Seattle

I’m sitting in the terminally chic lobby of the W Hotel in Seattle, having spent the entire day yesterday in my hotel room.  It’s somehow incredibly decadent to stay in bed and order room service meals and watch television and read trashy detective books all day long.  It did pour rain pretty much the entire day yesterday, so I thought it was a perfect opportunity to stay in bed.  This morning I felt rested and ready to hit the town.  I drank the Starbucks latte that Brad kindly brought to me unprompted after his morning run and took a shower and got dressed and actually left the room and the hotel and walked around for an hour and a half getting some sense of the city.  It’s sunny and breezy here today, and I covered much of the downtown area on foot.  I like cities:  the apparent purposefulness of people walking quickly, the availability of bookstores and coffee (especially here in Seattle!) and shiny new things in storefront windows.  Seattle is nicely ethnically varied and laid out in a fairly tidy grid pattern and all the steep hills raise the heart rate during a casual stroll.  It’s strange to me that Pike’s Place Market, which is probably the most touristy part of town, is also home to a large concentration of adult movie theaters and Girls Girls Girls places.  Or maybe XXX entertainment action is why people travel to Seattle??  The Rem Koolhaas designed public library is just around the corner from our hotel.  I’ve walked past it a couple of times, but am saving going inside to share with Brad, who is mostly excited about checking out the bathrooms.

I suppose that we’re technically on our way to Alaska.  We left Boulder yesterday, but I’m here for a week while Brad does board meetings and a Microsoft thing and a Gnomedex conference (whatever that is — something for geeks, I think) and then he’s making a quick trip to Boston.  It’s good to do a cross-continent 2 day trip on red-eye flights; really makes you appreciate sleeping in a bed again?  So I’m going to have plenty of time to enjoy Seattle and being in an urban environment before we get to Homer for the rest of the summer.

Hats and Horses – The Kentucky Derby

One week ago I was in Louisville, Kentucky, fulfilling another lifelong dream by attending the Kentucky Derby.  I think there are many ways of dividing the world into two kinds of people (e.g., the people who think there are two kinds of people, and the people who don’t), and a major bifurcation is between those who are horse people and those who aren’t.  I’m definitely a horse person.  I took dressage and equitation riding lessons with my niece, Morgan, and dream of having my own horse if my life wasn’t so nomadic.  I’ve watched all of the Triple Crown on television for years, and have explored the possibility of doing a Triple Crown set of spring travels; so when the invitation came to go to The Derby, I immediately accepted.  I had a terrific time, met some great people, lost my $20 on Bandini (finished 18th out of the field of 20), and got to wear two hats.  What could be better? 

I’ve posted all of my photos into my Kentucky Derby photo album, which still has its French command options.  Instead of laboriously posting each photo into Type Pad, Windows had an option to post to the web, and then to post to Type Pad.  I don’t know if this was some kind of strategic alliance between Six Apart and Microsoft, but I loved being able to upload 174 photos automagically.  Go Type Pad!

 

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Trumpets

The usual grueling international travel experience started off with a challenge at the Paris airport where the ticket agent said that miles hadn’t been pulled for my upgrade and I didn’t have enough miles left in my account to do it, and I would have to fly coach class even though I had a little piece of paper saying I was assigned to seat 8A.  I don’t really mind traveling coach since I fit fine in the seats and I usually just read and sleep the entire time I’m on a plane.  But on a 9 hour flight it’s really nice to be upgraded.  I was really polite and spoke as much as possible in French and asked if maybe we could pull miles from my husband’s account.  Oh, no, madame, that would be completely against the rules since he’s not here to witness and sign and you have no proof he even knows you and you don’t have his account number anyway.  So then when I was able to rattle off Brad’s account number from memory, the agent actually laughed and said he’d see what he could do.  And I did get to sit in seat 8A.

