Saturday, December 17, 2011

Family in Paris!

My parents and aunt, uncle and cousin just left after visiting Paris for a few days, and what a great few days it was! I was excited to have them, because previously the only other places I've lived besides Bordeaux that I should show off were Irvine & Newport Beach, CA, and they just don't have the same draw (I mean, frozen bananas, but that's pretty much it). Also, I've only ever visited foreign countries while traveling with my family, so it was  nice to already be established here so that I could make sure we did what I knew they'd like.

It was a complete WHIRLWIND, and we got sooo much done that I couldn't possibly recount it all here (plus I can't remember much of what we did), but here are the highlights!

Day One:

For my parents' first full day (and first visit in the daylight, since they had arrived the night before), we started with St. Chappelle (Aunt Sarah's favorite) and the Conciergerie (lots of Robespierre-related stuff). We also ended up at the Jardin du Luxembourg (it was raining lightly but still nice), the Cluny Museum (my mom loved it) and Notre Dame. I also insisted that we each eat Nutella crepes, obviously! Then at night, before meeting the rest of the family back at their hotel, we walked under the Eiffel Tour when it was all lit up (very cool).






Day Two: I met my parents at their hotel, and then we headed towards Pere Lachaise (because what Epstein-Merwin trip would be complete without a tour of a cemetery??). We met Aunt Sara, Uncle Ross and Matt there, and Matt arrived with a friend and his mother (who works in the same hospital as Aunt Sara!) who also happened to be visiting! They had run into each other on the metro. 

After Pere Lachaise, we separated and my parents and I headed to Canal St. Martin. I had never been there before, so it was nice to see something new. We went to a bakery that my mom had read about, and it was (obviously, duhh) good. I left to go work, but my parents went to take a tour of the Opera Garnier, which apparently they liked because they can't stop talking about it.





Day Three: 

Everything is kind of hazy, but I'm pretty sure Day Three is the one that started with a good amount of rain (so much so that my umbrella was useless and had to be thrown away before I had even left my suburb). Mariene came to Paris with me to hang out with all of us, and after we met my parents at their hotel, they walked us by Rue Cler, which they really liked and had eaten most of their breakfasts in. It's funny that my parents got to "show off" a part of Paris to me that  have never seen before. We decided to walk to the D'Orsay, which included a stop in the courtyard of Invalides, and a trip over the Pont Alexander III (VERY COOL). By the time we made it to D'Orsay, it was POURING and the line was VERY LONG. Mariene decided to leave, and my parents and I debated for a while before we decided to find Aunt Sarah (who was supposed to meet us but whom we couldn't get ahold of) and head to The Marais. We don't normally mind rain, but my parent's clothes were soaking wet and would be uncomfortable in the museum. By magic, we found Aunt Sarah in the metro station, and headed to the Musee Carnavalet in The Marais. It was surprisingly sunny when we arrived. We looked at some of the museum (not as much as mom would have liked), looked at Place Des Vosges, and finally ate falafels, mmmmm. After that, we found Uncle Ross and Matt and got coffee at what turned out to be a really nice cafe.







Later that night, we took an excellent hour-long cruise of the Seine, and that met up with Pascale for dinner in the Latin Quarter. I had scallops, yay! But before that, I had wanted my parents to see the St. Germain area, so we walked from their hotel, past the front of Invalides and down Rue de Babylone. I made sure we stopped at Hugo & Victor so that they could try real French macarons (from France). It was dark and pretty out, so we continued down towards Blvd St. Germain, visited the church (oldest in Paris! A must-see, even though it's super not-interesting from the inside), and then walked through a Christmas market, through the Latin Quarter, and to our boat. I was really proud of myself for choosing a route that took us by some many things through so many different areas. It feels SO GOOD to live somewhere and have the layout of the city finally click :) 


