Category Archives: Friends

Lazy Blogging and a Fire Pit

fire pit!

fire pit!

I have been a very bad blogger. Not only have I not posted in general but I seem to have failed at Friday Favorites and Music Monday this past week. What is wrong with me?

And I have things to report – we’ve made new recipes at home worth writing up. I even made olive oil cake  - look how pretty it turned out:

SO pretty but...alas...

SO pretty but…alas…

Pretty of course until it totally fell. Yup, caved in in the middle. It was an issue with baking soda or powder or something. It was still VERY tasty but sadly regardless of how good it looked when this photo was taken, it was fucking with me. And now I have to make it again to redeem myself. It will NOT beat me.

So there’s that, but for whatever reason I seem to be losing blogging motivation. So instead I’m gonna get back into gear here with a little update on the minutiae and perhaps that will kick the blogging muscle back into full gear.

We got our fire pit and in case anyone was wondering – this is what a happy zen man looks like when he there he not only has a backyard in Brooklyn but a fire pit in which to build a fire:

LOVE IT

LOVE IT

Sadly it’s been quite cold and snowy so there have been very few nights like the above but there will be more – many many more. There may even be a roasting of a pig on there (a small pig…but still – yummmmmm).

In other news in this past week we’ve tackled a few new recipes – Parisian chicken (why is it Parisian – I HAVE NO IDEA), homemade meatballs, and blackberry muffins. Blackberry muffins were a bit of a disaster but the meatballs and chicken were excellent and will  be documented here later. We also made official plans to go to my cousin’s wedding in May so there will be a long beautiful weekend at Niagara on the Lake coming up and then my sister and brother in law are coming to visit in August the same time a very, very dear friend from France is coming. It is going to be a FULL house and I am beyond excited.

So all good things. There are of course negative things in the mix, stressful things, and general NYC woes but let’s not get into those. Let’s attempt to remain positive and focus on the bigger picture – I have a backyard in Brooklyn where I can build a fire. Everything else will be okay.

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Filed under Apartment, Brooklyn, Cooking, Family, Food and Drink, Friends, Home, Life, New York, Travel

A New Year, A New Beginning, and of course, More Blogging

Enjoying life as best I can...

Happy place

Words cannot convey how happy I am to welcome the start of 2013. As you may have read on this little blog, 2012 pretty much kicked my ass. To be fair, good things came from it – I got an amazing new job which I am grateful for every day, I started cooking (a shock to myself and all who know me), my little shih tzu Rocky came back home and joined our little zoo in Brooklyn, and although it was via fairly traumatic circumstances I got a kick ass 2 bedroom garden apartment in Brooklyn Heights that has now spoiled me for life.

The worst part of 2012 was separating from my husband in August and the trauma that followed for the next five months. But I’m happy to report that the New Year is the start of a new beginning for us and he is back home and we are on a solid road of reconciliation. There’s a lot of work to be done but we’re recommitted to making it work and I couldn’t be happier about it. When we said for better or worse we meant it, and now that we’ve been through the worst it’s time to aim for the best – so 2013 best be listening! It’s time for a year of good and positive changes. No negative people or energy wanted or allowed.

In regards to resolutions, I would say mine are more goal oriented than resolution by definition, and fairly simple all things considered. Here they are:

1. To keep writing for My French Life and look into more writing opportunities about France, travel, etc. I really am happiest when I’m writing about France, cultural relations with America, travel, and what not, so if I can continue to do that and do it more, I think only good things can come from it.

2.  To recommit to the relationships in my life. Obviously this applies to my marriage but also some very dear friendships that I have not given enough attention to. Distance is a difficult thing but it’s no excuse to not check in with people beyond liking their status on Facebook. I need to make more of an effort to call people and catch up. More importantly I need to make more of an effort to see the people who live here in New York that I somehow never see. There’s really no excuse, and I need to recommit to being a better friend here and with those far away. For those nearby, the goal is to make my huge apartment a place to convene for drinks, dinner, general hanging out and random parties. We finally have a big enough apartment to have people over, so let the socializing and dinner parties begin. No more hermit bull shit. The time is now.

