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Authors: Elizabeth Bard

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BOOK: Lunch in Paris
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“The battle,” he said, looking at me like maybe I was speaking Russian. “When Stalin defeated Hitler on the Eastern Front.”

Duh
. It was only the moment that turned the tide of the entire Second World War, saving France from permanent occupation and
humiliation by Nazi Germany. There was no metro station named D-day.

It wasn’t just what we knew, it was what we wanted. Everyone I knew back home had a similar checklist, and the first item
(underlined, with an exclamation point) was
success
. Like most of my friends, at twenty-five, I considered myself to be in the slog-it-out stage—doing whatever we had to do
to become the people
we wanted to be. If that meant working hundred-hour weeks at banks, law firms, tech start-ups, or news magazines, so be it.
We were on the straight and narrow path toward partnerships, IPOs, Pulitzers, whatever would prove to us—and the world—that
we had arrived.

Gwendal didn’t seem to have a checklist. In fact, it was easy to get him to talk about anything but. Like that pig foraging
in the woods, Gwendal seemed to have only one consideration when making a decision: does this make me happy, does this give
me pleasure? Frankly, it struck me as a little odd.

The
porc noir de Bigorre
turned out to be a simple grilled pork chop served with sautéed potatoes and brussels sprouts. Under the toasted breadcrumbs,
my cassoulet was a small hill of white beans, cooked to unctuous perfection with a piece of
confit de canard,
a nice hunk of sausage, and a hint of tomato. Somehow, I felt no particular need to know the hair color of the animals that
had sacrificed themselves for my meal.

We were both yawning a bit over our empty espresso cups as we pushed back our chairs from the table. Thankfully, these leisurely
winter lunches were usually followed by a nap. Gwendal had introduced me to the concept of
le cinq à sept
. Literally, it means “the five to seven,” that hard-to-account-for time after work when lovers meet for a quick tryst before
going home to their families for dinner.
Vive la France.

As we put on our coats to go, I noticed a framed picture on the table just beside the door. It was the famous black pig, a
long dark Tootsie Roll, lolling around on the hay in his pen. He
did
look happy. All the same, I’m glad I didn’t see him before we sat down to lunch.

Recipes Inspired by the Bistro Sainte Marthe
SWORDFISH TARTARE
Tartare d’Espadon

I first tasted this appetizer at the Bistro Sainte Marthe. Tartare couldn’t be easier. It’s essentially small cubes of the
raw fish in a gussied-up vinaigrette. I’ve toyed around with several versions; these are my favorites. You can make them separately,
or serve a tasting portion of each with fresh greens in between. The following recipe is for an appetizer, but a few sautéed
potatoes will turn it into a light meal. Served on radicchio or endive leaves, it makes quite the chichi little hors d’oeuvre.

Traditional

½ pound freshest swordfish steak (be sure to tell your fishmonger you’ll be eating it raw)

1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon lemon juice

¼ teaspoon coarse sea salt

2 teaspoons whole grain mustard

2 teaspoons walnut oil

2 tablespoons best-quality extra-virgin olive oil

2 tablespoons chopped chives

2 teaspoons chopped dill

Trim the fish of any skin and red flesh and cut what remains into regular quarter-inch cubes. Set them aside in a glass dish
in the coldest part of the refrigerator.

In a small glass jar or airtight plastic container, combine all the
remaining ingredients (minus the dill). Shake vigorously to combine. Chill.

Five minutes before you are ready to serve the fish, add the vinaigrette and dill. Stir well to coat. If you leave the fish
to marinate any longer, the citrus will start to cook it—and you’ll end up with
ceviche,
which does not have the same fresh texture as
tartare
.