Getting from the plane to the customs checkpoint in Chicago must have been a mile long walk.  It was at least 20 minutes at a brisk walking pace.  Maybe you’re observed by Customs and Border Patrol the whole way to see if you look furtive or something.  I was already exhausted, which was exacerbated by having to transfer my own 67 pound suitcase (just under the 70 pound international limit!) and my 56 pound suitcase and my roll-aboard and my laptop case through customs without my usual Brad sherpa companion.  By the time I got onto my flight from Chicago to Denver I felt pretty shaky and sick from all the adrenaline and being awake for hours and hours.  I’m not really at my best between say 2 a.m. and 4 a.m., which is what time it was in Paris.  I even pulled my little air sickness bag out of the seat pocket and had it ready in case I didn’t make it, and then fell into a deep deep sleep as soon as my stomach calmed down.  When the pilot announced that the snow had stopped falling in Denver and we would arrive early, I was really happy. 

I went to baggage claim where Brad and I had agreed to meet, and he was looking for me in the wrong direction so I got to completely sneak up on him, which was fun.  While we were hugging, I noticed that he was standing really close to someone else’s luggage, not a suitcase, but some kind of instrument case, which is when I finally saw the man with the trumpet, who proceeded to play a trumpet fanfare in my honor!  Brad and I have an old, good joke between us, which is that when he’s working and I come into the room, I’d like a flourish of trumpets since I’m a human and therefore more important and interesting than the computer (a topic we continue to actively debate).  So he sings a little trumpet call for me sometimes.  And in celebration of my return home after being gone for six weeks, he arranged for a musician from the Boulder Philharmonic to come out to DIA and give me a real welcome.  Pretty special, really thoughtful, and since I was one of the first people off the plane and scurried quickly to baggage claim, not many people saw/heard, which is just right for introverted me.  Brad really puts energy into keeping the romance alive, after almost 15 years together.  Thanks for the trumpets — I’m happy to be home.

Museums of Paris

In the past couple of weeks I have seen many of the major art museums in this great city, including the Louvre, the Musee d’Orsay, the Picasso Museum, the Rodin Museum, and the Matisse exhibit at the Senat, all of them with Renee.

The Louvre is a very big place.  Renee and I were in there for close to five hours, which is probably a personal attention span record.  I’m usually a very fast-paced museum goer.  We saw a lot of old stuff — obviously the big three (Venus de Milo, Winged Victory, Mona Lisa in her new special display room, plus Antonio Canova’s Cupid and Psyche, ancient Egyptian artifacts, ancient frescoes, ancient mosaics, ancient statuary, ancient Napoleonic apartments, lots of other ancient stuff, and one of my personal favorites, the French Crown Jewels.  I last saw them in July 1995 when I was doing the youth hostel / backpack thing for six weeks with my cousin, Mario.  We came across them by fortuitous accident; but this time I sought them out deliberately.  I think the British have done a much better job of displaying their Crown Jewels with people movers that get people in and out in an orderly fashion and give everyone an equal chance to see.  At both the Crown Jewels and the Mona Lisa people form rings around the object and it’s not clear when it’s your turn or why the person behind you is pushing.  I wish I had been able to see some of the goodies better.  And I certainly need to read some more French history.  Who are all of these people?  I know a lot more about the British royal succession, perhaps because it’s more orderly and tidy than the French.  Fewer revolutions.  I did get to be closer and spend more time in front of the Mona Lisa than I ever had before.  And I asked myself again, what’s the big deal?  I think it’s beautiful and superbly executed and mysterious and all that; but what’s all the mystique about?  The enormous painting on the wall across the room from Mona, The Wedding Feast at Cana, is a monumental and massive work.  Why isn’t it famous?  Is Mona our oldest celebrity?  More photographed than Diana, Princess of Wales?  My real love is 20th century art (and is likely to become 21st century art), but I can see and appreciate the long foundation underneath the things I love.  I’d still rather have a Van Gogh than the Mona Lisa any day.  I’m making my fantasy list of paintings I’d love to live with, and Mona isn’t on it.

