French Women for All Seasons [NOOK Book]

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Overview

From the author of French Women Don't Get Fat, the #1 National Bestseller, comes an essential guide to the art of joyful living—in moderation, in season, and, above all, with pleasure.

 

Together with a bounty of new dining ideas and menus, Mireille Guiliano offers us fresh, cunning tips on style, grooming, and entertaining. Here are four seasons' worth of strategies for shopping, cooking, and exercising, as well as some pointers for looking effortlessly chic. Taking us from her childhood in Alsace-Lorraine to her summers in Provence and her busy life in New York and Paris, this wise and witty book shows how anyone...

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Overview

From the author of French Women Don't Get Fat, the #1 National Bestseller, comes an essential guide to the art of joyful living—in moderation, in season, and, above all, with pleasure.

 

Together with a bounty of new dining ideas and menus, Mireille Guiliano offers us fresh, cunning tips on style, grooming, and entertaining. Here are four seasons' worth of strategies for shopping, cooking, and exercising, as well as some pointers for looking effortlessly chic. Taking us from her childhood in Alsace-Lorraine to her summers in Provence and her busy life in New York and Paris, this wise and witty book shows how anyone anywhere can develop a healthy, holistic lifestyle.




From the Trade Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780307265982
  • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
  • Publication date: 10/31/2006
  • Sold by: Random House
  • Format: eBook
  • Sales rank: 70,823
  • File size: 633 KB

Meet the Author

Mireille Guiliano
Mireille Guiliano

  Mireille Guiliano is the internationally best-selling author of French Women Don't Get Fat (2004) ands its companion French Women for All Seasons (2006), which have appeared in thirty-seven and twenty-three languages respectively.  She is also a pioneer in business as a longtime senior executive at the world's largest luxury goods company, LVMH Moët-Hennessy—Louis Vuitton, where among other things she brought trendsetting marketing innovation to Champagne Veuve Clicquot.  She has written widely on food, wine, travel, and lifestyle for a range of international publications.




From the Trade Paperback edition.

Read an Excerpt

Pears with Chocolate and Pepper
Serves 4

The pear is one of nature's most remarkable inventions; its versatility is second to none. What other fruit could wed so perfectly with chocolate one minute, blue cheese the next?

Zest of 1 orange
2/3 cup sugar
4 Bosc pears
2/3 cup heavy cream
4 ounces dark chocolate, coarsely chopped
1 tablespoon unsalted butter, cut in small pieces
Freshly ground pepper

1. Bring 1 quart water, the orange zest, and the sugar to a boil. Peel and core the pears, keeping them whole by cutting the core out from the bottom, and put them in the boiling syrup over low heat for 20 minutes. Place each pear on a dessert dish and let cool.

2. Bring the cream to a boil, then pour in the chocolate and stir to melt it. Whisk in the butter piece by piece. Pour the sauce over the pears and season with pepper to taste. Serve immediately.

N.B. Pepper is surprising with dessert. It enhances the flavor of fresh fruit. In my first book, I included a pineapple dessert. You can also use pepper with strawberries.




Ouverture



“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” Thus Charles Dickens began his Tale of Two Cities a century and a half ago. The cities he imagined were Paris and London. The countries he was contrasting were revolutionary France and late-eighteenth-century England. Two opposing worlds, two points of view. And two divergent destinies. When I wrote French Women Don’t Get Fat, I had in mind two disparate worlds of eating: the French and the American. Also, to a lesser extent, two cities, Paris and New York. What I did not realize at the time was that I was in fact writing a tale of two global cultures increasingly without borders. For better and worse, where you live no longer dictates how you eat. It’s up to you.



Even in our ever more complex world, it is still possible to have our cake and eat it too, to enjoy our days to the fullest in many ways while embracing a time-tested, back-to-basics approach to life–one filled with quality, sensitivity, seasonal foods, and pleasure. I don’t want to live in the past, but I do want to learn from it, and I believe that the culture of moderation, painstaking attention to taste, and healthy eating and living that I absorbed growing up in France can be adapted to today’s world and pursued just about anywhere. This is not to say I don’t understand or appreciate firsthand the challenges women these days face: the pressures of too much to do in too little time, of mega portions and industrially produced food often eaten on the run.