Yield: Serves 2 as an appetizer, or makes 4 “tasting” servings

Asian

½ pound freshest swordfish steak (be sure to tell your fishmonger you’ll be eating it raw)

1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon lime juice

¼ teaspoon coarse sea salt

2 teaspoons finely grated fresh ginger

1 teaspoon Thai fish sauce

1 teaspoon sugar

2 tablespoons chopped chives

2 teaspoons sesame oil

4 tablespoons best-quality extra-virgin olive oil

½ cup ripe mango, peeled and diced

A good grinding of mixed peppercorns

1 tablespoon cilantro, finely chopped

Prepare the fish and combine the ingredients (lime juice through oils) for the vinaigrette as in the “Traditional” recipe.

Five minutes before you are ready to serve the fish, stir in the vinaigrette, mango, pepper, and cilantro.

Yield: Serves 2 as an appetizer, or makes 4 “tasting” servings

OVEN-ROASTED PORK RIBS WITH HONEY
Travers de Porc au Miel

I know why bistros love this dish—easy prep, all done in advance. Use fresh rosemary if you can; it makes a real difference.
Serve with a mound of crushed potatoes, soaked with the slick honey sauce.

½ cup rosemary honey (or other strong honey)

¼ cup olive oil

¼ cup red wine vinegar

1 teaspoon coarse sea salt

2 cloves garlic, lightly crushed with the back of your knife

1½ teaspoons dried rosemary, or a few sprigs of fresh

4 pounds pork spareribs, cut into individual pieces

Whisk together the honey, oil, vinegar, sea salt, garlic, and
dried
rosemary (if using).

Place the ribs in a large zipper-lock plastic bag and pour in the marinade. If using fresh rosemary, add the whole sprigs
to the bag. Refrigerate for 1½ hours, turning occasionally.

Preheat the oven to 300ºF.

Arrange the spareribs in a single layer in a large roasting pan. In a small saucepan, bring the marinade to a boil. Pour it
over the ribs and roast in the oven for 2 to 3 hours, turning once or twice. Remove the ribs from the oven and skim a bit
of fat from the sauce.

You can let the ribs rest overnight at this point. Reheat them gently in the sauce.

Yield: Serves 4

An ode to coarse sea salt: Since I’ve moved to Paris, I have a whole new relationship with salt. Coarse sea salt—obtained
from the evaporation of seawater—is plentiful and cheap in France. The crystals are dried in
snowy mounds, particularly in Brittany (Guérande) and the Camargue. I find the taste more subtle than table salt. If you’ve
never tried it, now is the time. Put it in a small glass jar on the counter and take a pinch as needed. Sprinkling by hand
gives you much more control than a shaker or a grinder. I find there’s a sensual quality to it as well, like dusting your
food with tiny diamonds.

INDIVIDUAL MOLTEN CHOCOLATE CAKES
Moelleux au Chocolat “Kitu”

If you have a chocoholic in your life, prepare to be worshipped. Perfect for dessert for two, this recipe also makes you look
a teensy bit like a culinary genius in front of guests. Make the batter in advance, and pop the cakes into the oven right
after dinner. As for accompaniments, resist the temptation to go overboard; forget the caramel sauce and raspberry coulis.
A dollop of lightly sweetened whipped cream or a golf ball–sized scoop of vanilla ice cream is all that’s required.

8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter

5 ounces dark chocolate (70 percent cocoa; the quality of the chocolate is essential—I use Valrhona or Green & Black’s)

A good pinch of coarse sea salt

2 eggs

2 egg yolks

¼ cup sugar

1 tablespoon flour

Preheat the oven to 450ºF.

Melt butter and chocolate together in the top of a double boiler or in the microwave. Add sea salt.

Meanwhile, beat together the eggs, egg yolks, and sugar with a whisk or an electric beater until light and slightly foamy.

Add the egg mixture to the warm chocolate; whisk quickly to combine. Add flour and stir just to combine. The batter will be
quite thick.

The unmolding is the tricky part of these little cakes; the only foolproof solution I’ve found is to use Reynolds foil cupcake
liners (paper liners don’t work, they stick). Use 5 or 6 liners stacked together so they’re rigid enough to make a freestanding
mold. Make 6 of these molds. (If you can’t the find foil baking cups, use small ramekins, generously buttered.)