The Louvre has done a masterful job on their website.  Their collection is so vast.  They’ve provided an incredible level of detail and access to information.  Kudos to the people who did this monumental work.

Renee and I also spent quite a long time in the Musee d’Orsay, which is a beautiful building housing a large swath of French painting as well as sculptures and decorative arts.  It’s the place to go to see art after 1848.

The Rodin Museum is also housed in a beautiful building.  It’s great to see The Thinker and The Kiss, but my favorite part of this exhibit was seeing what art Rodin collected for himself, especially the Van Gogh paintings that he owned.  I saw a painting I’d never seen before, even as a reproduction, that I just love.  It’s called Portrait of Père Tanguy and has an homage to Japanese woodblock works in the background.  I could spend hours with this painting.

I also got to see a great Matisse exhibit of his late work, called A Second Life.  This show had several of his monumental cutouts, and the Jazz Series, as well as many of his late paintings.  This exhibit was quite crowded, and I gave up on the claustrophobic gift shop after being bumped around.  I’ll buy the exhibition catalog from my friend Jenny’s bookstore.  Matisse is one of my favorite artists. 

And surprisingly, the Musee Picasso is housed in a beautiful building in the Marais near the Place des Vosges.  They had a fantastic exhibit of Francis Bacon’s work juxtaposed with Picasso.  There were several enormous Bacon works on loan from the Tate Modern in London, which has a great website of its own.  I’ll need to buy this exhibition catalog from Jenny’s bookstore, too. 
During my six week experiment with city living, I’ve really tried to take advantage of the things that Paris has to offer.  The art museums are certainly an incredible part of this city.

Les Bouquinistes

I had the chance to explore another one of the restaurants in the Guy Savoy food empire last night.  Les Bouquinistes is located on the Left Bank just across the street from the Seine at the Pont Neuf bridge and Notre Dame cathedral.  I’ve been lucky to get to spend time with Greg Reinacker and Anita Taylor from Newsgator the past couple of days, and we’re having a blast getting to know each other.  Dinner together was (another) great conversation about quantum mechanics and entrepreneurial company growth patterns and shoes, with some very nice food thrown in for good measure.  The atmosphere at Les Bouquinistes feels very California to me.  It’s probably some big blasphemy in the food world to compare Paris to California, but I call it like I see it — and I saw bright, cheerful colors and contemporary art and fresh food with sophisticated flavors that I associate with dining in San Francisco.  I had an appetizer of risotto with prawns (confirmed first that it was prepared without wine) and shared bites of Greg’s swordfish and salmon carpaccio.  For my entree I had tuna three ways:   seared, tartare, and in phyllo, served with a side dish of basmati and wild rice with herbs.  The tuna was excellent and each preparation was distinct from and also complementary to the others.  The seared tuna had capers and caraway seeds and a tart, acidic finish and was my favorite of the preparations.  The tartare was good, but my favorite tartare is still at Aqua.  Dessert was hard to choose, with lots of fruit options.  I finally went with the trio of creme brulees.  They were served in oval shaped glass glasses instead of the traditional ramekin.  The flavors were fruit, nougat and pistachio, with perfectly crisp tops.  Very nicely done.  I’d eat here every week.

Good Eating

I’ve been feasting here in Paris.  It’s a world of culinary delights.  Two of the meals in the past two weeks definitely belong on my hypothetical Top Ten list, which got me to thinking about what that list would actually be.  I’m a list maker, love lists, think in lists, speak in lists; yet I had never created an actual Amy’s Top Ten list of restaurants and/or dining experiences.  So after considerable thought, and in consultation with Brad to confirm my memories, I’m creating at least a first pass at that list here, in no particular order:

  • Le Cinq (Paris)
  • Restaurant Guy Savoy (Paris)
  • Biba (Boston)
  • L’Espalier (Boston)
  • Restaurant Daniel (New York)
  • Gramercy Tavern (New York)
  • Sushi:  Nobu / Matsuhisa Nobu (Las Vegas) Matsuhisha (Aspen and Los Angeles)
  • Aqua (San Francisco )
  • La Pont de la Tour, (London)
  • Lespinasse in the St. Regis Hotel in New York, which no longer seems to exist?  Does anybody have current information?  I just spent an inordinate amount of time trolling around the internet and could find old articles from 1991 about the restaurant, but the hotel’s website doesn’t contain anything about Lespinasse.  This was my very first degustation menu, and a vegetarian degustation at that.  Forever memorable.

