--- In [email protected], "curtisdeltablues"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> "It's been a rainy day in the south of France. The level
> of the river outside my window has risen two meters since
> morning. But the rain has stopped and the stars have come
> out and I'm about to go out for a walk with my best friend,
> and then take her to dinner. Life is good."
> 
> What is a typical dinner for you there Turq.  To give it 
> relevance to the group please use as our topic: "What Buddha 
> would eat in the South of France!" Spare no adjectives please, 
> I love food.

Damn you. 

Do you know the film "City Of Angels?" (Excellent film,
if you don't...a remake that defies the Law Of Remakes,
the one that says they can't be as good as the original.)
There is a scene in that film when Seth (not to spoil
too much, but Nicolas Cage, as the angel who has fallen
in love with a human, played by Meg Ryan at her most
radiant) talks about how he loves Hemingway's "A Movable
Feast." To Seth, who has no human senses, the magic of
Hemingway was that he never failed to describe how things
*tasted* and *felt*.

Well, I don't have Hemingway's ability. Sigh. We went to
the best local restaurant and had the 21 Euro menu. For 
both of us it was a salad garnished with croustillants
filled with a famous local chevre. She had the fish, a
lovely sampling of the freshest fish one can get in the 
area. Me, I had slices of duck breast with mireilles 
and ligonberries, followed by the house special, the
Crème Brulé To Die For.

The wine was a local favorite, a 2000 Domaine de Baubiac
AOC. More than sufficient. We can buy it locally for 3 
Euros a bottle, but I "blind tested" my oenophile brother 
when he was here visiting, and without knowing anything 
about what it was he was testing, he said that it should 
sell for at least 30 bucks a bottle in the US.

Just another normal meal along the Buddhist Way...and
still nary a poisonous mushroom in sight...




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