis and young talents; ends with a dawn performance by horse whisperer Bartabas and oud player Mehdi Haddab, Cathedral and Legion of Honor, Saint Denis, through June 30.

play Festival Extensions

> Concerts, dance, films and more, various locations, Paris and Val de Marne, through May 31.

play Festival International des Jardins de Chaumont-sur-Loire

>"Gardens of delights, gardens of delirium" is the theme of this year's garden festival, Chaumont-sur-Loire, through Oct. 21.

play Festival Jazz à Saint-Germain-des-Prés

>Jazz acts ranging from amateur to big names like Ahmad Jamal and Yusef Lateef (together). Various locations, Paris, Through June 3.

play Le Court en Dit Long

>Festival of short films. Centre Wallonie-Bruxelles, Paris, June 4-9.

play Nomades

>Cultural festival in the third arrondissement; art, poetry, concerts and more. Various locations, Paris, May 31-June 3.

play Quinzaine des Réalisateurs

>The features and short subjects entered in this category at the Cannes Film Festival shown in Paris, Forum des Images, Paris, May 31-June 10

play Salon du Vin de La Revue du Vin de France

>Annual wine fair. Palais Brongniart, Paris, June 2-3

 

Hot Topics - Flash News

 

The Art of French Cooking

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A la Carte
Cooking Classes

Muriel Foucher of Marguerite's Elegant Home Cooking supervises a student's technique.

Anyone who wants to take a cooking course in Paris has a wealth of choices, ranging from the famed Cordon Bleu and the Ritz Cooking School at the high-priced end to more modest à la carte classes. Here are three suggestions for food lovers who aren’t looking to become three-star chefs but enjoy watching experts at work and picking up a few tips on French cooking from them.

An appealing option for English-speakers is Marguerite’s Elegant Home Cooking, run by Muriel Foucher from her own home. Foucher learned to love cooking by watching her grandmother, Marguerite, at work when she was a child, which explains the company’s name.

Foucher meets her class (with a maximum of eight participants) at 9 a.m. at the Porte d’Auteuil outdoor market in Paris’s tony 16th arrondissement and gives them a tour of the market while buying the ingredients for the day’s lesson. Some of the information is basic (never touch the products in the French market, for example, a lesson we have all learned the hard way by being yelled at by vendors), but I learned some interesting facts that were new to me. The Extra and Category 1 and 2 classifications for fruits and vegetables, for example, concern the size and shape of the products rather than their quality – a knobby organic tomato might get a lower rating but could be far tastier than a perfectly round one classed as “Extra.”

She also explains the four families of French cheeses: 1) big mountain hard cheeses, always made with cow’s milk, such as Beaufort, Cantal and Comté, and tommes, a generic name for smaller hard cheeses made with any type of milk; 2) the soft cheeses, which may have white rinds like brie or camembert, or be lavé (washed) in local alcohol, like smelly Epoisse from Burgundy; 3) goat cheeses, with or without an ashy coating; and 4) blue cheeses, usually made from cow’s milk, with the exception of Roquefort, which is made with sheep’s milk.

Armed with our shopping bags, we then hopped into Foucher’s car and drove to her home in Surennes, where she has set up a professional kitchen for her classes, with four stoves and sets of equipment. Two students man (or woman) each stove, preparing the dishes themselves with Muriel’s assistance while chatting and getting to know each other. On the day I attended, one of the participants regaled us with amusing stories about a friend of hers, the late Julia Child, while we cooked up a lamb tajine (Moroccan stew) with caramelized pears and, for dessert, a pineapple tarte tatin (upside-down cake).

Once the fruits of our efforts were cooked, we set them out on serving dishes and carried them downstairs to the family dining room, where we were joined for lunch by Muriel’s 13-year-old son, Hugo, who quite understandably prefers to share lunch at home with his mother’s students rather than eat in the school canteen.

The advantages of Marguerite’s Elegant Home Cooking are the market visit, the hands-on cooking experience, the opportunity to spend time in a French home and the convivial ambiance. We finished up at 2 p.m.

The Leçon Gourmande Gaggenau I took a few days later was a totally different experience, yet just as wonderful in its own way. Gaggenau, the kitchen appliance maker, offers once-a-month, two-hour cooking demonstrations presided over by one of Paris’s leading chefs, Jean-Pierre Vigato, owner of the two-Michelin-starred restaurant Apicius. On the day I attended, Vigato never showed up, which was something of a disappointment, but two of his sous-chefs, Stéphane Paillard and Vincent Dautry, manned the stoves with great charm and verve.

At Gaggenau, the participants (maximum of eight) are lined up on stools at a bar watching while the chefs on the other side prepare some of the dishes from the Apicius menu. For the moment, the demonstrations are in French only.

While Marguerite’s Elegant Home Cooking concentrates on tasty dishes that can easily be prepared at home, the Gaggenau course involves rich, sophisticated dishes with pricey ingredients that most people would only attempt for special occasions. We watched the two chefs make three dishes in a whirlwind of activity while they explained what they were doing and fielded the questions we threw at them. On the menu were delicate mushroom tarts with escargots and mascarpone cream; fried escalopes of duck foie gras with a complex sauce made with several types of vinegar, crushed black pepper, orange-peel powder and cocoa; and scallops paired with boudin blanc (a sausage made with poultry and crème fraîche) and served with black truffle sauce and parsley-potato purée.

The beauty of this class is that as soon as each dish is completed, the chefs serve a generous helping to each participant – all three, made from top-quality ingredients (the chefs are happy to reveal their sources), were sheer bliss, although the chocolate-flavored sauce on the foie gras quickly hardened to an unpleasant consistency and stuck to the teeth, preventing the perfect marriage it should have had with the foie gras.

For a totally different experience, the Atelier des Chefs offers English-language cooking classes in a glass-enclosed kitchen smack the middle of the Galeries Lafayette department store’s kitchenware department. In this fishbowl atmosphere, shoppers watched curiously as a charming young chef and his assistant guided us through the making of a dessert, moelleux au chocolat (soft-centered chocolate cupcakes). I had taken my 17-year-old nephew with me, and our fellow students were a vacationing Canadian woman and her young daughter.

Atelier des Chefs has a wide variety of classes, covering everything from cooking with truffles to risotto with shellfish, some of them held in its own center and others in department stores. The advantage of these workshops is that they are short (usually one hour), hands-on and relatively inexpensive.

All three of these very different classes were highly entertaining in their own way for anyone who enjoys cooking. They all provide printouts of the recipes to take home, although I don’t think I’m up to trying the Gaggenau recipes yet.

Heidi Ellison

Marguerite’s Elegant Home Cooking: Tel.: 01 42 04 74 00. Cost: Market visit, cooking class and lunch: €110. Cooking class and lunch: €90. www.elegantcooking.com

Leçon Gourmande Gaggenau: 7 rue de Tilsit, 75017 Paris. Tel.: 01 58 05 20 20. Cost: €100 for one person; €150 for two.

Atelier des Chefs: 10 rue de Penthièvre, 75008 Paris. Tel.: 01 53 30 05 82. Cost: €15-€50, depending on type of class. www.atelierdeschefs.com

© 2006 Paris Update

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