Restaurant opinions are very personal, of course.  As they say here: Chacun a son goût.  I’ve been fortunate enough to experience meals at so many superb restaurants, several of them on this Top 50 List.

My two Top Ten Paris restaurant experiences at Le Cinq and Restaurant Guy Savoy had plenty of similarities, all of them wonderful.  The food was exquisite:  delicate, fresh, beautiful, aromatic, unique, full of adjectives.  At both places the staff is clearly delighted to be doing what they’re doing, and proud to share their knowledge and the evening in high good spirits.  There was not a single second of feeling awkward about being an American or not really speaking French.  Both evenings were lengthy, and I never noticed time passing.  Zen gourmet.

I think I’d have to say that the major difference between the two evenings, which may make Le Cinq slightly more memorable in the long term, is that I forgot to tell the incredible staff there that I’m seriously allergic to wine, and something was prepared with that vile substance, and by the time we got home after the meal, I was sick as a dog.  I thought I might be sick in the back of the taxi or in the street.  Yippee.  Later that day (since I was up until well after 2:00, procrastinating as hard as possible the inevitable vomiting process, and then puking my guts out), while waiting to feel like a human being again, reading the menu more closely, it very clearly states, “Salade de morilles a l’araignee de mer at AU VIN JAUNE” which in English means Morel Mushroom Salad with Spider Crab and YELLOW WINE, YOU ILLITERATE, PRETENDER TO BE SPEAKING THE FRENCH, SEVERELY ALLERGIC TO THE WINE PERSON.”  Of course, the reason I was able to lazily peruse the menu was that when Brad asked for a copy of the menu during our dinner, meaning a single quick photocopy, the restaurant prepared individual copies of our own particular degustation menu for the evening for each member of our party.  That’s a new level of service for me.

The other thing that was unique in my experience was the positioning of a small padded stool near my chair to serve as the home for my purse.  My purse usually hides quietly under my chair; it doesn’t get its own comfortable seat near the table.  Now it expects that kind of treatment at home.

Brad blogged on April 7th about his experience of the evening, and very kindly left out all the yucky part that happened after the yummy part.  I’m cutting and pasting his typing efforts here (stealing?  community property blogging?)

Mercredi 06 Mars 2005
Diner au Restaurant Le Cinq
Philippe Legendre, Chef des Cuisines, Meilleur Ouvrier de France

Blanc et noir aux ecrevisses pattes rouges
Salade de morilles a l’araignee de mer et au vin jaune
Grosses asperges vertes au Parmesan et a la truffe, polenta et olives noires confites
Turbot de ligne au melon d’eau, nage aux epices et au citron vert
Langouste puce aux petits pois et aux oignons doux des Cevennes
Bar de ligne roti aux epices et aux artichauts poivrade
Le selection de nos Maitres fromagers
Granite d’ananas a l’hibiscus et parfum de litchi, emulsion coco
Du chocolat exclusivement …

Eric Beaumard, Directeur du Restaurant

or – in English – according to Babelfish

Wednesday 06 Mars 2005
Dinner at the Restaurant Five
Philippe Legendre, Chief of the Kitchens, Better Working of France

White and black with the ecrevisses red legs morel
Salade have the araignee sea and with the YELLOW WINE, YOU ILLITERATE, PRETENDER TO BE SPEAKING THE FRENCH, SEVERELY ALLERGIC TO THE WINE PERSON
Grosses green asparaguses with the Parmesan and have truffle, polenta and crystallized black olives
Turbot of line to watermelon, swim with the epices and with the green lemon
Langouste chip with peas and soft onions of Cevennes
Bar of line roti to the epices and the artichokes poivrade
The selection of our Maitres Granite Cheesemongers
Pineapple has the hibiscus and perfume of litchi, emulsion coconut
Of the chocolate exclusively…

I really insist that the fact that I’m unable to read and am allergic to wine is completely separate from the elegance and seamless luxury of the experience of dining at Le Cinq.  It’s not their fault that I ate a poison.

