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Feb 10th
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Home Vive La Difference

Vive La Différence

Saving Graces

Saving Graces

Whenever I collect English-speaking visitors from Toulon airport, they tend to be subdued in the first part of the journey by the spectacular scenery they are passing through. Later, though, they generally perk up at a roundabout where a sign indicates a turning towards an école bilingue.

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Animal Crackers

Animal CrackersUntil recently I thought that greaseball was an American term of racial abuse. What changed that was the birds. When we lived in the country we saw masses of birds in the garden but hardly ever heard them. Having mo...
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Table Manners

Table MannersSome four centuries ago, the French statesman, the Duc de Sully, observed ‘The English take their pleasures sadly, after the fashion of their country’. Nowhere is the contrast between French and British behaviou...
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The Right Lines

The Right Lines

The British like to think that they invented queuing and that they are the only people who know how to do it properly. While that may once have been true, the claim no longer seems as valid as it may once have been....

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Talking Turkey, with Cutting Comments

Talking Turkey, with Cutting CommentsIf you’re a British ex-pat planning your first large-scale UK-style Christmas dinner you are about to encounter an unexpected problem – one that your American counterparts will already have discovered at Thanksg...
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Video: Robert V. Camuto

Latest Book Reviews by Martin Hills

 

Corkscrewed by Robert V. Camuto

Adventures in the new French wine country

 

Julia Child: My Life in France

If, like me until recently, you had never knowingly heard of Julia Child, it will help to understand that she was, so to speak, America’s answer to Elizabeth David.  It was she who, after the second world war, introduced the dishes and techniques of French cooking to, principally, her countrywomen.  I had been aware of, but never read, her encyclopaedic work Mastering the Art of French Cooking, but could not have told you who had written it (or even that it was an American book).  In fact, Julia Child later parted company from Elizabeth David: while David went on to explore the cuisines of Italy and other Mediterranean countries, Child stuck to that of France but developed her teaching skills into pioneering television cookery programmes decades before they came to clog up our TV channels on a daily basis.

 

Sarah's Midnight Anthology

A year ago I introduced readers of this website to an old friend, Sarah Nock, who had written an insightful  –  and surprisingly funny  –  account of what it is like to suffer from Parkinson’s disease.  (My review of Ponderings on Parkinson’s is still on-site.)  Now she has published another book of a quite different kind: an anthology of verse, but one with a difference.

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