For a long time, this clash of cultural and lifestyle perspectives and outcomes took shape in my mind as a contrast between on the one hand fundamental elements of French culture and on the other behaviors I learned in America. But with the appearance of French Women Don’t Get Fat in language after language, I have come to understand that what I thought of as a national divide is really only an emblem for a conflict of two world orders. While I certainly don’t think I have all the solutions to this conflict, or any highly specialized expertise–I try not to take myself too seriously–I still have more experiences and secrets (and many more recipes and weekly menus) to share that will help people enjoy a better quality of life–and almost certainly lose weight.



Last fall a French reporter followed me through the Union Square Greenmarket in New York, where we encountered a class of eight-year-olds with their teacher. The kids were participating in a program called Spoons Across America, a not-for-profit organization dedicated to educating children, teachers, and families about the benefits of healthy eating and the value of supporting local farmers and sharing meals around the family table. As it was fall, apples of many varieties were abundantly available. But when the reporter, half kidding, picked one up and asked a little boy what it was, the child drew a blank. Forget the variety; he did not know it was an apple. This city kid had apparently never seen one in real life. It gives one pause. I would bet, though, that he could recognize the packaged apple pie at the McDonald’s just opposite the greenmarket.



The world where I grew up–and my experience of apples–in Alsace-Lorraine could not have been farther from this little boy’s in New York City. As I recall it, all our neighbors had at least one fruit tree, and we had numerous apple trees in our garden. Come apple-picking time, my job was to place the different varieties we grew into little flat crates called cagettes, which we put into the cold cellar for winter storage–a centuries-old practice now mostly gone. What sweet and glorious aromas filled that cellar when I deposited all those baskets! (Tellingly, in French the word for smell, sentir, also means feel.) Today I recall the apple smell even more powerfully than the old footage of that autumn ritual I carry around in my head. And, of course, the harvest meant my mother would once again make an apple pie, une tarte aux pommes alsacienne.



In our garden we also had bushes of groseilles, tart red currants that are a regional specialty. My mother and I loved to make pies with these tiny berries. The season for red currants is short, and we quickly made jam (confiture) or jelly (gelée) or pies, and sometimes a sauce (coulis). And oh, how we looked forward to this once-a-year treat, which somehow exemplifies for me the French woman’s psychological pleasure in food. It is the anticipation and joy that we gain from a pleasure we cannot take for granted and know we will soon lose. Tasting such seasonal bounty heightens our awareness of what we put into our mouths and contrasts with routine, mindless eating that provides little pleasure and often unwanted pounds.


From the Hardcover edition.

Customer Reviews

Average Rating 4
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Sort by: Showing 1 – 11 of 10 Customer Reviews
  • Anonymous

    Posted February 14, 2007

    A delightful change...

    French Women for All Seasons was a very easy read, nice little stories to go along with the great recipies. It is a must read for those who have read French Women Don't Get Fat. I read it in an evening, and really enjoyed the touching stories of Mrs. Guiliano's father, mother, and grand parents. Just a fun little book!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 10, 2007

    Fun and intertaining!

    Loved the book. Not too heavy and had sprinkles of tasty tidbits throughout.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 9, 2007

    Simple Pleasures

    I'm enjoying this book and her first book French Women Don't Get Fat. I've enjoyed reading about her memories and the simple basics of eating the right food. The recipes are wonderful and very easy to prepare. I've always wanted to use more herbs in my cooking and have enjoyed the wonderful meals I've prepared since I purchased the books. I hope book number three will be coming soon.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 9, 2007

    Portion Control revealed

    Mireille does it again - after reading 'French Women Never Get Fat' I was very curious what else she could provide to those of us wanting to drop some weight and change our life style. She really adds the little extras, in this book, that do matter - highly recommended for those who loved her first book. Both of her books are highly recommended for those looking for a new way to view food and lose weight.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 9, 2007

    French Women Continues

    It is not like a diet book. It is more like an autobiography but pleasant and interesting. It has some receipes but not tons. I liked it as a reading book.

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