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Almost French
Book Review - Excerpt 1
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Eating in France
"Before arriving in France, I hardly ever had more than two
courses at restaurants and was totally unaccustomed to rich flavors. In a not so
distant life in Australia, I had a refrigerator full of soy and skim milks and
low-fat yogurts alive with apparently desirable cultures. My cupboards contained
costly health food-shop items such as bee pollen granules and lecithin....I
could quite easily have turned vegetarian.
"But France took care of that.
"These days, breakfast is a café
crème with a croissant or a pain au chocolat, which I guess is a bit
like starting the day with coffee and cake. When Frédéric has time he prepares a
fresh fruit salad--served with snowdrifts of full-fat fromage blanc, sold
straight from the farm at our local cheese shop.....I can no longer tolerate
skimming anything, and studiously avoid low-salt products--the butter I buy is
packed with crunchy crystals from Brittany.
"...France has this effect on
foreigners. It turns your eating habits and food principles upside down so that
before long you're rhapsodizing about the delicate silkiness of foie gras
entier without a thought for the fat content, let alone the poor goose or
duck who was force-fed with a tube down his throat. The damage is
irreparable--there's no turning back to muesli after flaky pastries filled with
ribbons of dark chocolate."
Sarah Turnbull
Almost French: Love and a New Life
in Paris
Read Excerpt 2:
Service in Parisian shops and restaurants
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