Reviewing the
Republican Guard from Fouquet’s Glassed-in Terrace (Paris) by Savvy Mom Ruth
Paget
When I first moved to France, I lived outside of Nantes, the capital of Brittany, with my husband’s family. After my honeymoon, I began looking for a job and learned how to do French-language cover letters (handwritten) and resumes.
I
was finally invited in to do skills testing and do interviews in Paris after
six months of looking for a job. After
discovering that the French keyboard is different from the English one for
skills testing, I walked down Avenue George V to assuage my wounds.
I
knew I was going to have to practice typing for a few hours a day to get my
French typing speed increased to the same speed as my English one.
I
sat in the glassed-in terrace at Fouquet’s and ordered a French grilled cheese
sandwich, which comes with ham called a croque monsieur – “die mister”
sandwich. They are delicious, but you
cannot eat too many.
If
you add an over-easy egg to a croque monsieur sandwich and béchamel sauce, you
get a “croque madame” sandwich – “die lady” sandwich. These are delicious, too, but you cannot eat
too many either.
Both
of these sandwiches feature bread that has been fried on both sides with butter
giving the sandwich a crunchy bite despite béchamel sauce on the croque madame,
for example.
As
I was eating, I heard a rhythmic “clip, clop” outside and turned my head around
to see the mounted Garde Républicaine with horses and soldiers dressed in black
and red uniforms go by.
The
mounted horsemen surrounded the Socialist President of France François
Mitterand and Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, who rode in a gold
and black carriage down Avenue George V to the Champs-Elysées.
From
my privileged seat on Fouquet’s glassed-in terrace, I felt as if I were being
personally welcomed to France by President Mitterand as I ate a “croque monsieur”
sandwich and drank an Orangina, a lightly carbonated French orange soda.
I
liked Fouquet’s and ordered a café crème, not a cappuccino, but a coffee with
about 1/3 cup of warm cream added to it. The French do not really want to admit
that they make this item, because it is so fattening.
I
ate food like this in Paris during the winter at bistros, when it rains and is
generally crappy weather to warm me up for Métro rides home to the 10th
arrondisement when I finally found a job.
(The French have great umbrellas due to their winter rainstorms; most
will not bend in the wind.)
By
Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Click here for: Ruth Paget's Amazon Books
Click here for: Ruth Paget's Amazon Books
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