Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Recommended Posts

Posted

I recently discovered a website that arranges visits to all sorts of small producers, sellers, and crafts people. So far, I have visited Girard Mulot to watch them make macarrons and chocolate covered orange peel. I also met Veronique Mauclerc, unusual as a woman baker and in particular because she uses a 100+ year old, wood fired oven, in an historic building.

Yesterday, I visited the bakery of Arnaud Delmontel, who just won the "best baguette" award (Concours pour la Meilleure Baguette de Paris). You can visit jewelry designers, book binders, etc., not just food makers.

For a small fee, from 5-10€ per person, you spend up to an hour meeting the artisan and watching behind the scenes. (We spent 1.5 hours with Delmontel, who himself was delightful.) Tours are in English and French. It`s called Meeting the French. They also arrange much longer visits and events, and have B&Bs, but I have no experience with those. The short visits are called "company visits" on the English version of the website.

This is a small agency partnered with the Paris tourist office. The French owner and her chief guide are both delightful. I highly recommend this company and their mini-visits for a really different Paris experience.

I have no connection to them, by the way. I found them entirely by chance on the Internet a week ago.

Posted
Thanks for the tip.  So did you take any pics on your visits?

I have lots of photos from every visit. Even some short movies taken with my regular digital camera.

Posted
I recently discovered a website that arranges visits to all sorts of small producers, sellers, and crafts people. So far, I have visited Girard Mulot to watch them make macarrons and chocolate covered orange peel.  I also met Veronique Mauclerc, unusual as a woman baker and in particular because she uses a 100+ year old, wood fired oven, in an historic building.

Yesterday, I visited the bakery of Arnaud Delmontel, who just won the "best baguette" award (Concours pour la Meilleure Baguette de Paris). You can visit jewelry designers, book binders, etc., not just food makers.

For a small fee, from 5-10€ per person, you spend up to an hour meeting the artisan and watching behind the scenes. (We spent 1.5 hours with Delmontel, who himself was delightful.) Tours are in English and French. It`s called Meeting the French. They also arrange much longer visits and events, and have B&Bs, but I have no experience with those. The short visits are called "company visits" on the English version of the website.

This is a small agency partnered with the Paris tourist office. The French owner and her chief guide are both delightful. I highly recommend this company and their mini-visits for a really different Paris experience.

I have no connection to them, by the way. I found them entirely by chance on the Internet a week ago.

Great site, THANKS!!!!

Posted (edited)
Then cough them up!  There's a bunch of us who would love to see them.   :smile:

Thanks for the personal explanation of how to upload images, gfron1, so here they are.

The images in it include the Mauclerc oven and Mme. Mauclerc with me in front of it.

gallery_7277_5474_62407.jpg

gallery_7277_5474_82740.jpg

What the molds for making ganache filled chocolate candies look like at Girard, with the chocolate filling machine behind.

gallery_7277_5474_3617.jpg

M. Delmontel himself talking with some of the group visiting; guide Florence and the Delmontel pastry chef along side the machine that can mix and knead 50 kilos of dough at a time, bread oven on the left.

gallery_7277_5474_17818.jpg

gallery_7277_5474_48757.jpg

Putting the passionfruit puree into the basil-flavored macarron at Mulot; covering orange peel with chocolate at Mulot;

gallery_7277_5474_59985.jpg

gallery_7277_5474_63989.jpg

Edited by RandyB (log)
Posted

Here you go.

Thanks so much for the info, by the way. I was reading about someone visiting Mulot's workshop, and I was trying to figure out how I could do that if I ever went to France. But thank to you, I now know how!

Posted
Then cough them up!  There's a bunch of us who would love to see them.   :smile:

Thanks for the personal explanation of how to upload images, gfron1, so here they are.

The images in it include the Mauclerc oven and Mme. Mauclerc with me in front of it.

gallery_7277_5474_62407.jpg

gallery_7277_5474_82740.jpg

What the molds for making ganache filled chocolate candies look like at Girard, with the chocolate filling machine behind.

gallery_7277_5474_3617.jpg

M. Delmontel himself talking with some of the group visiting; guide Florence and the Delmontel pastry chef along side the machine that can mix and knead 50 kilos of dough at a time, bread oven on the left.

gallery_7277_5474_17818.jpg

gallery_7277_5474_48757.jpg

Putting the passionfruit puree into the basil-flavored macarron at Mulot; covering orange peel with chocolate at Mulot;

gallery_7277_5474_59985.jpg

gallery_7277_5474_63989.jpg

RandyB:

Thanks for the interesting post. I have had the privilege of visiting a chocoleteer in Lyon and it was eye opening.

Look for a tutorial I posted a few years ago on how to post photos - its simple follow the steps.

Thanks again,

Jmahl

The Philip Mahl Community teaching kitchen is now open. Check it out. "Philip Mahl Memorial Kitchen" on Facebook. Website coming soon.

Posted

looks like beat me too it.

Thanks for the Photos.

Jmahl

The Philip Mahl Community teaching kitchen is now open. Check it out. "Philip Mahl Memorial Kitchen" on Facebook. Website coming soon.

×
×
  • Create New...