Showing posts with label Normandy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Normandy. Show all posts

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Taking in the Breath of Spring

Parler Paris Nouvellettre®
Your taste of life in Paris and France
ParlerParis.com
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Paris, France

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Dear Parler Paris Reader,

The House Hunters filming that took place this past weekend in Normandy ended at the foot of the Eiffel Tower early this morning with the scene that will be edited into the beginning of the program -- the moment we all first meet and discuss the couple's wish list for the perfect home in Normandy to house their brood of six children. The weather was gloriously fresh with a bright sun and blue skies. The trees along the Champs de Mars seemed about to burst with baby green leaves as we could feel Spring take hold after this long, gray and rather dismal winter.

The home we filmed on Monday in Normandy was the third of those from which they will have to choose -- all designed to keep you guessing throughout the program as to which of them all they will settle on and settle into. This last one was a sprawling old stone farmhouse close to the town of Argentan that had been completely renovated to perfection by an artist and his wife, leaving not one single detail to question. With five bedrooms, a large yard and a ton of special features, it was easy to how they might want move right in -- except that it was an extra hour's drive from Paris and miles from the nearest school.

Each home they visited had its 'pluses and minuses' -- things one must trade off for others. This is an age-old dilemma, particularly here in France, where it's near to impossible to achieve perfection and where one must always expect to NOT "have your cake and eat it, too." (In French, the equivalent expression is "vouloir le beurre et l'argent du beurre," meaning literally "wanting the butter and the money for the butter.")

All throughout the show, you will see there will be much conversation about just this and like an Agatha Christie mystery, the focus will be on the one who is NOT the murderer, to guarantee the ending will be a big surprise. You will not coax the outcome of the show from me -- so you will just have to have patience until it airs in a few months time.

Last night Kathleen Spivack read her luscious thought-provoking poetry to a devoted group of afficionados at the Village Voice Bookshop. Bookshop owner, Odile Hellier, made a beautiful introduction and then Kathleen devoted much of her opening to memorializing recently passed author, Hazel Rowley. She then proceeded to read from "A History of Yearning," a poem titled "Monet's Path." I couldn't help but think of my recent time in Normandy, having passed by train through Vernon, the town nearest Giverny, Claude Monet's famous and well-visited home and garden:

"You walk into the painting,
you walk down the path
through the bleached grass toward the village:
the cicadas are singing;
you are going someplace
ordinary."

Before leaving the Village Voice, I purchased a copy of each author's latest work and today, began taking in their beautiful words as I did the breath of Spring in Paris. Yes, it has arrived.

A la prochaine...

Adrian Leeds
Editor, Parler Paris

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P.S.Experience a taste of Provence in Paris! Take advantage of a last minute special price offer for a luxurious stay at "Le Provençal" in Le Marais!...up to six nights for 109€ per night or seven nights or more for 99€ per night between March 25th and April 14th! Never before has it ever been such a bargain during the glorious spring season (and will likely never be again)! No hotel room can compare. Visit Le Provençal and reserve now!

P.P.S. For those who'd like to have a look at the photos from Saturday's Parler Parlor French-English Conversation Group 13th Anniversary Party, click here:parlerparlor.com/events.html

Monday, March 14, 2011

From the Witch's House to the School House and Back


A tasty treat in the "witch's house"

Parler Paris Nouvellettre®
Your taste of life in Paris and France
ParlerParis.com
Monday, March 14, 2011
Paris, France

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Dear Parler Paris Reader,

Saturday midday, we lit the candles on the cake, sang “Joyeuse Anniversaire” in both French and English, blew them out, passed around the pieces of cake and filled the glasses with cider to celebrate the 13th anniversary of the French-English conversation group called “Parler Parlor.”