I was much smarter by the time Renee and I got to Restaurant Guy Savoy last week, and the first thing I said after “Bon soir,” was “Je suis allergique du vin.  J’ai une allergie du vin.  Je ne boire jamais du vin.”  Of course, since all of the staff speak beautiful English, I needn’t have bothered, but I’m going to get in the habit of announcing my allergy at the beginning of every restaurant meal so that I never have to have the retching through the night experience again. 

The differences between the experiences are more about the atmosphere than about the food.  When a course is delivered at Le Cinq it’s almost as if there’s a flourish of trumpets.  The room is grand and exquisitely French and makes one feel like Marie Antoinette (before the beheading, of course).  Guy Savoy feels like you’re dining at a friend’s home; a friend who really knows how to cook!  The space is small and intimate, divided into multiple alcoves and rooms, fairly dark with pools of light along the walls highlighting the contemporary artworks.  There were a total of four tables in our room.  There are sight lines into other rooms so that you glimpse other diners, but feel as though you’re having a very private and special experience. 

A new dining experience for me at Guy Savoy was individual pairings of bread with each course.  The bread cart is rolled out and a staff member describes the different options and makes a recommendation to complement your particular food choice.  It’s a great idea, and once you’ve heard it, seems obvious.  The flavors of the bread are an important part of the degustatory experience, and they wouldn’t want you to inadvertently choose a bread whose flavors would overwhelm the delicacy of a course, or a bread that wouldn’t hold up to something very flavorful.  The most memorable bread has little spikes along both sides and looks like some kind of sea creature and is called Mustache Bread.  The staff is always only making a helpful suggestions to enhance your experience; never any hint of snobbery.  “We recommend this, but if you prefer something else, we’re happy to accommodate you,” is the tenor of the entire evening.  Incredibly elegant and intimate.  After some course midway through the evening, I guessed that it was 9:15 and when I looked at my watch it was 10:30. 

My recollection of my food choices for the evening don’t include the various amuse bouche and extra dessert goodies that magically appear.  I do remember that we had small little delicacies like a raisin wrapped in crispy mille feuille still warm from the oven.  The first amuse bouche was a foie gras something, so after I said that I don’t eat meat, they brought me tiny carrots and sugar snap pea pods on a tiny skewer with a citrus sauce of some kind.  I started with the Soupe d’artichaut a la truffe noire, brioche feuilletee aux champignons et truffes (creamy artichoke soup with black truffles and a flaky brioche roll with mushroom and truffle butter) and then had an appetizer portion of seared tuna with various scents in a ginger cream sauce, followed by some morel mushrooms with tiny asparagus and then the entree of Breton lobster roasted in its shell, with Bordelaise sauce and tiny coral beads decorating the plate.  This dish made me wish I had a camera.  Perfectly arranged, colorful, and presented like a jewel, with bright citrus flavors in the sauce.  Just beautiful.  I love a nicely presented lobster.  I still remember the first whole lobster claw I ever had, at Jasper White’s in Boston, another restaurant that I think doesn’t exist anymore, or at least not in its Atlantic Avenue incarnation.  (Jasper White’s Summer Shack restaurant)  The lobster at Guy Savoy was perfection.

