Today it was up and atom early as I was meeting Kate so we could have a last catch up before she left for the UK for two weeks, I will be gone when she gets back. I was only meeting her at 9am, but that is early here and I had to get there.
Of course, I was running late, so rushed out the door with wet hair and no camera!!
When I got to the metro, it was packed, I had managed to find "peak hour". In Paris, when the train is full, people run at the open doors and squish themselves in. It is crazy. You find yourself squashed like a sardine, face to face and god knows what else, with people you don't know!! Men push you out of the way to get in first. Madness. Luckily, the people allow you to get off when you need to ... there is a swivel of heads at each stop to see if anyone is struggling through the crowd to get off. It was like that until I got onto line 2. I was very glad to get out of there.

Kate was waiting for me at the metro stop, she knows my sense of direction is like a bat with no radar. We walked to her apartment, which is lovely. Light decor, wooden floorboards, big kitchen and nice comfy couches and a huge bathroom. We had coffee and chatted about our interest in alternative health therapies. Kate wants to work in Herbology and I am interested in preventative health, vitamins and minerals and non-harmful products in your home as well as personal care. I think we could have talked all day, but Kate was starving as she hadn't had breakfast, but I had bolted down some cereal before I left because I wasn't sure what we were doing.
We went to a place not far from the apartment that looked okay, Kate said the coffee was good. I ordered a coffee and pain au chocolate and Kate the basic breakfast, which consisted of a baguette, jam, croissant and crepe. For some reason they bought me a hot chocolate too, we tried to tell them, but in the end realised it is easier to just drink what you get ... although I was needing the caffeine .... I kept yawning like a buffalo. I have been sleeping strange hours while here and it was taking it's toll.
After that, we wandered around the shops for a while, there was the most beautiful pair of earrings in one shop, but they were 195euros and, for costume jewellery, we thought it was a bit expensive. The lady was lovely though and had us trying all of them on. Unfortunately, she didn't make a sale!
Then I had to go as I was meeting Monique at Rose Bakery in Montemartre, from there we were off to Les Halles where all the commercial cookware and kitchenware is!!
I got there at 12:30pm and went inside to see if Monique was there, and waited for a while before I realised that I was meeting Monique at 1:30pm not 12:30pm - will I ever learn? What a slow. I wandered around in the rain for a while, window shopping and wasting time. I did find one shop that was filled with beautiful things and bought just a couple.
I spent a little time outside of Rose's, to see how many people went in and out. It is very popular and has been there for a while, it was set up by English lady, Rose Carrarini, in 2002. It is very popular and the cuisine quite different from what is available in French Bakeries. The bakery uses organic produce and ecologically sustainable & biodegradable products. There are also a wonderful selection of teas and organic grocery items for sale, including Green & Black's organic chocolate, which is divine. Vegemite was on the shelf too.
When Monique and I went in there wasn't a lot left on the menu, so I ordered the broccoli and tomato tart with salad and Monique the tart and celeriac & cepe soup. The staff were lovely and bought some bread with butter (a treat as the French don't serve bread with butter)! I also had a coffee and Monique a tea. The tart was excellent, the salads were a little bland - I had cous cous & potato - I think they could have used a little dressing, but I am a dressing freak!!
Afterwards we hopped on a bus to Les Halles, we were able to sit on it all the way, no changes, which was nice. Firstly we checked out a few shops looking for a shower curtain for Monique, but there were none suitable, she would like one like we have in Australia.
Then it was off to the kitchen shops. The first one was a rustic, old-style place, E. Dehillerin, established in 1820, that Monique said is very popular with tourists, particularly Americans.
It was great to wander around and see what was available. I made a list of everything I wanted so I could check to see if it was available from Australia, if not, I will make the trip back there and get it. I think I will have to post these items home as the luggage allowance is well and truly blown.
We stopped past two other shops, which had similar things. I was particularly interested in trying to find comfortable shoes to wear when cooking all day. Students and chefs at Le Cordon Bleu wear them and I am sure they do at home too. I found some in the correct style, but they were only in white, not the best colour for moi. I will keep searching. I am sure Leeanne (fabulous Australian translator) can tell me where to get them from.
Then we were heading for home ..... or so I thought. On the way, we found a couple of lovely shops, including a divine shoe store
58M ... ooh la la! The shoes were gorgeous and the prices were high. A pair of boots ... 700euros!! Mind you they were designer, Marc Jacobs I think? I did manage to find a pair of clogs that weren't expensive and the last pair was my size! Also a pair of Melissa Shoes that are a gift for someone back home. Monique found a pair of flat, gray boots for her.

We stopped into
Comptoir de le Gastronomie, a gourmet food store that has ham on the bone for sale, hard to get here and Monique, Peter and Guillaume love it! In Geraldton we can buy it from Rigter's Supermarket every day!! It sells for about $47.20 a kilo here ... as it is not common and I think, hard to come by.
Monique noticed they had some black truffles in and asked if we could check how much a small one was, they were 1450euros/kg, the one we picked out was 21.75euros (approx $36.00), much less than I thought it would be, so we bought it! First time I've ever seen a truffle ... we had it with foie gras when we got home, delicious. It wasn't as strongly flavoured as I thought it would be and my brother wasn't convinced that the quality was that good. I made a pasta with it the next night and we couldn't taste it and the aroma wasn't there, compared with the truffle oil Monique has in the cupboard! Perhaps I will just have to buy one from Manjimup, WA and see what that one is like ... or stick to the truffle oil!
