Showing posts with label paris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paris. Show all posts

16.2.11

Paris, Pas Cher?

When in Paris, you do not grump about the Metro, and you do not give up on the Louvre just because your credit card doesn't work with Vélib. You do not forego the wine with the duck confit, should you be so lucky as to still be able, in this saturated-fat-obsessed moment, to eat duck confit, and you absolutely do not fall into a self-admiring reverie -- of your cheapness, no less -- while failing to listen to the organ at Notre Dame.

Non.

You might be pennywise, but you're missing the point.

9.7.09

Jane: "France Is FUN."

Lots to say about our trip, but I can't say much until I've located the cable to download all the pix, without which I would actually have to write descriptions, making the blog posts much too long. Perhaps the cable is still on vacation.

Some notes:

-- Turin's Egyptology museum begins with an exhibit of a 6,000 year-old corpse buried with full kit for the afterlife. After food and shelter, it seems the first task of civilization is to make sense of death. We have nothing on the ancient Egyptians in this regard. They made thanatology into a glorious art.

-- At the Museum of Cinema in Turin it seems almost possible to dream with your eyes open. Riding the glass elevator to the top of the building is something to do once, but not more than that, and certainly not directly after eating. A restorative campari and soda is available in the cafe when it's over.

-- Did I mention campari and soda?

-- The Piedmontese know how to eat. The hazelnut may be its own food group. Snacks and an aperitif at 6 pm are de rigeur. Snacks are served buffet-style in many places and they are substantial enough to be a meal on their own.

-- The second-floor of the bookstore on the Piazza Vittorio Veneto is quiet, with places to sit, and it is stocked with interesting new titles, including a pamphlet-sized essay, for 3 euros, on the upheavals of 1968 by Erri Deluca which I now regret not buying. The proprietor selects music according to his mood; delightfully, in the middle of a downpour, he played a selection of rain-related songs (including, of course, "Singing in the Rain" and Jovanotti's Piove, which is surprisingly better than anything I've heard by this guy, who has always been a bit of joke between me and MJ, and not only us).

-- The bookstore-cafe is a marvelous thing. So, too, the high-end gelato and sorbet at GROM. The almond (mandorla) granita tasted just like frozen marzipan. Which is probably just what it was. In any case, it was delicious.

-- Don't eat at the Porto di Savona, no matter what the the New York Times says. Instead, take the via Giovanni Plana away from the Piazza Vittorio Veneto to Rubirosa. The pasta dish with frutti di mare -- mussels, clams, squid, shrimp -- was amazing. MJ got a gratis sample of a local favorite, vitello tonnato -- a very thin slice of veal smothered in a tuna-flavored mayonnaise-y sauce -- just because he expressed an interest in it.

-- The overnight train to from Turin to Perpignan was a once-in-a-lifetime sort of thing. Like Sanrio Puroland in Tokyo, it was fun to do -- once. Perhaps twice, but only if you go all the way to Barcelona.

-- The train ride from Montpellier to Paris made me realize how poorly I have understood Van Gogh until now. His landscapes only seem whimsical. Those Dr. Seuss trees and golden haystacks are straight from real life.

-- The Mediterranean really is that blue.

-- While in Paris with children, if you discover a county fair in full swing in the Tuilieries, forget the Louvre. Take the euros you save on museum admission and spend them on tickets to ride the bumper cars and the ferris wheel. Cotton candy is barbe du papa. Expect to be tickled in the Haunted House. Remember, in the 18th century and before, you had to go all the way to the outskirts of town to have this much fun.

-- In Paris, if you find an enticing rare book in an out-of-the-way bookstore on the Rue des Archives but don't have the nerve to buy it, don't worry because it will be waiting for you in the exact same place on the shelf when you return a year later. I love Paris.

16.4.08

Parisienne


heartsparis
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
I feel the same way.

Guimauves


guimauves
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
How Parisians love their guimauves (marshmallows)! Flavors, from left: green tea, saffron and pimiento, rose water.

Menkes


menkes
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
For all your cross-dressing and flamenco dancing needs. Which are apparently substantial enough to support a nice little shop right here in the 3rd. Oh, Paris!

I Can't Believe It's Midnight


midnightinthemarais
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
...and I'm still awake. At a party. In Paris. Somebody pinch me.

Could Stay Here Forever


misty
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
Misty street, six o'clock.

The Luckless Mouton


mouton
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
A book about Michel, the sheep who can't catch a break.

Interior Designer Goes Crazy


amours
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
For all your bordello decorating needs.

Waiting Is the Hardest Part


angelina
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
Jane waits for her pot of insanely thick and rich hot chocolate (served with a bowl of butter, I mean whipped cream) at Angelina's. We also ordered macaroons and ice cream. It is probably no coincidence that this is the only place Jane deigned to speak French during her visit. If there's no hot chocolate, no macaroons, no ice cream -- what's the point?

Un Philosophe dans Les Philosophes


philosophe
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
MJ philosophizes at Les Philosophes. I forget what he is talking about. Mais, pas de quoi!

MJ hearts Paris.

This Is the Small Bottle


sangredecriste
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
A bottle of Baby Jesus brand wine, 85 euros. Your celestial hangover? Priceless.

So Many Wines, So Little Time


spoiledforchoice
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
You know how, in American grocery stories, there are whole aisles devoted to salty snacks? Same thing in Paris, only it's wine on the shelf, not Fritos. This is a tiny grocery store in our neighborhood.

Pyramide des Macarons


pyramiddesmacarons
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
You will not find this in the Description d'Egypte.

A Quiet Moment


tuilieres
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
...In the Tuilieres. Afterward, she bounced for fifteen straight minutes on the trampoline, drank a big cup of hot chocolate, and fell asleep in the cab on the way home.

Another Guiding Spirit.


rabelais
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
This is the guiding spirit who shows up after the, uh, spirits and makes you fall off the banquette. Not that I would know anything about it.

15.4.08

Only in the Marais

As if this striped armchair were not enough to induce a headache, in place of a throw pillow it had been adorned with a stuffed squirrel -- and I don't mean en peluche. Has Little My left Moomin Valley, and gotten herself a job as a Paris shopgirl?

The rest of the display was relentlessly normal.

13.4.08

Ma fille, avec biro.


ecrivain.bw
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
A cafe, a pen, a notebook. That's my kid, all right.

A Different Time


gryphon
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
Gryphon at Notre Dame: a suggestion of hell in stone.

Tucked in an Alcove at the Hôtel de Ville


michelet
Originally uploaded by quiet.eye.
The historian Jules Michelet, a guiding spirit. "There I walked, from age to age..."