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Authors: Elizabeth Bard

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I
HAVE ALWAYS
been enthusiastic about new, even strange, food. My first memories of eating out were yearly “ladies days,” when my mother
and my aunt Debbie and I would go for lunch at a fancy French restaurant and out to a Broadway matinee. I must have been four
or five the first time we went to
Mildred Pierce.
It was an occasion for white gloves and a tiny patent leather pocketbook. We sat at the Alice in Wonderland table, so called
because it was up on a little pedestal and surrounded by mirrors. After my mother explained the menu, I announced that I wanted
mussels.

The waiter raised an eyebrow at my mother. “Are you sure?”

Never one to slap down my more precocious tendencies, she nodded. “If she doesn’t eat them, we will.”

They never got the chance. I didn’t share, and I didn’t leave a single shell unturned. The waiter cleared the plates with
an amused grin and asked me if I enjoyed my meal. Was I allowed to lick my fingers?

My mother turned to me and said, “When you enjoy your lunch that much, you are supposed to go and tell the chef.”

“Where’s the chef?” I said, not quite sure who that was.

“In the kitchen,” said my mother, looking at the waiter. “Can she?”

So I followed the waiter through the swinging doors and offered what I can only imagine were my carefully rehearsed “compliments
to the chef.” I don’t particularly remember the kitchen. What I do remember are the bathrooms. The doors had no pictures,
just two brass plaques engraved with the words
Messieurs
and
Mesdames
. Not sure which one to choose, I came back to the table, awaiting instructions.

W
HEN THE
ANDOUILLETTE
arrived, it was smaller than I imagined—four or five inches at most, a delicate-sized portion for what I imagined was hearty
peasant fare. As I tasted the first slice, I understood why. The texture was rich and slightly springy, the gentle patchwork
of meats meant to celebrate rather than disguise their humble origins. I made short work of a deep, moist glass of Burgundy.
We toasted. “
Dans les yeux,
” Gwendal said, meeting my eyes. “It’s bad luck to toast if you’re not looking directly at someone.” The large coins of meat
soaked up the mustard.

I felt full and satisfied. We had clearly passed on to a new phase in our relationship; the American girl had proven herself
an enthusiastic eater of offal. Gwendal had something else in mind.

He reached past the empty plates and took my hand.


Je t’aime,
” he said softly.

Nothing says “I love you” like a plate full of sausage.

Weekend Treats
CHOUQUETTES

This was my first and most beloved Parisian breakfast.
Chouquettes
in Paris are dotted with small pebbles of white sugar called
sucre perlé.
You can get the same effect at home with a last-minute dusting of powdered sugar. This recipe is adapted from one of my French
kitchen bibles:
Lenôtre: Faîtes votre pâtisserie
(Flammarion, 1975).

½ cup whole milk

½ cup water

8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter, diced

1¼ teaspoons granulated sugar

¾ teaspoon coarse sea salt (or 1 scant teaspoon fine sea salt)

1 cup flour

4 eggs (total weight approximately 9 ounces)

3 tablespoons powdered sugar, plus more for decoration

Preheat the oven to 425ºF.

In a heavy-bottomed saucepan, over low heat, combine the milk, water, butter, sugar, and salt. Bring just to a boil, turn
off the heat, and add the flour while stirring continuously, until the flour is incorporated and the dough comes away from
the sides of the pan. It will look like a lump of marzipan.

Quickly incorporate the remaining 2 eggs and stir until smooth. The batter will be thick and sticky. It can be refrigerated
for up to a day.

Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper. Using 2 teaspoons, dole out heaping dollops of batter, widely spaced. You
should have about 24. (If you have room in your freezer, you can freeze the individual puffs at this point. I wouldn’t recommend
freezing and thawing a big lump of batter.)

Bake 1 sheet at a time. Before you put them in the oven, sprinkle each puff generously with powdered sugar.

If baking immediately: Bake for 12 minutes at 425ºF. Then turn down the heat to 400ºF and bake for 10 to 12 minutes more with
the oven door slightly ajar (I stick a wooden spoon in the door to hold it open just a crack).

If baking straight from the fridge: 15 minutes at 425ºF, then 10 to 12 minutes at 400ºF with the door ajar.

If baking from the freezer: 17 minutes at 425ºF, 12 minutes at 400ºF with door ajar.

You’ll want to watch the
chouquettes
the first time, as every oven is different. Grab one out of the oven to taste if you like (I always do). It should be fully
puffed and highly colored. Don’t worry if the sugar caramelizes on top or underneath.

Eat right out of the oven or cool on a wire rack. If you prefer a sweeter finish, dust with additional powdered sugar just
before serving.

Yield: makes approximately 24 chouquettes

CHICKEN AND SWEET PEPPER STEW
Poulet Basquaise

After a flea market near the Bastille or a walk along the Seine to the new national library, Gwendal and I would often end
up at Chez Gladines, a student hub in the villagey neighborhood of La Buttes aux Cailles. With a zinc bar, communal tables,
and red-checkered cloths, Chez Gladines is cozy in a “love thy neighbor” kind of way. They serve huge salads topped with chicken
livers and
lardons,
and heaping plates
of this chicken and sweet pepper casserole, a specialty of the Basque region of Spain.