3. To keep cooking! My amazing sister and brother in law got me Jacques Pepin’s Essential cookbook (SO EXCITED) for Christmas and Erik got me a great cookbook as well so it seems I have plenty of new things to try. I just have to stay motivated! Which I’m very confident I can do – I just need to keep trying new things so I don’t get bored. Also buy new kitchen tools. Shiny new toys always help.

4. To get healthy – blah blah blah. Same old same old goal every year. But this year, it’s time to combine forces. Healthy cooking which I have already mastered (yay!) and working out regularly. I never seem to be able to make these two things happen at the same time. I’m either working out non stop and eating with no limits (for shame) or I’m eating super healthy and avoiding the gym. Viscous and completely useless cycle. It’s time to refocus in this area and get back into tip top shape. I’ve always been a girl who loves my curves in all their glory – but the fitter the better – so time to get some muscle tone back.

5.  To start gardening – now that I’m cooking, and I have a backyard, it only makes sense to start planting some herbs. And learning a new skill is always good. First on my list – basil. My favorite herb EVER. Sadly this will have to wait until Spring so I’m hoping I don’t lose my motivation…

6. To start biking and hiking. Part of my problem with hitting the gym is that it bores me to fucking tears. I hate it. I loathe it. I would rather be doing ANYTHING else. But I do love being active in general, especially if it involves being outside and, more importantly, away from the city. So my goal is to get a bike and start venturing past my comfort zone and eventually venturing past my gym to the point where I’m getting enough exercise with outside activity that I simply don’t have to go to the gym anymore. FOR REAL. I’d also like to start hiking. Upstate New York is so gorgeous, and a simple train ride away, for a nice day’s hike in the woods. This goal will definitely be the hardest in terms of getting off my lazy ass and making it happen but hopefully I can stay focused and get this ball rolling after the winter weather wears off.

7. To manage and get out of credit card debt – this is NOT happening in the span of a year (ha! wouldn’t that be nice?) but little steps can make a big difference. We’ve already consolidated a good chunk of our debt and with a little financial planning we should be able to make a big difference in the next few years. I’m hoping by this time next year to feel a lot less weighed down by all the bills.

8. To read more – seriously – I gotta get down with library town. Ever since I finished my masters I have avoided all things resembling literature. It’s quite pathetic and quite frankly, inexcusable. Amazon is gonna see some serious book purchases from me soon. Please feel free to send any recommendations!

So there you have it. A pretty solid list of realistic goals I should be able to achieve with a little will power and the love and support of my amazing friends and family. I’m not quite sure how I would have gotten through this year without all of my loved ones near and far. There really are no words to do justice to how grateful I am.

And then of course there’s this little blog, which hopefully will remain interesting. There will be recipes so I stay on the cooking track and hopefully – eventually – there will be traveling again. I’m going to commit to getting back to my lyrics of the day because I love them, and perhaps I can come up with some other weekly/daily blog rituals that will keep things interesting around here.

Thanks for sticking with me! Here’s to a wonderful and memorable 2013!

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Filed under Apartment, Brooklyn, Cooking, Culture, Family, Food and Drink, Friends, Home, Life, Lyrics of the Day, Music, New York, Travel, Work, Writing

Amelie Wine Bar – A NYC French Gem

photo courtesy of yelp

My latest article for Ma Vie Francaise/My French Life is up! The focus this month is my favorite wine bar (on both coasts) Amelie. It’s my go to end of week place for happy hour drinks with my dearest friends and a MUST visit for any francophile, French expat, or happy hour loving person in NYC.

To read the full article, click here.

Merci!

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Filed under Culture, Food and Drink, France, French Culture, Friends, Life, New York, San Francisco, Travel, Writing

Classic California

This post is going to basically be nothing but a photo blog of all things food from California. So avert your eyes now if you’re not interested.

