Wednesday, 27 April 2016

You're Invited: Cannes Film Fest Luncheon



























The annual Cannes Film Festival Luncheon Party hosted by the American Club of the Riviera always attracts a great mix of locals and visitors. This year it's Saturday May 14 and everyone is welcome. There are 75 seats available on the terrace but if they sell out and the weather looks good, more tables will be set up on the beach.





Guests will gather for Bellinis and hors d'oeuvres at noon at the restaurant Vegaluna Plage Restaurant, just in front of the Carlton Hotel. During the three-course lunch (foie gras, sea bream, apricot tart), film industry folks will provide insider insights and, as in years past, there will be a famous film quiz.





If you're going on to the Palais des Festivals afterwards, it's an easy ten-minute walk along the seafront.





Water, wine and coffee are included in the price: members 65�, guests 75�. The reservation deadline is Monday May 9th and the event is expected to sell out. For all the info or to reserve: americanclubriviera.com



The 69th annual Cannes Film Fest launches with a screening of Woody Allen's new film, Caf� Society, on Wednesday May 11 in the Palais des Festivals�s Grand Th��tre Lumi�re. The festival runs until May 22 and all the info is here.

Sunday, 17 April 2016

Julia Child's Provence House is For Rent
































Now that it's possible to rent Julia Child's old house in
Provence, it's only a matter of time until someone settles into that famous
kitchen, whips up some delicious new recipes and publishes a cookbook
titled In Julia's 
Proven�al Kitchen or Channeling Julia or something similar.





From the moment I heard that Sotheby's had listed the house for sale (asking price: �880,000), I had a half-real, half-ridiculous
fantasy of buying it and transforming it into a cooking school. And now that's
exactly what Makenna and Yvonne (Evie) Johnston have done. They swept in,
snapped it up and announced they'll be offering week-long "courageous cooking" workshops there, for six people at a time, in 2017.




In the meantime they're renting the house out via Airbnb, as of June 13, 2016.  Which means that alone or in a group, you could fulfill that classic foodie fantasy of "Mastering the Art of French Cooking" in Julia's actual kitchen! Or, of course, write your own master work. When one of her students spied the house on Airbnb, food writer Molly O'Neill quickly booked it--along with another next door--for two one-week writers' retreats in October. (Molly is former NY Times food columnist, author of six books, a multiple James Beard Award winner and founder of LongHouse Food Revival. For info: molly@cooknscribble.com.)





I'm so delighted that Julia's old digs--the summer home she loved so much--will continue to be a magnet for French food- and wine-lovers!








In reality this isn't the first time the house
will be used as a cooking school.  In 1993, Kathie Alex, who knew and worked for Julia,
took it over and ran a program there called Cooking with Friends in France.  She put it on the market in November 2015.





The story beyond the house--how
Julia and Paul Child came to have it, who hung out with them there, why it was
important to the whole American food revolution--has been well documented so I
won't go too deeply into that here.  (If  the
topic interests you, you'd love Julia's book
My Life in France and as well as Provence 1970 by Luke Barr, which you can read about here.)





The house is called La Pitchoune ("the
little one") but everyone calls it La Pitch or La Peetch. It was built in
1963, on a property belonging to Simone Beck, one of Julia's original cookbook
collaborators. M.F.K. Fisher and James Beard were frequent guests. It's set amongst the olive groves near the villages of
Ch�teauneuf and
Plascassier,  not far from Cannes and Grasse.  (Not that
Ch�teauneuf...but one of many villages with the same name.)



Makenna and Evie say that La Peetch Ecole de Cuisine will be more than just a cooking school. It will also welcome high-end retreats, family experiences, food and wine
journeys and more. 






The Airbnb listing calls it "a space to cook, commune, explore and walk in the footsteps of the culinary greats." On Facebook they call it "A Center for Food, Culture and Community." 




Evie, a former
U.S. Air Force captain who left the military in 2014,
 is now studying at the International Culinary Center in New York. Makenna, a business strategist and life coach, will train
at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris, where Julia earned Le Grand Dipl�me in 1951. (Like Julia did, Makenna graduated from Smith College in Northampton,
MA.) 





The house has three antique-filled bedrooms,
a sitting room, gardens, a pool...and of course that famous kitchen, which is
virtually intact. Even Julia's pegboard is still there, the one Paul made and
painted with outlines so Julia knew exactly which implements went where. The only thing missing is Julia's beloved white La Cornue stove,
which now belongs to that other famous American cookbook author and cooking teacher in Provence, Patricia
Wells





So of course I had to ring up Patricia to ask how she got Julia's
stove.  "When
the time came for Paul and Julia to give up La Pitchoune," she told me, "I asked her if I could
buy it and she said no. Then she changed her mind and said I could have it as a
gift, as long as I replaced it. So that�s what we did! We
went to Darty, bought a new stove,
went to her house, took the La Cornue and replaced it with the
new one, which I believe is still the one
in the house."





The
La Cornue has two gas burners, a side burner where you can set
a series of pots and a small, single gas oven.
If you have Patricia's most-recent book, The French Kitchen Cookbook,  you'll see it in there. "The oven is bit cantankerous," Patricia reports, "and
it's very difficult to adjust the heat so we don't use it often. But we definitely
use the cooktop with our students, who of course love to cook on it. I always joke that having Julia's stove is a bit like having
Freud's couch!"