It's hard to believe that was a 'mere' 13 years ago when I met Marie-Elisabeth Crochard, then Director of Berlitz Champs-Elysées, and together we decided to start the conversation group. Internet was in its infancy then, but when purchasing the domain name “www.parlerparlor.com” I saw that “www.parlerparis.com” was also available, so I 'snatched it up.' That's how Parler Paris began – as the communiqué for the conversation group. Funny how things just seem to work out, as if they were just 'meant to be' that way.

After eating too much cake, welcoming a new guest to “Le Saint-Tropez" apartment (Le Saint-Tropez) and uncovering the geranium pots from their winter protective covers, I scurried off to the Gare Saint-Lazare to catch a train to Normandy to have dinner with chef and author Susan Herrmann in advance of filming a new House Hunters International episode the next few days.

I hadn't been to Normandy in a while – too long. It's so easy and fast, too. I purchased a ticket at a machine, hopped on the train that was filled to the brim and within a little more than an hour of a smooth, quiet ride, stepped out into the glorious Normandy countryside. Susan's 15th-century tutor home is in Louviers, a small town 100 kilometers from Paris built on a series of canals with an interesting history.

Susan's house is a tutor style 15th-century sprawling home which was once a convent directly across the street from the gothic Eglise Notre-Dame (13th-century). We've always joked that it was the witch's house – the GOOD witch...only to discover that “in 1642, the nuns of Louviers claimed to have been possessed by the devil, giving lurid evidence during a witchcraft trial that echoed the events at Loudun 10 years ago.” (www.independent.co.uk)

Susan whipped up a scrumptious sumptuous dinner of breast of duck on a bed of quinoa and sauteed okra followed by a “caramelized apple cake” made from Normandy apples (of course) that I topped with rich Normandy cream and pledged to diet the next day. She is so at home and fluid in her vast and well-equipped kitchen that I didn't even notice how effortlessly she constructed a complicated meal within minutes. By 10:30 p.m. with a full belly I crashed in one of the many rooms where one can sleep with a view on the church.

Sunday the filming began at a house in a nearby town that had once been a schoolhouse dating back to 1883. The family of six children with their parents filed out of a van and introduced themselves one by one, the children aged 10 months to 13 years -- four girls and two boys. One was more beautiful and polite than the next. The film crew arrived at the same time, consisting of three Englishmen – a director, cameraman and sound engineer. The cameraman was the same as on a previous House Hunters filming and upon realizing it gave me a big hug.

For the next few hours we filmed the family visiting the four-bedroom house with it's spacious newly renovated rooms and lovely large backyard. Lunch of

Normandy cheeses, “charcuterie” and fresh baguette was brought in for all to eat before moving on to film the family visiting the 'witch's' house on rue Tatin in Louviers. There we played a game with the kids to see if they could count all the rooms that could be used as bedrooms on as many as five levels within the sprawling old house. There were eight, although three are actively used, two are used as offices, one is a guest room and the last two are utility rooms. The best part of the house is, naturally, the kitchen, which every cook would dream of. It's a room you gravitate to and never want to leave.

Today the morning is misty in Argentan, where we will be filming a third house -- about two hours drive from Louviers not far from Caen. When all is done for the day I'll get on a train headed for home in Gay Paree to prepare for more filming on Wednesday with the family to discuss which house they liked best and why. So...stay tuned!

A la prochaine...

Adrian Leeds
Editor, Parler Paris
(in Normandy)

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P.S. Friday I visited with one of our best lenders to discuss a mortgage for the Nice apartment I am in the process of purchasing. The loan will be partially based on the property and another part on an “equity release” of my existing properties. If you are interested in learning more about how one property can generate more in your investment portfolio, visit French Property Loan for more information or contact John Rule atloan@adrianleeds.com who will assist you – this service is free of charge!