As I mentioned previously, going home was extremely therapeutic, so much so that I’m actively trying to figure out when I can move back. Who needs the mean streets of NYC when you can have the calm, relaxed back roads and wineries of northern California? Proof is in the pictures:

Healdsburg farmer’s market – vegetables just don’t come that fresh and colorful here in the city

Mimosas on a terrace in wine country – also known as heaven

well HELLO brunch…

my amazing omelette – post farmer’s market visit

and then we went to a harvest party at J Vineyards! Seriously found my happy place

wine barrels everywhere…ahhhhhh

ultimate setting

and then there was a wedding at a winery

beautiful, gorgeous, wish you were here…

My gorgeous Mom

a few days later there was dinner at Gary Danko’s…but I only took a pic of my cocktail. I devoured the food too fast to photograph it. SO GOOD.

More brunch – this time at La Note – a provencal restaurant in Berkeley. One of my absolute faves. And yes, that tastes even better than it looks.

So there you have it – more or less my trip. Not pictured are countless lovely evenings with my Mom at home, many cocktails, cupcakes from Love at First Bite, much needed coffee from Peet’s, a Jack in the Box run (or two), and the beautiful faces of my amazing friends.

Needless to say, I left my heart in San Francisco and it’s many beautiful surroundings, and I will be back as soon as possible.

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Filed under American Culture, Brunch, California, Cooking, Culture, Family, Food and Drink, French Culture, Friends, Home, Life, San Francisco, Travel

And I’m Back…For Now at Least

I am finally back in NYC after a much needed trip home to see my Mom and my amazing friends in California. More posts to come with actual details, but here’s a small summary of the past week or so – the first one my friends is a fucking doozy…

1. In which my life is like a fucking movie – I got arrested at the airport on my way to California for a “weapon” in my bag, that was of course not mine. It belonged to my husband, and was in my bag from the move, and I just didn’t see it before I started packing (I KNOW – lesson fucking learned). Obviously, this is a long story…the short of it. I got arrested and I now have a court date to prove I’m just an innocent little girl and very much NOT a terrorist.  I wish I was kidding, but this is in fact my life right now. Just when I thought I couldn’t be any more stressed out…fun times.

2. After my traumatic travel experience I went straight to wine country in California and thanks to my Mom and amazing friends managed to have a fabulous time. There was brunch, farmer’s markets, a harvest party, wine tastings, and a wedding. Couldn’t have asked for a better welcome home.

3. The wine country festivities and my entire trip back to California with my amazing Mom was so emotionally restorative that I think I might be moving back there soon. No firm plans yet, but NYC is no longer on an indefinite timeline. Quality of life is better in California and it’s time to go home. There’s also free rent in California (God bless my Mom) which would be extremely helpful right now. But if you know of free rent in France, I could also be persuaded to live there instead…just sayin’.

4. After much time reflecting about my life while in California, I now want to get a PhD…I KNOW. I thought I was done with school too. But I had a lot of time in CA thinking about what makes me happy and the reality is studying culture makes me happy. Specifically studying French vs. American culture, and even more specifically food culture. So if I can build a career where it is literally my job to discuss and write about French and American food and chef cultures, I’m all over it. Now I just need to develop the topic and get someone to let me into their program. Time shall tell…

5. Speaking of chefs and French food, my Mom taught me how to make my dad’s classic French mustard chicken from his old school recipe. I’m going to try it by myself this week…here’s hoping I can carry on the family tradition.

6. I am officially looking for a roommate. If I can’t find a sane person I am actually willing to live with I’m just going to move home now. If I can find a roommate, I’ll be in NYC until August when my lease is up. Once my lease is up, California is calling my name – officially.

7. All this being said, who knows what will happen in the next year and I am open to anything. But I’m a planner. So those are my plans, subject to change if the universe intervenes…or if I get arrested again.

More detailed posts later with pics from sunny California!