I think it was finally time for dessert, although it seems possible that I’m omitting a course in here somewhere.  I couldn’t decide between the two juicy chocolate dessert choices, so they offered to bring me half portions of each.  Now that’s a good idea!  I had a half portion of dark and milk chocolate fondant terrine with praline leaf underneath and chicory cream and a half portion of a dense dark chocolate cake with a dark chocolate ganache, dark chocolate sorbet, infused with a perfume of some mysterious Tonga flat bean  (Fève de tonka ) that was almost vanilla, but different, darker, richer, less sweet. 

Okay, I love the internet [sometimes].  Instead of fumbling around making stuff up, I just looked up Tonga bean on Yahoo and found all kinds of good stuff.  It actually is Tonka, not Tonga as I was automatically and erroneously translating for some reason.   Yahoo results for Tonka bean    So cool.  Tonka Bean  info everywhere

I was offered a bean for inspection before making my dessert selection from a glass container full, and I slid it into my purse and kept it as a rather strange souvenir of the evening.  My personally autographed menu Renee especially requested on my behalf is a rather more visually appealing souvenir — a million thanks to Renee for such a generous thank you gift from her, and for introducing me to this spectacular restaurant, and for sharing a wonderful evening.  As we were staggering out the door with our Restaurant Guy Savoy bags containing our menus, the front desk staff tried to offer me a last morsel of sweets, which I tried to decline; but they slipped it into my bag.  And since I didn’t get sick afterward, it was an especially delightful evening.  I think I’ve experienced the best that Paris has to offer, with these Michelin three star experiences, and fear that I’ve been wrecked for lesser dining experiences — but I think I’ll keep eating..

Friday Beers

I worked hard this week, really immersing myself in French grammar and conversation.  I feel like I’m starting to fire on all cylinders in terms of the language.  About a million years ago, when I worked for a small custom database software company in Boston, we would go out for Friday beers after work, frequently to The Boathouse in Harvard Square where I would drink vodka-based drinks like Mudslides and White Russians since I don’t like beer.  I could use a celebratory moment tonight.  Toast to Amy for all of her good work this week! 

After class this afternoon I went to the little neighborhood grocery store and bought milk, yogurt, applesauce, mandarin oranges from Israel, a big box of matches to light all of my good smelling candles, a chocolate bar with orange flavoring, a brie cheese, and a 6 pack of bottled water.  Just under 20 Euros.  I brought that home, carried it up all the stairs, and put it away.  Then I went back out to the bakery on our street and bought a baguette which I then carried with me while I walked around for an hour, down rue du Bac to Le Bon Marche, turning left on rue de Sevres and following it down to Blvd St. Germain.  Lots of fun fancy stores along there (Furla, Burberry, Fresh) and lots of people out strolling about.  At La Maison du Chocolat there was a long line extending out of the store and down the sidewalk of people buying their Easter chocolates.  I had a minor victory:  a French woman approached me as we were waiting for the light to change at an intersection and asked me some long question in French before I could tell her that I only speak French a little bit.  My good scarf/watch/shoes/purse disguise is working.  The baguette is an important fashion accessory for looking French.

After being here less than two weeks, I’m settling into a good routine and think that after another month of this I might be able to answer questions from strangers at intersections.

Bourgeois

I’ve been noticing that while the average Parisian woman on the street is very well-dressed, it’s a very bourgeois type of fashion:  nice shoes/purse/scarf/watch/perfume/suit.  It’s exactly my style, but it’s definitely not at the cutting edge of fashion innovation.  I think that Los Angeles and New York are much more fashion forward in terms of taking risks and doing new things.  Paris feels much less oriented toward the new and the young.  There’s something very settled feeling in this place, which I like.  I can wear my good shoes/purse/scarf/watch/perfume and feel right at home.