After dinner, it was VERY COLD, and we ended up on Rue Moufftard, so we ended up having noisettes in yet another cafe. That was the New Yorkers' last night, and it worked out that we were able to take the same metro line towards both of our directions, so that was nice. However, the Transilien hours had just changed, and I ended up arriving at Montparnasse at the precise moment that meant I had just missed one train and would have to wait the full thirty minutes until the next (at 12:05AM, errrrr). Plus I had to walk home after that, but it was fine (if cold). I was working the next day, and normally, Lise can wake up as laaaate as she wants on Wednesdays, but of course the one day that I really needed her to sleep in (so that I could sleep in!) she ended up waking me up earlier than she would on a school day (no school here on Wednesdays). But I made her climb in bed with me and "take a nap" for another 20 minutes, so that was good, even though she didn't close her eyes the entire time and insisted on counting down the 20 minutes. But at least I could stay horizontal. 

I watched Lise until midday, and then when her grandma relieved me, I went to go meet my parents, who had woken up early and managed to fit in both highlights of the Louvre AND the D'Orsay since it was their last day (go them!). After more noisettes in a nearby cafe, we wandered around and eventually had dinner in the Latin Quarter, at a place with the perfect formule (yummy mussels, beef bourguinon AND a crepe for 10 euros!). Then we had to say goodbye and it was sad, but we made plans to see each other on Skype in a few days, so that was good. We all hopped on Line 4 in opposite directions at Saint Michel and they were off! I was sad to see everyone go, but we had such a good time, so I was all smiles. I was a little more homesick than usual the after after everyone was gone, but July really isn't so far away, so I think I'll manage until then. Especially when I remind myself that nutella crepes aren't available on every street corner in America they way they are here. 

So, in conclusion, this is why people should come visit me! Macarons and noisettes! And a guide who can finally (kind of) find her away around a big bustling foreign city :) 




Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Yay!

What a great past few days with my parents, Uncle Ross, Aunt Sarah and Matt! We fit sooo much in to this trip that I'm going to sleep VERY well over the next few days....I live here and am semi-used to Paris, so I can imagine how exhausted they might be. Pictures and details soon, must start catching up on my sleep!

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Parents in Paris!

I am tooo exhausted to write a detailed entry right now because I've been on my feet for 16 hours straight (and "on your feet" in Paris is extra exhausting!), but I'm having a great time with my parents, aunt and uncle and cousin. Today was their first full day (and my parents' first day in France ever), and I'm proud to say that we got a lot done!

1. Saint Chappelle
2. The Conciergerie
3. Coffee in a cafe (obviously, we're in Paris, duh)
4. Notre Dame
5. Paninis on the street (and Amelia favorite)
6. Jardin du Luxumbourg
7. Shakespeare  & Co.
8. Nutella Crepes on the street (another Amelia favorite)
9. The Cluny Museum
10. The Eiffel Tower all lit-up at night.

We've got lots more on the agenda, including Pere LaChaise and Canal St. Martin tomorrow!

Monday, December 5, 2011

Baking!

Lise's only memory of living in the US two years ago is cupcakes. Or, as she pronounces it, "cuupcaaaaaaaaakes". They're her favorite thing ever and she rarely gets the opportunity to eat them here, so on Sunday, after having gathered the ingredients to make the cakes and the frosting from scratch, we got to work! It was genuinely a fun way to bond with the girls over two-and-a-half hours on my afternoon off. BEST AU PAIR EVER?


Baking can be a little messy, but it can be even messier when an enthusiastic 7 and 11-year-old are measuring out flour and breaking eggs while fighting about who gets to do more of the mixing/how many sprinkles should be on each cupcake when it comes to the decorating portion. But we had a good time. I would much rather spend time baking with them than doing a lot of other things, so perhaps there will be more baking in our future?




