Showing posts with label Langudoc-Roussillon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Langudoc-Roussillon. Show all posts

March 4, 2017

My Favorite French Instagram Accounts

A post shared by Doorways Of Paris (@doorwaysofparis) on
I've always had a thing for doors.


A post shared by Photography tourism and wines (@gaylord_burguiere) on
His photos always make me long for the Languedoc. And for the wine!


A beekeeper and his beagle on the rooftops of Paris. Need I say more?


Love the duo behind the brilliant magazine, L'Instant Parisien.


 People who are passionate about cheese are some of my favorite people!


A post shared by French Words (@frenchwords) on
I've learned some very valuable French words and expressions from this account.



Molly shares her delicious discoveries while wandering around Paris.


How can you not help but love this face?


These are just a few of the many that I follow and love.
Some other favorites include 52 Martinis, David Lebovitz, Carina Okula, At Home in NormandieMartin Boire et Manger (yum!), Lou in Paris, Rosa Jackson, Prêt à Voyager, Lina Caschetto and Plum Lyon.

I would love to hear about your favorite France focused accounts. It's always fun to discover someone new!



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November 19, 2016

Down South

Vineyards in November

We just returned from 2 weeks in the Languedoc, and let me tell you, our trip couldn't have come at a better time. The day before we left I was grumpy and frustrated with Paris.

Yes, it happens.

In a single day, just two days before we left, I had an unpleasant interaction with a pharmacist, was almost run over by a scooter in a crosswalk just 10 minutes later (and I had the light!), and then the icing on the cake was having to deal with some last minute, ridiculous and time consuming issues at our bank.

It felt like time to get the hell out of Dodge for a bit.

Le Languedoc

Autumn is our favorite time in the Minervois. The intense heat of the summer has broken, yet it is still warm and usually sunny. It's red wine weather, and those intense reds they make down there are perfect with rich, cooler weather dishes like magret de canard, pipérade and cassoulet.

And the colors! If you've never seen vineyards in the autumn, I highly recommend making a trip to see them.

The magret de canard toss

One sunny day I went with my friend, Gee, to Narbonne for a bit of shopping and lunch in les Halles. She had told me about one of the restaurants in the covered market, Chez Bebelle, where the chef/owner calls out the meat orders to the neighboring purveyors over a megaphone. A few minutes later the various butchers shout back at him and toss the order to him across the market. Which he always catches.

Now this I wanted to see!

Narbonne

It was a simple, delicious menu with grilled meat, fries, salad and tomato/garlic bread. All washed down with a glass of local red. I had the grilled duck breast and couldn't have been happier. Especially for €13.

Vineyards in November

Other than seeing friends, we didn't plan much. I cooked, took walks in the garrigue, had coffee with friends and enjoyed catching up with our neighbors. It was a relaxing 2 weeks.

Our village is the kind of place where you head out to run two simple errands - return a can opener to a neighbor and go to the café for 10 minutes to use their wi-fi so you can check your email and the weather - and get home almost two and a half hours later because you spent 45 minutes chatting with the neighbors and then got to the bar to find the mayor, who kindly offers you a drink, which you can't just turn down.

Time moves at a different pace in the south of France.

Vineyards in November

After living in the south for almost 9 years before moving north, people often ask me which I prefer: the south of France or Paris?

That's an impossible question to answer because the two places couldn't be more different. Our village in the Languedoc* has a population of less than 400 and our corner of the 15ème in Paris probably boasts five times that many people. And I mean the actual corner where our apartment is located.

Down south it is calm and quiet, the village is surrounded by vineyards and olive trees, a glass of local Minervois AOC wine will set you back €1.30, most of the restaurants serve only French food or pizza and, sadly, leave a lot to be desired, life is organized around opening hours and a car is required for practically every little errand, especially bureaucratic ones.

