My last meal in France. I got up this morning and took the metro to a familiar neighborhood for breakfast. Somehow I'd never made it to Eric Kayser before, and I was determined to see if their croissants and pastries were all that.
I arrived around 9ish and sat down with a croissant, pain au chocolat and a canelé. The croissant was pretty good, but nothing really inspiring like what I had at Blé Sucré yesterday. The canelé tasted alright, but was kinda soggy...
But the real reason I'm here is actually across the street... Androuet has a shop here, and I continued to hang out in Maison Kayser after finishing my pastries, waiting for the cheese shop to open. They finally did at 9:40am - only 10 mins after the official opening time. I was their first customer of the day.
I was in heaven the second I walked in. They weren't 100% ready, but I already spotted most of the stuff I wanted to bring back home. I took the medium-sized Vacherin-Mont d'Or (for some reason the shop called it "grand modèle"), the Epoisses from Gaugry, the 30-month Comté, the 24-month Mimolette Extra Vieille, and finally the Cabri Ariégois. I asked for them to be packed sous vide, and packed them into my suitcase. Hopefully they'll be ripe in a week's time...
I checked-in my very full suitcase, filled with jars of jam and unpasteurized soft cheese... coming in just under 29kg. With my bag of Pierre Hermé macarons in hand, I boarded my flight and headed home.
Peech,
ReplyDeleteDo you know if the Mont D'or should be in a shade of brown? So far I've seen whitish or orangy rinds. The ones at Whole Foods are brown so I'm wondering if it's past it's time.
PS, LOVE your blog =)
Thanks
Mmm... I don't remember ever seeing brown Mont d'Ors... white or light gray usually.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for the compliment!