And the cupcakes turned out delicious. It's so easy to just buy cake mix at home and use that, but they don't have it here so I had to make them from scratch. They ended up tasting better than any other cupcakes I've ever made though, so YAY! It might have something to do with the fact that their sticks of butter are shaped completely differently than our sticks, plus they don't have the little markings on the package designating how many grams is in each part, so I kind of just closed my eyes and chose a place to cut -- which means that the cupcakes and frosting might possibly have a little extra butter, but in France, is that ever really a bad thing? ;) 

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Meow

Watching The Wire, Season 4 with a French cat in my arms! He can't tear his little eyes away from the screen.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Mmmm

Happy December from Paris! This is a post about food.

On Saturday, Mariene and Rachael and Haley and I ended up having "Thanksgiving" dinner at Rachael's apartment, because she lives right of the Champs Elysees and is the only one among us who has access to her own kitchen. The night was a success!

Mariene and I contributed sweet potatoes, which I peeled and Mariene finished peeling and then cut and seasoned. Our original plans was to make them like french fries, and while they ended up being less fried than we had envisioned, they still tasted delicious. Rachael made a really good pumpkin spice cake with ingredients from the American import store in The Marais (which happens to be called Thanksgiving). The au pair who lived with my family before me had left a box of instant stuffing (which I assume she had also purchased at that store), so voila! I had a perfect excuse to use my microwave skills. Our main course was Haley's hamburger helper, which also tasted really excellent. Yay for glamorous traditional dinners! I definitely would have contributed more if I had my own kitchen. Oh, and the traditional pre-Thanksgiving jello shots invented by the pilgirms that Haley made and transported on the subway all the way from St. Germain were also excellent.



Then on Tuesday, my friend Sarah and I really wanted Moules Frites, so we took a German friend and an Austrian friend with us to a nice looking lunch place near the Pantheon, and I think we got a really good deal for 12 euros, especially because the place was nice and indoors.

Moules Frites! I forgot to take a picture of the salad with lardons before I gobbled it up, but that was good too. 

Warm Tartelette Aux Pommes...best of my life possibly?



Also, here's a recipe that I did not invent, but that I eat often because my favorite bakery on Rue de Babylone on my way to school has them, and I can't resist.

RECIPE FOR BEST BAGUETTE SANDWICH EVER:

1. One Baguette, cut like a sandwich.
2. Sliced French goat cheese (for the most accurate replication of the sandwich, you might want to look for something with a rind like brie or camembert, but American goat cheese will taste good too even if it changes the overall taste.
3. HONEY, mmmm.
4. A small amount of spinach leaves.
5. WALNUTS
6. AND/OR CRANBERRIES!!!!!

It's, like, too good. Honey makes everything better! Again, I meant to take a picture today but I forgot about that until it was all gone.

I've been collecting baking ingredients and doing lots of cup-to-gram conversions, and I have big plans to make cookies on Friday and then bake cupcakes with Lise on Saturday. I'm really excited, but I warned Anne that as soon as I start baking I won't be able to stop! The family isn't a big fan of peanut butter, but I'm hoping that my Martha Stewart peanut butter cookie recipe will convert them, especially since Mariene and I discovered that the new Marks & Spencer's on the Champs Elysee sells peanut butter for less than two Euros!! (peanut butter is really hard to find here. French people apparently find it really odd!).

Bordeaux Part II

I realized that I left out one of the most exciting parts of my Bordeaux post :


When I left my host family's house in May 2010, in the scramble of getting out the door, I accidentally left my coat behind and I didn't realize it until it was too late. I loved that coat -- I bought it with money that my next door neighbor Jackie had sent me, and it was warm and flattering and (I think) slimming. So I was kind of devastated not to have it anymore. I tried to get it back, but it was going to be too expensive/too heavy/too inconvenient, so I eventually dropped it.

Well, it turns out that my former host mom has an AMAZING sense of ESP, because she HAD IT WAITING FOR ME WHEN I SHOWED UP AT HER HOUSE THIS TIME. Seriously, who else would hold on to a large coat when the person that it belongs to probably isn't going to make it back there for some years (it's like she *knew* that I'd be back to visit within only a year and a half!!). Anyway, getting my coat back was the perfect end to an already great weekend.

I've been bad about blogging, I'll update more soon, I promise!