Went to dinner last night with some friends who are in Paris for a week.  Jeff Behrens and Lori Rutter live in Boston, but I didn’t know them when we lived there.  I met them only last summer when they came to our place in Alaska.  Jeff was an exchange student here in college, so he knows his way around.  We met for early evening drinks at Cafe Marly which is in the Palais Royal directly across from the pyramid entrance to the Louvre.  Lori had taken a bad spill within hours of arriving here on Monday, and sprained her ankle; but is carrying on like a trouper.  I’m completely impressed with her good spirits and stamina — or maybe it’s the good pain killing drugs?  After watching the sunset and drinking mint tea, we took the Metro to a bistro in the Marais and had a more typical French meal than I’ve had here so far.  I had a pumpkin soup appetizer that was delicious.  Butter!  Yum!  Lori had smoked salmon and Jeff had a salad with crispy duck bits on top.  For our entrees Jeff had duck breast and Lori had veal and I had a white fish.  We had dessert of shared bites of pear tart, deeply rich dark chocolate tart, and flottant, which is a classic French dessert of meringue in a bath of creme anglaise with toasted almond slivers.  Delicious.  I don’t remember the name of the place off the top of my head.  I’ll have to ask Jeff.  We’re going to try to connect at least once more while they’re here.  I feel so relieved to speak English that I’m happy to babble away endlessly with them.

When we were here last April, we explored different neighborhoods with an eye to their potential for longer term visiting this spring.  My impression of the Marais was that it was maybe too edgy for me.  The New York analogy is that I’m an upper east side, or maybe upper west side, kind of babe.  I like to visit the galleries in Chelsea and the Meatpacking District, but I don’t want to live upstairs from a nightclub.  Last night after dinner we walked around a bit in the Marais and there were many more people carousing about, drinking from wine bottles and having noisy arguments in the street than there are in my neighborhood.  I made a good decision to stay in the 7th arrondissement.  Bourgeois Amy.

Just another day

Brad met me after class yesterday and we tried to go the Maillol Museum which is having an exhibit of Gustav Klimt etchings.  There was an enormous line waiting to get in, which we don’t really do, so we walked across the Seine, through the Tuilieres and to the Librairie Galignani which is a bookstore that sells both French and English books.  I picked up a copy of the scintillating best seller Conjugations of 12,000 French Verbs by Bescherelle.  Yippee.  I also bought some trashy detective thriller books, which I love; but in French.  Juste un Regard by Harlan Coben and Celui qui a peur de loup (Who’s afraid of the wolf?) by Karin Fossum.  I also bought a French copy of The Memory of Running by Ron McLarty (J’ai reve de courir longtemps (I dreamt of running a long time)) which should keep me busy for the next year or so.

We then had late lunch/tea at the Park Hyatt Paris where we stayed for a week last April before our massage appointments which Brad had very kindly made as a surprise.  Tea was perfect little salmon roulades covered in fresh herbs, La Maison du The Earl Grey, a side of green beans, and a side of mashed potatoes that must have had a pound of butter mashed in.  For dessert we chose from a beautiful dessert cart with several chocolate options.  We shared an orange infused chocolate mousse that was dense and creamy and wonderful, with a candied orange peel slice as an accent.  The public areas of the Park Hyatt are serene and beautifully lit and have an Asian feel instead of the French gold brocade fabrics and tassels everywhere.  It’s one of my favorite hotels.

We both loved our much needed massages, followed by another sushi dinner at Lo Sushi, followed by another long stroll home down the Champs Elysee, through the Place de la Concorde and across the Seine to our neighborhood.  We woke up relatively early (8:30) this morning and had breakfast of baguette and black cherry jam and French press coffee, then went back to bed until 2:00.  We’re both pretty tired.  Two hours of French class with only two other students in basically like taking an oral exam every day.  No possibility of hiding in the back row and hoping the teacher doesn’t call on you.  I’m learning a lot, but it’s very demanding.  This afternoon we explored our neighborhood for a couple of hours, and then did some major grocery shopping at Le Bon Marche.  As long as I have Brad here to be my sherpa, I’m buying heavy things like humous and cheese and eggs and olive oil and things that come in glass bottles.  I can’t get over the incredible range of foodstuffs available at Le Bon Marche.  Everything is beautiful there.  We had fresh olive foccacia and humous for dinner. 