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Filed under American Culture, Apartment, Brooklyn, California, Cooking, Culture, Family, Food and Drink, France, French Culture, Friends, Home, Life, New York, School

Baking and Backyard Beautification – A Weekend in Brooklyn

This weekend was a tough one. I could be all flowery and positive on this blog and pretend I’m strong all the time and kicking this break up’s ass, but it’s not true. And when my sister came to visit this weekend to offer moral support, it became even less true. Because, let’s be honest, there’s something about being around your family, where your walls just crumble to the ground and you know you can be vulnerable, so you are. And it’s a great thing, but it’s also really really hard, because all that stuff you’re trying to push down and more importantly push past walks up and smacks you right in the face.

So emotionally this weekend was really hard, but on all other levels it was great. Great to see my sister and more importantly great to have some real quality time together, something we really haven’t had since her job has taken her abroad for the past three years.

And in an effort to make the most of my time with her, we decided to take on the kitchen together and bake a cake. While I’ve been somewhat brave taking on the kitchen and making meals, I’ve been very wary of baking. I think my first real attempt at “cooking” was baking back in God knows what year and it was something stupidly easy, like baking brownies from a box and I somehow managed to screw it up. And I do believe that scarred me for life and contributed to me avoiding the kitchen for YEARS. But my sister, the real cook in the family, is also a great little baker, so I thought I’d rip the baking band aid off with her there so it would be less painful and maybe I could learn a thing or two.

So what did we decide to make? A pineapple upside down cake. The last time my sister made one was probably the last time I ate one so it a baking project and nostalgia all wrapped into one. We took the recipe from my Williams Sonoma cookbook and spent our Saturday afternoon in the kitchen.

the ingredients – already enough to make me overwhelmed.

pineapples ready to go in the pan on top of the brown sugar butter yumminess on bottom

the whipping ingredients into submission. Apparently there are fancy tools that can do this for you. Something to consider if I start baking more often.

putting the cake batter on top, ready for the oven

Ta da!! We didn’t burn it! And it actually looks good enough to eat.

Everything up until this point went swimmingly but then we misjudged the flipping of the cake onto a plate and kinda broke it. But it still looked good to me!

kinda broken….but look how pretty!

Despite it being a bit broken it was DELICIOUS. Props to my sister for her baking skills and making it always look so easy. Now it’s my turn to try it on my own. I really want to master the tarte tatin (French apple pie) and I think I can do it…but I might try making a banana nut bread first. For some reason that feels less intimidating. We’ll see. Either way, this weekend, I am going to bake something new and force myself right out of my fear.

So yay us, and yay me for again trying to break out of my comfort zone and take on new kitchen challenges.

Another notable event this weekend – the arrival of my tables and chairs for outside. I finally found a really good sale for patio furniture and while it’s nothing fancy and not the most comfortable, it does the job and fits the space I’m working with. Voici my new backyard tables and chairs (two bistro tables pushed together):

Who wants to come over??

Isn’t it nice? Now I just need to figure out the lighting. I got some cute little lights from Pottery Barn with birthday money but I’m not sure if they’ll work. It all depends on what I can pull off with outlets…I might not have any to work with…we’ll see. If anything, a girl can do a lot with candles and mason jars so that’s also in the works. I’m having some girlfriends over on Wednesday night so I’ll have to have something ready by then. Until then, it’s cocktails at dusk:

Enjoying life as best I can…

So that was my weekend – crying, baking, sister bonding, and backyard decorating. Making the best with what I’ve got to work with, trying to keep it all together.

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Filed under Apartment, Brooklyn, Cooking, Culture, Family, Food and Drink, Friends, Home, Life, New York, Summer

A Breakup, A Birthday, and a Cookbook

And I’m back.

The basic update is this – Erik and I split up. And I had to move in to the new apartment anyway as the smaller apartment we were in was already rented to a new tenant. I am now in a gorgeous garden apartment I can’t afford on my own and am looking for a roommate, while dealing with the reality of no longer being with the person I thought I’d be with forever. Needless to say its been an incredibly stressful and emotionally tumultuous few weeks and will likely continue that way for quite some time. I’m doing my best to stay positive and move forward but some days are worse than others.