As to what Julia would say about all this,
I have no idea. I met her a few times over the years at food-world events but
didn't know her. So I turned to someone who did,  my old pal Bob Spitz. Bob is the author of Dearie: The Remarkable Life of Julia Child and he's
currently putting final
touches on the script for a one-woman show of Dearie, which will open on Broadway early next year.





"Julia
always filled La Peetch with friends and guests," Bob says,
"so I�m sure it would delight her that the house
was continuing her gracious tradition.  The fact that it will live on as a
cooking school and retreat would be the icing on her, well, Reine de Saba.�
 







Want to know more? Check out the stories on
La Peetch in Vogue,
 Conde
Nast Traveler
and People,
then go to
Lapeetch.com, where you can sign up for
email updates.







Photos: (1) Julia's famously colorful
Provence kitchen has been kept (almost completely) intact. Rent the house and
have it all to yourself...or come take a weeklong "courageous cooking"
workshop next year. (2) In the kitchen at La Pitchoune, Paul Child painted
outlines of Julia�s tools and equipment on the pegboard walls. [Photo by Benoit
Peverelli, courtesy of Luke Barr.]  (3) Julia Child on the terrace at
La Pitchoune in the early 1970s, courtesy Luke Barr. (4-8) Interior and
exterior shots of the house. Makenna says "Our
goal is to maintain the house as much as possible, we have no intentions to
remodel or update the house itself.  But we definitely are updating some
elements of decor, including furniture and linens." (9) Julia's old
La Cornue range now lives with Patricia Wells at her home and cooking school in
Vaison-la-Romaine, Provence. Owning it, Patricia says, is like "having
Freud's couch." (10) Julia at La Pitchoune in 1969. [Photo by Marc Riboud/Magnum
Photos, from the Wall
Street Journal
.]

Monday, 4 April 2016

Another Fine French Book Giveaway!




Just in time for the 2016 travel
season in the South of France comes
 Markets
of Provence: Food, Antiques, Crafts, and More
 by Marjorie R. Williams. This
charming guide is perfect for anyone living in Provence...traveling
here...or still dreaming of visiting "some day." 





The book comes out May 3 and the
publisher,
 St. Martin's Press, would like to gift
two of my lucky readers with free copies.





Marjorie is a Cambridge,
Massachusetts-based travel writer who believes that exploring markets is one of
the most-rewarding ways to immerse oneself in a foreign culture. It's a passion that goes back to her very first sojurn in France around 1980...and one she has
explored extensively through the articles she writes for magazines such as Afar, France Today and House Beautiful.





"My
first
French market was in Fontainebleau," she tells me.
"I bought a sundress and a blue
mesh bag which I still use...
and they always take me back to memories of that trip."





Marjorie's first book was Markets of Pariswritten with Dixon
Long and published (second edition) by Little Bookroom in 2012.





The new book--which I already have and love--is the result of Marjorie's many months criss-crossing Provence, learning about the villages and markets,
talking to the vendors, trying their wares, exploring surrounding areas. And while
this research trip wasn't exactly a hardship, she says it definitely had its moments. Such as?





"Well,
m
y rental car had GPS so I didn't think I would need
a printed map," Marjorie tells me.
"I
wa
s following the GPS and not paying
attention when, to my great surprise, it led me onto a car ferry. I had no idea
if that was mistake and, if so, where I'd end up! Everything turned out
okay--it was just a 10-minute ferry ride and indeed a good shortcut--but the
shock of it taught me to always carry a printed map.
''





And then of course there were all
the typical tiny misunderstandings, which happen even to those travelers who speak 
terrific French. "At a
fromagerie stand in the Tarascon market,"
she remembers, "a vendor kept urging me to try his 'cheap cheese.' And I
held back until I realized he was saying 'sheep cheese!'"





Popping up over and over again at
all the various markets like certain vendors do, Marjorie got her share of curious looks; they couldn't quite figure out why this woman with notepad and camera was everywhere, asking questions and tasting everything. "And then one day in Arles I had the opportunity to shop
the market with Michelin-starred chef Jean-Luc Rabanel," she recalls. "He's very
recognizable and well known among the vendors. They certainly took notice of me
then!"





The charming 300-page soft-cover
features 30 of Marjorie's favorite market finds--the very-best ones and the B list as well. She also serves up local specialties, practical
tips, interviews with popular chefs and farmers, delicious photos, maps,
restaurant recommendations and more. It's organized by the day of the week
to make itinerary planning easy...and small so it can popped easily into a handbag,
backpack or glove compartment. You can read more about it here.





Peter Mayle, author of A Year in Provence and many other books set in Provence, finds it "thorough, accurate and mouth-watering."





Luke Barr, author of Provence 1970, calls it "an
indispensable...authoritative and seductive guide."





So how to win a copy? Simply leave a
comment below, where it says "comments," and tell us why you'd love
to have it. Please be sure to leave us your email so we can reach you if you
win; signing in with your Google account is not enough. If you're not sure which way is best to sign in, choose "Name/URL." Then put your name or any name in the first field...and your website or blog in the second field. If you don't have a website or blog, you can skip that. Then type your message...but be sure to leave us an email somewhere in your message.





If you want to go ahead and buy
the book, it's on Amazon here




Marjorie will be doing readings and signings in various US cities in May...see the list here.




And to learn more about her or connect with Marjorie online, check out her website, blog, Facebook and Twitter.





Good luck in the giveaway!


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