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Paris--City of Lights
By Carole Kotkin
Paris
is maddening, sprawling and chaotic. And yet it is also stunningly beautiful
and vibrant, rich with history, culture and art. With its wide sweep of
boulevards and the procession of bridges across the Seine, fantastic
museums, and its multicultural neighborhoods, Paris is a city that you can’t
forget whether it’s your first trip or your twentieth.
If
you have already done the big sights—the Louvre, Notre Dame, Montmartre—you
may want to get off the tourist beat and go exploring. In fact, simply
wandering around is the most fun—then you can sit on a park bench in the
Tuileries and reflect on the wonders of it all, or stop at an outdoor café
where your seat provides instant access to the inner rhythm of the city. On
each trip to Paris, I notice that no matter how much things change—and
they’ve changed a lot—there is so much that remains the same. This makes it
a city of remarkable contrasts: the Louvre and the Pompidou Museum;
Notre-Dame and the Eiffel Tower; art nouveau bistros and fast-food stands,
matrons in Chanel and young women in Mugler. Parisians—and their love of
food and wine remain unchanged.
Everyone
continues to treat food with reverence, and the produce in the markets is
arranged as carefully as a Cézanne still life. Early morning strolls to the
open-air food market on rue Mouffetard never disappoints. Perhaps plump,
red, first-of-the-season cherries from Rousillon, a new goat cheese
Camembert from the Alps, or half a dozen varieties of earthy wild mushrooms
will be on display. All over France, inspiration for dinner comes from these
daily-shopping rituals.
The
colorful Marais district, easily accessible by the Paris Metro, weaves
together 17th century grandeur and 21st century style. The small but
distinctive neighborhood stretches along the Right Bank of the Seine between
the Hotel de Ville and the Bastille district. It has long been the home of
Paris’ Jewish community, but it has lately become one of Paris’ trendiest
neighborhoods. Antique shops, cutting-edge boutiques, and cafes and
restaurants (even a Jewish deli) flourish.
Never before has Paris seen such a vast choice of
tastes, flavors, cuisines and styles of dining as it enjoys today. There is
a new cosmopolitan charm, openness and warmth—a new sense of vitality and
modernity. While tradition continues to be bedrock of Parisian cuisine, it
is now often the foundation for innovation. The willingness to expand a
classical French repertory and include uncommon ingredients like touches of
curry or coconut, or Moroccan or Asian spices is relatively new to Parisian
chefs. This fusion cuisine makes Paris more vibrant, dynamic and delicious
than ever before.
What to do:
Bicycle lanes cover 160 miles in the city and are spreading. A delightful
Fat Tire guided tour starts at the Eiffel Tour and cruises through the city
(01-56-58-10-54,
www.fattirebiketours.com ).
If learning how to cook French cuisine appeals, the
Ritz-Escoffier Ecole de Gastronomie Francaise offers an assortment of
classes, including pastry demonstrations, Burgundy wine tastings and
half-day workshops on making soups and petits fours and week long classes on
seasonal and regional cooking. Classes are held in the historic hotel, close
to the kitchens once under the thumb of the great Auguste Escoffier
himself. French is the working language, but English translations are
available.Ritz-Escoffier Cooking School, 011-33-1-43-16-30-50
Degas, Monet and Van Gogh can take up an afternoon at
the Musée d’Orsay, 77, rue de Varenne, 33-1-44-18-61-10.
Where to Stay and eat:
Hotel
d’Vigny, 33 0 1-42-99-80-80,
vigny@relaischateaux.com. Popular both because of its location on a
quiet street right off the Champs-Élysées and the friendliness of the staff,
the hotel is a haven from the buzz of the city. The only Relais & Chateaux
hotel in Paris, this is a true boutique hotel. Noted designer Nina Campbell
has decorated the 37 bedrooms and suites with refined antique furniture. The
adjoining Baretto restaurant and bar was designed by Adam Tihany and offers
traditional French brasserie cuisine.
Hotel
Meurice, 228 rue de Rivoli, 011-33-1-44-58-10-10 One of the oldest of the
grande dame hotels. The baroque splendor of the hotel and two-Michelin
starred Restaurant Le Meurice has been brought back to life with a recent
renovation. No other restaurant in Paris has a more glittering past than Le
Meurice. Yet it remains one of the city’s most exciting places to eat. Since
Chef Yannick Alléno’s arrival, the restaurant and his team have received
phenomenal reviews. The 50-seat dining room is a gracious and elegant room
filled with shimmering crystal chandeliers and antique beveled mirrors that
reflect large bay windows framed in rare marble. A special degustation meal
orchestrated by Alleno and his staff was magical. Specialties may range from
the purely simple such as a superb pan seared duck foie gras with acacia
honey on a mound of sweet and sour turnips to the wonderfully complex
fricassee of pink Brittany dorado and saffron mussels with mushroom duxelles
and lemon-thyme potatoes. No matter the menu, his food combinations are
always out of the ordinary, but never go over the edge toward
pretentiousness.
Hotel Plaza Athenee, 011-33-1-53-67-66-67 The
newly-renovated hotel on avenue Montaigne puts guests in the middle of haute
couture. The 3-star Michelin restaurant is run by super chef, Alain Ducasse
at super prices. The more affordable Le Relais Plaza, a chic rendezvous
spot, will welcome you with its Art Deco style. Don’t miss roasted chicken
from Bresse with artichoke flan and simmered bacon or grilled and flambéed
spiny lobster with curry sauce and madras rice.
Where to shop:
E.
Dehillerin, 18-20 Rue Coquillière, Founded in 1820 and still owned by the
Dehillerin family, this toy store for cooks, and favorite of Julia Child’s,
sports an array of everything imaginable for the kitchen stacked from the
floor to the ceiling.
Poilane, 8 Rue du Cherche Midi. Each day moist,
thick-crusted sourdough loaves nourish thousands of Parisians.
Fauchon, 26 Place de la Madeleine. Picture perfect
food. Everything from cakes to baby artichokes.
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