So there you have it.

In the midst of all this I also had my birthday this Saturday in which my lovely friends treated me to dinner and lots of wine at Chateau Cherbuliez and kept my day from becoming one in which I emotionally spiraled down and out of control.  It was a good reminder that as sad as this reality is, relationships come and go, and friends – the good ones who always have your back – really are forever. I don’t know how I would have gotten through these initial first few weeks without their love and support.

So I am now 31, looking for a roommate, learning how to cook, and trying not to go crazy in the midst of this very big transition in one of the toughest cities in the world. I do love New York, but it is not an easy place to be alone or to start over.

But let’s focus on the positive shall we? Thankfully, my motivation to start cooking started before the split, and now it’s becoming suprisingly cathartic. In an effort to keep motivated and make new things I took some birthday money given to me by a dear family friend and bought myself my first cookbook. It’s the Williams Sonoma Cookbook and it has a lot of standard recipes that weren’t too intimidating for yours truly and a few more challenging ones I hope to be able to take on in time. In an effort to stay on the cooking track and keep focused on all things not breakup related, I chose recipes for each night this week and did the bulk of my grocery shopping on Sunday so I have what I need in the house. Tonight’s dish will be whole wheat penne with broccoli rabe, ricotta, and turkey sausage and last night’s dinner was cappellini pasta with shrimp and spinach. Very basic and really easy which is just what I need to keep me cooking. Right now pasta and fish are the usual suspects but in the coming weeks I’m hoping to branch out into rice, chicken, and perhaps even red meat…we’ll see how I do.

But last night’s simple recipe turned out quite lovely and I’m finding that this cooking thing is a great way to enjoy my massive kitchen (by NYC standards). This is how big my kitchen is:

HUGE kitchen, clean and ready to be used

Not too shabby huh? Also, you can see why I need a roommate. The apartment is BIG and therefore not cheap enough for one person like myself.

Here are some pics from last night’s dinner where I managed to have two things going on the stove at once (!) and the end result was pretty darn tasty – and healthy!

basic ingredients – not much to mess up thankfully

Two things cooking at once! This is a very big deal for me…I know, but I’m still a newbie so it’s exciting.

The finished product – shrimp cappelini with spinach. Ta da!

It seems that blogging about my kitchen adventures is keeping me active in doing it so be prepared for more photos. If I am absolutely in love with anything I make I will most certainly post the recipe here. For now, everything has been quite delightful, but I’m not sure anything is so stellar it deserves to be reprinted here. But time shall tell.

So there you have it. Life as I know it has certainly shifted and I am doing my best to stay positive and not dwell on the sadness. What I believed to be the one constant in my life for better or worse is now no longer and I just need to refocus and reclaim my life.

Apparently that all starts with cooking. My father would be proud.

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Filed under Apartment, Brooklyn, Cooking, Food and Drink, French Culture, Friends, Home, Life, New York, Summer

Weekly Roundup – A New Bar, the New Apartment, and Building a Wall

It’ s August. How in the world is it already August? It’s amazing how fast these summer weeks are going by. And on that note, another weekly roundup!

This week has been fairly uneventful but if you’re in it for the minutiae you’ve come to the right place.

On Tuesday, my lovely girlfriends and I went to Todd English’s new restaurant and bar Chateau Cherbuliez and had a genuinely fabulous time. So much so that we will be going back on Saturday night. To be fair the motivation to return rather quickly has a lot to do with some sexy and very friendly Frenchmen who work there, but combine that with their great patio and stellar wine list and you’ve got me hooked.

Actually, I was so impressed with it that it is going to be the first installment for my Best of France in New York series of columns with My French Life/Ma Vie Francaise. Once the article is officially posted I’ll provide the link so you can read the full review. For now just know that I had a stellar experience there and can’t recommend it enough.