Divide the batter evenly among the molds. (You can make the cakes in advance to this point and chill them until you’re ready
to bake. But
be sure
to bring the batter back to room temperature before baking.)

Baking time will depend on your oven; start with 7 minutes for a thin outer shell with a completely molten interior, 8 minutes
for a slightly thicker crust and a gooey heart.

Yield: Serves 6

Tip: These also cook well straight from the freezer. Freeze directly in the foil cupcake holders. Take them out of the freezer
about 10 minutes in advance. Bake at 410ºF for approximately 15 to 17 minutes.

CHAPTER 3
April in Paris

O
ver the next few months our weekends in Paris took on a lazy routine. Like any proper affair, the first challenge was getting
out of bed. There was a backstage tour of the Opera House at twelve thirty every Saturday. With the best intentions, we just
kept missing it.

I’d come to cherish waking up in this small room: the futon mattress on the floor, the sunny yellow sheets, the tiny Italian
coffeepot that, by some mystery of physics, started with boiling water in its bottom and finished with coffee in its top.
The textures and objects in this space began to feel like details in a recurring dream. Gwendal and I had created a little
glass bubble, precious and fragile, completely separate from our everyday lives. There was no thinking ahead, no questions.
For some people, that might have been normal; for me, it was a small miracle. It might have been the first time in my life
that I lived entirely in the present.

While I was still facedown on the pillow, Gwendal bravely pulled on a pair of jeans to go “hunting” for breakfast. He returned
from the Tunisian bakery around the corner, not with the head of a freshly killed mastodon, but with a waxed paper bag, neatly
crimped at the corners. It was filled with
chouquettes,
nothing more than empty cream puffs sprinkled with tiny pebbles of sugar—like biting into a sweet breeze.

Now that the weather had warmed up slightly and there was less fear for my numb and soggy toes, we spent our days outside,
hopping from one café terrace to the next. Paris in the springtime is a different city—every mild day could be just a break
in the endless November rain or the true beginning of summer. It was on one of these rambles that I got what I consider to
be a glimpse of Gwendal’s true character.

There are many things that will tell you the true measure of a man—the way he kisses, the way he holds a fork, the way he
talks to his mother on the phone. For me it was something else: we’ll call it the infamous bird-pooing incident.

We were on our way down to Bastille to go to a flea market. It was sunny, warm enough for me to be wearing Gwendal’s favorite
of my summer dresses—blue-and-white gingham with spaghetti straps—that, thanks to some clever engineering, didn’t require
a bra. He had on his favorite white linen shirt, the one from Australia with the baggy sleeves. We were walking along the
boulevard Richard-Lenoir in the shade of the plane trees, when I heard a distinct
ploop,
and saw an enormous green-gray puddle spread across his biceps.

I burst out laughing—no polite pause, no nod of sympathy. It’s a reflex. I once pulled a radio alarm clock down on a boyfriend’s
head in the middle of the night, like the anvil in a Bugs Bunny cartoon. As soon as I saw he wasn’t bleeding, the hysterics
began—giant tears of laughter rolling down my face. That’s what I’m like in a certain kind of crisis. Once the fear of concussion
is past, there’s just no stopping me.

“Ah,
merde,
” said Gwendal, looking up at the tree. “I see you!” he shouted, shaking a finger toward the sky, as if he knew the pigeon
personally. “It’s a vendetta,” he whispered. “Like the Corsican Mafia. They
know
me.” There are so many people in this world who can’t laugh at themselves; even fewer who can stomach a girl they are still
trying to impress laughing very much in their general direction. I’ve dated men… this would have ruined their entire day.
We would have had to go straight home to change, or straight to a pharmacy to buy some Handi Wipes. There might have been
a half-hour tirade on the immediate extermination of all rats-of-the-skies. Gwendal just looked at me, still doubled over
on the sidewalk, with a sheepish grin. We went to the café across the street, he washed the sleeve of his shirt in the bathroom
sink and let it dry in the Parisian sunshine, and we continued on with our walk.

BOOK: Lunch in Paris
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