The secret ingredient is
piment d’Espelette,
a smoky red chili pepper. It gives the dish a warming but not overwhelming heat. You can find
piment d’Espelette
in specialty food stores or online. It sometimes comes as a paste; I prefer the powder. You’ll find yourself sprinkling it
onto omelettes and steak, and in recent years it has become a fashionable addition to chocolate desserts. Espelette truffles—yummm.

1 small chicken (2½–3 pounds), cut into pieces

Coarse sea salt

2 teaspoons piment d’Espelette

3 tablespoons olive oil

8 ounces lardons fumés or cubed pancetta

4 medium onions, sliced

3 cloves garlic, halved

2 medium red peppers, sliced

2 medium yellow peppers, sliced

one 28-ounce can whole tomatoes, with juice

1 bay leaf and a few sprigs of thyme (optional)

In your largest frying or sauté pan, brown the chicken on one side, season with sea salt and 1 teaspoon of
piment d’Espelette
. Turn, then season with additional salt and the other teaspoon of
piment d’Espelette
. Remove the chicken from the pan and set aside.

In the same pan, heat the olive oil, add
lardons,
and cook for 3 minutes. Add onions and garlic; sauté for 10 to 15 minutes. Add peppers and sauté 20 minutes more, stirring
occasionally.

Add tomatoes, crushing them between your fingers, and juice. Bring to a boil; return the chicken to the pan with the bay leaf
and thyme. Cover, lower the heat, and simmer 30 to 40 minutes, turning the chicken at the halfway mark.

I serve this stew, as Chez Gladines does, with sliced red potatoes tossed in olive oil and roasted in a medium oven.

Yield: Serves 4

CHAPTER 4
A Birthday Celebration

I
get carsick, dramatically, green-around-the-gills carsick. So imagine the knot in my intestines during the five-hour drive
to the Brittany coast to meet Gwendal’s parents, forty of his nearest and dearest friends—and a leek.

Gwendal and I had been living for the past year in our own little Paris-London bubble. Because of the enchanted but ill-defined
nature of our relationship—not to mention my pathetic level of French—we had avoided social occasions. But he was turning
thirty at the beginning of May and wanted me to be there.

I was terrified, but I was also curious. Despite a certain nonchalance on my part, we were slowly paddling toward the deep
end. I had not exactly
responded
to Gwendal’s sausage declaration, but it was there, dangling like a ripe pear on a tree. He didn’t pressure me; not for the
last time, he seemed to understand my feelings better than I did and was content to wait me out. We had begun to lapse into
the comfortable silence of two people who know each other better than they care to admit. Most days ended with the phone to
my ear, just listening to him breathe. I needed to know what would happen if we ventured beyond our little weekend world.

Being the studious type, and also scared out of my mind, I was determined to come to this party fully prepared. I resurrected
my college French textbook (
why oh why
had I done my junior year abroad in Scotland?) and asked Gwendal for a guest list. I memorized Catherine the biologist; Bastien,
the fashion victim. I put a star next to those who Gwendal had met when he studied in Canada—maybe I could switch to English
in a pinch.

I also quizzed him about the first question I should ask when I met someone. He shrugged, thought about it, then shrugged
again. Clearly, starting a conversation with a French person was going to be more complicated than “So, what do you do?”

When we arrived at the house in Saint-Malo, preparations were under way for a family lunch. The house was in a grassy new
development, a ten-minute walk from the sea. It had the feel of a year-round beach house: white tile floors and an open living
room, dining room, and kitchen with doors leading out to the back garden. There was a spiral staircase in blond wood curving
up to the bedrooms.

We were greeted at the door by Gwendal’s father, Yanig, who bent to kiss me on both cheeks. He had been a sailor most of his
life, the skipper of a boat he’d built with his own hands. With long limbs, watery blue eyes, and a graying beard, he looked
like someone perfectly content to sit up all night on a silent windy watch. He shared my own father’s towering height, his
wiry frame, his walk. As I had with my dad, I took two steps for his every one.

Gwendal’s mother was already in the kitchen. As tiny as Yanig was tall, Nicole was dressed in black with a long blond braid
trailing down her back. Did I mention that she’s a psychoanalyst?
No pressure there.
Except for the glasses and the delicate creases on her forehead, she could have been sixteen.

Affif and Annick, Gwendal’s godparents (or as near to godparents as hippie atheists can get), had come early to help with
the cooking. Annick teaches French as a second language. She made sure to speak clearly for my benefit. Affif is an Algerian
painter with a disarming grin. As I sat down at the dining room table, he handed me a small paring knife and a leek.

My only previous encounter with a leek was in something called a “soup pack” at our local ShopRite—a plastic box with a few
carrots, a stub of leek, some turnips, parsley, and a brittle bay leaf, for those too lazy to cut their own veggies for stew.
This thing was as long as a cricket bat, with unruly green ribbons at one end and bristly blond whiskers at the other. I wasn’t
one hundred percent sure which end was up. Was I supposed to throw away the white part or the green part? There was dirt between
the leaves. Was I meant to ignore it? I stared at the tablecloth while rapid-fire French conversation buzzed in my ears.

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