In terms of cooking, I haven’t taken on any other new dishes this week so not much to report. This weekend however should provide some real time to play with new recipes and branch out a bit. Tonight I’m planning on making quinoa with broccoli and shrimp (HELLO healthy) so that should be interesting. Might be ordering a pizza later if it is in fact too bland and healthy of a dish.

In more exciting news, we officially have keys to the garden apartment, left for us by the old tenant. What we don’t have is the lease. My Virgo brain is not happy about that, but apparently the landlord is just busy and plans to send it to us in the next few days. But I’m a bit panicky about it. It won’t feel official and real until that lease is signed and the deal is officially made. Despite this, one thing definitely getting me excited is the fact that my oh so handy husband wants to build a wall in the apartment that will give us a second bedroom. Apparently by handy boy standards building a wall is “easy” and we just need to buy the materials. So if we can manage to build the wall (without the landlord noticing) before moving in we will officially have a two bedroom, two bath garden apartment in Brooklyn Heights.  This is wonderful for many, many reasons, but the main perk will be that we can actually have people come stay with us – comfortably. They’ll even have their very own room, like grown ups. So fingers crossed that a lease gets signed soon and we can get a move on with making all this happen. Then I can choose and buy my paint colors. I love choosing paint colors.

And in even better apartment news, the old tenant left us an air conditioner, a futon, and a desk (score!) and a very dear friend of ours is giving us a great chair that she no longer has room for. So things seem to be aligning quite well. Now all we need is someone to gift/donate a table for outside and a new bed and I’d be the happiest person on the planet.

In other news, it is officially my birthday month. As is typical, my birthday always seems to fall during the time of year where money has to be sucked into something else. Namely moving. Every summer in the past five years we have moved in some capacity (no joke) so there has been no money left in the piggy bank for much besides a taco dinner on my birthday. Last year I’d just gotten back from Paris where the euro and the cost of us living in two of the most expensive cities in the world had done us over, the summer before we’d just moved into the place we’re in now, the year before that I’d just moved back to CA from Lyon and we sunk all our money into our Berkeley apartment, summer before that I moved to Lyon…you see how this goes.  And this month we are moving again. I’m hopeful we’ll be settled in and can at the very least throw a housewarming/bday gathering but knowing how things work for us my birthday will probably be spent painting the new apartment in my underwear and ordering in take out (sexy, I  know). If that’s the case, I at the very least will make sure I have an ice cream cake. A girl has to maintain a few birthday standards even when penny pinching.

So there you have it, another THRILLING week. Here’s hoping I have more positive apartment news to report next week and some new recipes I didn’t manage to fuck up.

Bon week-end!

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Filed under Apartment, Brooklyn, Culture, Food and Drink, France, French Culture, Friends, Home, Life, Lyon, New York, Summer

Lyon in NYC – a Former Lyonnaise Girl’s Opinion

Picture courtesy of Eater

Normally, in terms of reviewing things, I don’t write about anything on this blog unless it’s going to be a good review. I’m not an actual food or restaurant/bar critic, nor am I a chef, so I don’t think it’s really appropriate for me to wax poetic about how a restaurant failed to deliver.  If I don’t like it I won’t go back, plain and simple. No internet bashing necessary. That being said, if something does fall into my realm of knowledge and it’s claiming to be something that it clearly is not, I’m more inclined to say something – like now.

This brings me to my trip to Lyon, the fairly new restaurant in Manhattan’s West Village claiming to be an authentic Lyonnais bouchon. This would mean as little to me as any New Yorker if I hadn’t actually lived in Lyon, and when there, based my entire social existence at a real Lyonnais bouchon. It became my happy place and I tried everything on the menu. TWICE. Probably more. I met an eclectic mix of French locals, the kind that only a bouchon could attract, and developed friendships of true value, specifically with the owner himself, whom I try and go back to visit as much as humanly possible.