Thursday, March 10, 2011

In Disguise for House Hunting in Normandy


A Frenchman in Costume at the Carnival of Venice
Photo by Linda Hervieux

Parler Paris Nouvellettre®
Your taste of life in Paris and France
ParlerParis.com
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Paris, France


Dear Parler Paris Reader,

While we were doing 'improv' at "Parler Paris Après Midi," photos from various carnivals around the world came floating into my email box. It made me jealous to not be participating...then I remembered that Carnivale in Nice was just a couple of weeks ago and at least I didn't miss that.

My daughter was in the French Quarter of New Orleans going from Mardi Gras parade to Mardi Gras parade, dressed as a ballerina and taking lots of photos for her portfolio of work as well as her portfolio of life. Paris-based journalist, Linda Hervieux, was doing the same in Venice taking portraits of Venetian costumers, only to discover most of them were French!

Meanwhile, "Après Midi" was an adventure, as for the first time we had a speaker make a presentation. It had been planned for months for illustrious author and poet Kathleen Spivak to talk about "How to Write Well and Get Published" -- only to learn that she was headed to the doctor with a viral infection and unable to be with us.

Thanks to Johnnys-on-the-Spot Kristin Shannon and Antonio Meza of PSI Communications, we still managed to have a fun-filled afternoon involving improvisational play called "Step inside your story: improv, creativity, and getting your story across..."

We started off with the usual mingling and networking before making a few announcements and turning the floor over to Antonio and Kristin. All eyes were turned to them as they gave us an introduction as to what and how we would be 'creating our own stories' and then bringing them together in one fun-filled improv session.

The room was divided into three groups. One person from each group was designated as the "white canvas" on which we would paint a character and a story. That person took on a new persona, the one we had all created for her (it turned out to be all women).

Then, those three new personages came together in one scene, improv acted with Antonio as the "partner" character -- a man with whom all three women had some connection.

Our characters were a 12-year-old girl from Crete (Julie Vetter from Paris), a divorcée from Paris, Texas with a bouffant hair style and red cowboy boots named Barbara (Pauline Solnik from Houston) and a married woman who makes lace garters, but moonlights at the Crazy Horse Saloon and who has affairs with younger men named Angelique (Catherine Jallian).

We laughed until it hurt! If you're sorry you missed it, then no worries...they will be back Kristin and Antonio will be back next month with "How to design your own Body-Language Business Card" -- so be sure to come and see for yourself how much fun and entertainment one can have for just the price of a coffee. (To see the photos and read more about it, visit parlerparis/apresmidi and plan on coming next time.)

Thanks to all of your help, but especially to American-born Normandy chef and author of cookbooks extraordinaire, Susan Herrmann, we are set to film another House Hunters International in Normandy this weekend. I'm not at liberty to divulge too much, but the show will involve an American couple settling in Normandy with a large family, seeking a large home that will accommodate many children for the price of a studio apartment in Paris!

We'll be filming for two days in the glorious countryside of the region where American soldiers landed that fateful day in June, 1944 (D-Day) and where cattle-breeding is its most important industry, supplying us with some of the finest dairy products you will have ever tasted. Normandy is also well known for its apple growing and products such as Calvados, cider and of course, "Tarte Tatin."

Ms. Herrmann not only lives at number one rue Tatin, but is also makes the best Tarte Tatin I've ever eaten, of which I am hoping to have a taste this coming weekend. What could be more divine than having a brief séjour with an accomplished chef making dinner from such delicacies as "crème fraîche," Normandy apples and cheeses such as "Camembert" and "Livarot?"

Are you jealous? You should be...but luckily for you, Ms. Herrmann provides lots of opportunities for individuals to take her courses and sample her creative talents. Visit her site for more information:onruetatin.com and stay tuned for Monday's Nouvellettre® when you'll hear more about our weekend hunting houses in Normandy!

A la prochaine...

Adrian Leeds
Editor, Parler Paris
(in Normandy)

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P.S. Don't miss Saturday's 13th Anniversary Celebration at the Parler Parlor French-English Conversation Group! Have cake and eat it, too when you take advantage of special discounts that day. Visit parlerparlor.com for more information!