I took a couple of pictures from the balcony of the apartment, and then had my usual temper tantrum when the technology to transfer the digital images from my camera to my laptop didn’t work on the first try.  I hate it when I choose an option called “transfer pictures dated today” after I just took several photos and the computer says that no images fit that description.  ARGH!  ARGH!  Brad eventually had to resort to transferring all 217 images off my camera just to get the ones that you see below.  I think it was worth his efforts.  I really am fortunate to have Brad here to be my grocery delivery boy, computer/camera technician, and moral support.

DSC_0230

 

The Eiffel Tower at sunset from the apartment balcony

 

 

 

 

The view across our courtyard DSC_0229

Truffles and Grammar

Ah, yes, the $60 bowl of soup.  Last night we had dinner at Gaya, which is a wonderful seafood restaurant located downstairs at the front of our apartment building.  Extra convenient.  I managed to successfully call in advance and make a reservation (in French), which was a minor triumph for me.  Brad’s starter was a bowl of creamy artichoke soup covered in a thick layer of black truffles.  I’ve never seen such a generous portion of truffles, except once at Biba in Boston when Lydia Shire, the chef there, brought an entire fist-sized white truffle to our table for inspection before grating it over some risotto.  Staggeringly rich food last night.  The soup was worth the 45 euro price tag.  I had wild sea bass carpaccio and risotto with grilled shrimp and a parmesan crisp.  Brad was full after his soup, but had already ordered curried monkfish with white beans and ginger.  We shared a peach melba dessert with whipped cream that had almost too much (crunchy) vanilla bean in it.  After dinner we walked to the Seine and along the river to let our food settle before the aerobic exercise required to get home.

I think we’re on French time now.  We went to bed around midnight and I woke up shortly after nine.  Brad slept until noon while I did my homework, so he’s definitely in happy vacation mode.  I went to class and stuffed my brain full of all the complicated various ways to talk about time and duration in the past and the future (depuis, combien de temps, il y a, pendant, en, dans, etc.).  It’s a different form when the question is about an event that was a single moment in time in the past versus an event with duration in the past, and something else entirely for the future.  And of course all of the instruction is in French.  A new word, chomage, is defined by the teacher as seeking work and not being able to find it, distinct from voluntarily removing yourself from the workplace, for example to stay home and care for children.  My dictionary defines chomage as “unemployment.”  My brain is tired.  I’m amazed both by how much I’ve forgotten since college, and how much I’m remembering.  I did my homework tonight and read the newspaper out loud for 30 minutes.  Good Amy.  I’m in the phase where my English is deteriorating rapidly; but I still can’t speak French.  Soon I shall be mute.

Brad met me at school after class, voluntarily wearing his gorgeous new Armani sport coat (thank you, Raj and Stef for the Andriesen Morton store referral) and Paul Smith shoes.  He had shaved and was even wearing a tiny bit of Hermes cologne which I brought from him in my toiletry kit.  I think he’s entering into the spirit of the Parisian way.  I shall reward him (in)appropriately.

We had Asian food for lunch and then went to Le Bon Marche to find Q-tips and dishwasher soap.  It’s a beautiful place to shop.  We came home with Marriage Freres Earl Grey tea sachets, Swiss muesli cereal, black and white striped squid ink pasta, and Q-tips and dishwasher soap.  We’re figuring out how much we can carry up to our place.  The rue de Bac, which is where our apartment is located, stretches through some of the most interesting shops I’ve ever seen all the way to Le Bon Marche.  We walked past an espresso store that was like a Zen garden, and a couple of stationery stores, and fancy linen places.  Lots of exploring to do.

A quiet night at home tonight.  Brad is reading his second book of the day.  We’re listening to Melissa Etheridge on the iPod, drinking tea, relaxing.  We stood out on the terrace and watched the incredible flashing lights covering the Eiffel Tower for awhile after the sunset.  It really is Paris here.