Needless to say, I’ve seen the Lyonnais bouchon wrapped in its beautiful blanket of authenticity and my standards for the cuisine and the “bouchon” experience are impossibly high. The bar has been set. So, as far as I am concerned, if you say your restaurant is a Lyonnais bouchon in Manhattan, you better mean it, and it better be true.

Knowing I had impossible standards to meet, I put off going to Lyon. I remember it opening, I read the reviews, I followed the restaurant page on Twitter. I wanted to try it, but I was scared to. I knew it could never be what I wanted it to be unless the people I love from Lyon magically showed up, but I still held out faith that the food and the ambience could maybe hold a candle to the energy of Lyon, as they claimed it would. So when summer Restaurant Week came up, I went. $35 for three courses – what better way to sample the menu and make a real determination of how good it was – non?

So I went, and I tried it – with a native French person in tow for the extra critical eye. And the best way to sum up my feelings on this restaurant is by way of a standard and always understood French facial expression. Words just will not suffice. You need the face, specifically the French frustrated face:

this is how I felt about my meal a la francaise

Part annoyance and part frustration – this is the face I made all throughout dinner – with poutier lips if you can believe it.

To be fair the food was not bad. In fact, our appetizers suggested we’d be in for a real treat, but then it just went downhill.

First the appetizers. My lovely friend Mathilde had the Lyonnaise salad, which I sampled and can attest that they did an exquisite job. The signature Lyonnaise salad was in fact perfect. Wonderful way to start the meal and I remained exceedingly hopeful. For my appetizer I chose the duck wings with orange and red chili glaze. Now while the duck wings were delicious – truly delicious – there was nothing French about them, and more specifically nothing Lyonnais about them. If anything, the flavors this dish offered would be better suited to a Chinese restaurant menu – a high end Chinese restaurant – but definitely not a French restaurant, let alone a Lyon bouchon. To be fair, I should have ordered the onion soup and had it not been so hot, I would have. But instead I ordered the duck and it was the first sign that based on that even being on the menu at all, we were nowhere near being in Lyon.

Then came our mains. Mathilde ordered the coq au vin and I took a leap of faith and ordered the moules frites. Now, this was a big order for me. I haven’t actually had moules frites since I left the city of Lyon because the last moules frites I had there were so stupidly delicious. The restaurant that I frequented for mussels was a fish only restaurant and their moules provencals was the best tasting thing on the menu. The sauce was nothing but cream, herbs, tomatoes, more herbs, cream, and more cream. It was basically melted fat, in a bowl. And it was a thing of beauty that I ate whenever the opportunity arose. So much so that I’m convinced that particular dish is the reason that upon returning to the States I had to have my gallbladder removed within six months. No joke. The Lyonnais don’t mess around. The food is RICH, and it is amazing.

So – that being said – I was taking a real chance with the mussels, but I thought – what better place to test mussels again than a restaurant named after Lyon? Well, sadly, they did not live up to their city’s reputation. The sauce, while cream based (trust me, I asked), was bland, so much so that at first I thought I just didn’t have enough so I asked for more. Only to realize that no, it’s not that there wasn’t enough, it just had no real flavor. It was supposed to be a mustard cream sauce but all I tasted was a watered down cream like sauce.  It tasted more like half and half than real cream. And again, to be fair, it’s hard to find real cream here like you can find in France, but if anyone can do it, you would think it would be the chef and or owner of a French restaurant in Manhattan. A disappointment to say the least and a sure sign I will not be having mussels again until I go back to the actual city of Lyon. All that being said, the fries were excellent and as French as they come. Small triumph.

Mathilde’s coq au vin looked good, but I didn’t taste it so I can’t be the judge. But her French face said enough and was reminiscent of the one above,with more indifference. Never a good sign. You never want a French person to be indifferent to their food. It never ends well.

For dessert we had the chocolate fondant cake – or by Lyonnais terms the moelleux au chocolat. This was also a serious test as the moelleux au chocolat at my favorite bouchon in Lyon was literally a food orgasm. It was the type of dish that if you’re eating it you cannot focus on anything else. The rest of the world goes silent while you eat it and when it’s gone, you want more, and you’re almost ashamed at your unabashed appetite for more of what can only be described as sex on a plate.

