Posts in Lyon
A Farewell Letter of Gratitude & Thanks

On the eve of a deadline, I found myself sorting through various sources on La Saint-Valentin and the saint’s disputed origin while attempting to refine (no pun intended) the long history of chocolate into a few short paragraphs (after all, Valentine’s Day + France + love + chocolate + fail-proof ganache recipe = albeit obvious, the perfect February blog post.) Halfway through my rough draft, I received the news: Paul Bocuse - the “Pope of Gastronomy,” Meilleur Ouvrier de France, 3-starred Michelin chef dead. Personally, writing an article about an over commercialized (in the states; not France) holiday of whose origins are, if nothing else, bizarre to go along with a recipe for “the perfect ganache” seemed untimely and trite.

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The Cheese That Was Almost Lost or L'Epoisse Theory

I am going to begin at the very end – The Cheese Course. As we passed the cheese tray around the dimly lit dining room table seated full of strangers-turned-new friends, we silently (and correctly – afterall, we had just been taught how to accurately and politely slice and serve ourselves from a proper French cheese platter) cut our fair portion of each of the crumbly, luscious, dense, colorful & custardy choices while we concentrated on Lucy, our instructor/trained-pastry-chef/history-buff/masterful-story-teller as she began The Tale of the Cheese That Was Almost Lost.

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Chef, Foodie, Francophone, & Farmer --- How Did I Get Here?

France was my ultimate foodie paradise. I enrolled into a 210-hour intensive “Cuisine & Culture” course at L’Institut Paul Bocuse where I learned traditional techniques, practiced important recipes, tried new flavors, listened attentively to history lessons, lost myself in stories and grew an even deeper appreciation for France, its food and its culture.Deborah Cater said, “You have to taste a culture to understand it.” So, in the spirit of Ms. Cater and throughout my culinary experiences, workshops, blog posts & instagram, let’s take a stroll through traditions and time, tastes and flavors, vivid colors and fond memories.

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The Moment a French, 3-Star Chef Invites You To a "Little" Bar-b-Que at His Home in the French Countryside ... Plus a Recipe for Beef Paleron

"I propose you ... how you Americans call it - Bar-B-Que at my house next Saturday, oui?" So, on a sunny evening in June, at 7:30 pm, my husband and 2 culinary school friends of mine arrived at a quaint, two-story house just outside of St. Etienne, about a 45-minute drive outside of Lyon. Happy and excited, but not quite prepared for the culinary adventure that lay before us ...

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