In Paris it is calm and quiet between 3-4 a.m. (sometimes), our apartment building is surrounded by cafés, a bakery, a butcher and has a really nice view, a glass of wine will set you back €4-8, the restaurant choices are very good and varied, we can go grocery shopping on Sunday and even have groceries delivered to our apartment, and driving is a nightmare and to be avoided at all costs.

There's just no comparison. They are both wonderful and frustrating in their own way.

Narbonne






*it feels very weird to say that we were at our house in l'Occitanie, instead of the Languedoc-Roussillon. It's definitely going to take a while to get used to that.






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March 22, 2013

Returning to the Languedoc

Blue shutters

Our trip down to the Languedoc earlier this month, admittedly, filled us with a mild sense of dread.

When we moved over a year ago, we were feeling disheartened by many aspects of life there. That, combined with how smoothly we transitioned into a new life in Normandy, left us thinking that we never wanted to return.

But return we did. Our house needed to be cleaned up to get ready to sell and we really wanted to see our friends, the one remnant of our former life that we truly missed.

Cherry blossoms. #Languedoc

Next to the Canal Du Midi. #languedoc

The sense of dread disappeared the minute we drove into the village and parked our car. Our neighbor was out walking her dog, with two of the village cats trailing behind. She rushed over to give us the requisite bisous and welcomed us back. I think it was just what we needed.
Returning felt good. And it felt right.

That, combined with the fact that our friends had turned on the heating in our house that morning, meant that we were able to walk in, get the cat and the dog settled, and start making dinner. It was like we had never left.

Carcassonne Ramparts

Beautiful blue skies, but freezing cold wind. Typical #Languedoc winter weather. Brrrr!!!!

Our time in the Languedoc couldn't have been better (other than the weather).
Two and a half weeks of walking in the vineyards, visiting our old haunts, discovering new places and being wined and dined by good friends.

Now we have two places in France to call home.


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November 6, 2011

Saying Au Revoir

Port en Bessin

I've been sitting here trying to think of either a philosophical way or a funny/witty way to begin this post and am failing miserably.
So I'm just going to say it: We're moving.

In a few weeks the title of this blog will no longer be "Chez Loulou - A Taste of Life in the South of France."


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September 8, 2011

La Fête du Fromage - Le Treillou

Le Treillou

There was a dearth of cheese chez nous this July and August.

Other than driving back and forth to work and making short trips to town to buy groceries, I didn't leave the village. Not even to go to the market!

Last week I was forced to leave my little Minevois bubble and head to Béziers (for reasons I'd rather not discuss for the time being), however, it did offer me the chance to stop by les Halles in the hopes that there would be something new at the Fromagerie. Success!
And on the way home I stopped at une épicerie fine that recently opened in the area to buy some olives and, lo and behold, I discovered that they also sell cheese!

So, not such a terrible day after all.


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August 22, 2011

Restaurant M'11

Vin et soleil

Squid

If you ever find yourself in Carcassonne and either need an escape from the crush of tourists in la Cité or just can't face another overpriced, mediocre restaurant, I suggest you hop in your car and head 15 minutes southeast to the tiny village of Monze.

There you'll find Restaurant M'11, an unpretentious, charming little place that offers a menu of regional dishes done with panache.

Vente et Dégustation
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January 27, 2011

Photo du Jour - So Many Choices

Bio Wine Fair

An organic wine fair, the 18th annual Millésime Bio, kicked off In Montpellier on Monday, offering an impressive selection of wines from 12 different countries. I spotted producers from France (of course!), Spain, Egypt, Italy, Hungary, Austria, the US, Germany and Greece.
While making the rounds, the things that impressed me the most were the passion and the knowledge of the producers and the sophistication of their wines.

Of course we didn't have a chance to taste them all in just one day, so here are a few of the highlights: 
Erbaceo white wine and Selvato red from Puglia
The wines of Domaine Allegria and Château Pech Redon from the Languedoc-Roussillon
The Rieslings from the Domaine Bernhard Reibel in Alsace
A Saumur Blanc from the Domaine du Pas Saint Martin in the Loire Pin It