And, of course, that’s not what we got. Instead we got dull tasting chocolate cake that sort of resembled a moelleux au chocolat. I don’t believe either of us even finished it.

All this, combined with severely low level lighting (hence no pictures of the food), mediocre service, and a main dining room that felt too big to really capture the energy of a bouchon, left me aching for the real thing and wishing I could hop on a plane for the actual Lyonnaise experience.

Le sigh…

So there you have it – my two cents. I am sure if you are not French, and more specifically not Lyonnais or someone who has lived there – you would have a perfectly pleasant meal here. It’s much like a lot of other New York establishments that aren’t necessarily amazing, but they’re not bad either, so if you are in the neighborhood and don’t have impossible standards for Lyonnaise cuisine like myself, then you should definitely stop in and try it. Perhaps you will enjoy it more than me. I however will likely not be back, for no other reason except that it will just hurt my heart and make me want to fly home to my little studio, in my little town, where all things taste as they should.

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Filed under American Culture, Cooking, Culture, Food and Drink, France, French Culture, Friends, Life, Lyon, New York, Summer

A Garden Apartment in Brooklyn Heights

Well – it’s official! We are moving into the garden apartment downstairs in our building. All the praying to the Irish saints and the New York real estate Gods paid off.

I give you our new outdoor space:

heaven in Brooklyn Heights

Needless to say, it was love at first sight.

I mean, look at that backyard – in New York! Well, Brooklyn, but still – Brooklyn Heights! It’s covered in ivy which immediately sent me into a state of swooning. I love ivy. You can’t even see it all in this picture but it lines the entire side fence and it’s just gorgeous. And then of course there’s plenty of room for an outside table and a few areas where Erik can plant a little garden. We could even have a hammock like the old tenant did…I mean does it get better than this for city living? And not only is the backyard gorgeous but it’s also bigger than our current apartment. No joke. Erik actually measured the square footage and you could fit our entire apartment in that backyard space.

The downstairs apartment itself is also much bigger. To begin with, it has a real full sized kitchen with a dishwasher. I think Erik actually had to hold on to something when he walked in to keep from fainting at the sight of it. It also somehow has two bathrooms (!) – one with a shower and one with a claw foot tub. That’s right – it has a claw foot tub. So not only are we getting a bigger apartment – with a garden – but I don’t have to give up my claw foot tub. This is a VERY big deal. Because while the garden will be my best friend in the warmer climate, there is just nothing better on a cold winter’s night than making myself a pretty pink cocktail and taking a deep, indulgent soak in a beautiful bathtub.

The living room is a good size and there’s enough room for a little office if we want it. The bedroom is probably the least attractive part of the apartment, as it’s a build on to the side of the kitchen and the proportions are a bit weird, but a girl can do amazing things with a can of paint and the right curtains.

In terms of the negatives, the apartment has had a ton of problems over the years, none of which were ever quite fixed properly so it’s extremely rundown. So we’ve got ourselves a fixer upper. Thankfully Erik is quite handy, and I love a good decorating challenge, so over the next year we should be able to turn it into a really great place.

And while the move means a more expensive apartment in the long term, we are literally saving thousands of dollars in moving costs upfront – no broker fee, no last month’s rent, no movers – just a change in rent and a slight supplement payed towards our deposit. Not too shabby and definitely too good a deal to not take advantage of given the current cramped quarters we are living in.

So – yay!!!

Projected move in date is August 15th, sooner if we can manage. Needless to say, once we cut through this horrific heat and edge towards the fall months, there will be many dinner parties and barbecues happening chez nous. You know, now that we actually have the space for more than one guest at any given time – like grown ups.

More pics to come soon of the rest of the apartment, as well as before and after pics as the months roll by. Stay tuned!

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Filed under Apartment, Brooklyn, Culture, Family, Friends, Home, Life, New York, Summer