A love letter to Gascony

Written by the current owner of a beautiful manor house for sale with Bliss. To view the property click on this link

Ah, Gascony. The very name is evocative; musketeers, wine, duck fat, Armagnac, rolling hills, medieval villages and, of course, foie gras.

I’m Australian and I’m often asked why I love France, and more specifically the Gers, so much. For the British who live here, the answer tends to be straightforward; the weather is much better and the health care is excellent. However an Australian’s answer might be different.

My reasons for loving Gascony are much more complex.

The landscape to start with, the architecture, the cuisine and produce, the pace of life, the history but above all, the people. Warm, generous, friendly and welcoming.

I have lived here for seven years. In that time, I have always felt embraced by the community even though my French is almost non-existent (sadly, learning languages is not one of my strengths!). The Gersois are very patient; hearing a car horn is a rare occurence. There might be a long queue at the butcher’s or baker’s, but that won’t stop an animated chat over the cash register about the rugby results. No-one complains or becomes impatient. At the supermarket twenty percent of locals will pay by cheque – it slows everything down but no-one cares. The pace of Gascony is slow and rooted in the history and character of the land where things move slowly and change is very gradual.

Visit any shop or restaurant and you are immediately greeted with ‘bonjours’. A friend recently lost his dog. When the village heard about this, everyone, and I mean everyone, went looking for the dog. Happily, Fido was found. We had a concrete water trough that needed to be moved so I asked a local farmer if he could help. Ten minutes later he arrived with his tractor and spent the next hour relocating the trough. My offer of cash was met with surprise and was promptly refused, as was the offer of a bottle of whisky. In the Gers, you help your neighbour and you don’t expect any payment. Living here is like living in the 1950s. Each village has a community spirit that shows in the vide greniers (village-run second hand fairs), the night markets, the festivals, the fetes, and the weekly markets (what a delight they are; there is a market available every day of the week within a twenty minute drive).

The Gers is called France’s Tuscany and for good reason. Rolling hills, fields of sun flowers, rivers slowly flowing North, medieval villages and sylvan forests. The French have the word “flaneur”, which describes someone who wanders about without haste, and there is no better place than the Gers to do so. We often go for a drive with no destination or purpose in mind except to meander through the back lanes and admire the landscape. The area is primarily rural with an emphasis on crops rather than livestock; being stuck behind a tractor or a combine harvester is a regular occurrence which, in the tradition of the Gers, is met with patience (certainly no horns!). Sprinkled throughout the agricultural land are glorious forests and copses often harbouring boars and deer.

Adding to the joys of the countryside are the villages and architecture. One of the reasons that time has stood still in the Gers is that the population is half of what it was five hundred years ago. Before mechanisation, farms would typically boast twenty to thirty workers, both to work the farm but also to protect it, as Gascony has a very, very turbulent history. With tractors and modern tools, farms are now mostly run by families. Due to this exodus from the Gers, there has been little need to build new dwellings, so most towns and villages look much like they did in the past. If you want to see what medieval Europe looked like, come to the Gers. And the buildings blend beautifully into the landscape. Limestone walls, terracotta tiles and pleasing symmetry define the architecture. Because all materials are local, the buildings become part of the landscape.

The beauty of the villages has been well recognised and a number of France’s ‘most beautiful villages’ (a prestigious honour bestowed on 159 French villages) are in the Gers including Fources, Laverdens, Sarrant, Larresingle and La Romieu. Wander around the cobblestoned streets of Auch and visit the wonderful Sainte Marie Cathedral, the monumental steps (with a statue of D’Artagnan halfway up), and the painted column commemorating Napoleon’s visit. The cathedral sits atop the highest point of the city, which was once the location of a Roman temple. When the visibility is clear, there are glorious views of the snow-capped Pyrenees.

For history lovers, Gascony is a treat. As mentioned, if you want to step back in time to medieval Europe, the Gers is the place to go, but even Roman remains are sprinkled throughout. The Roman villa of Seviac is one of the largest Roman villas found in South West France with a surface area over 6,000 square metres. Eight Roman towers (or piles) are scattered throughout the Department, some of which are still in excellent condition. The area where the Gers sits was once Britain’s longest held colony from 1152 to 1453. To defend its colony, the English built ‘bastide towns’ which typically have a central square lined by arcades. These are now some of the most attractive villages in France.

The Gers is blessed with fresh produce and excellent vineyards. Armagnac, France’s oldest brandy, is distilled throughout Gascony. Unlike cognac where the makers are large businesses, Armagnac is made by individual farmers. It is distilled once and left to age in oak barrels, gradually the brandy takes on a warm colour with flavours of chocolate, vanilla and truffles. Many Armagnac distillers will sell their produce at the weekly markets and, even if you don’t buy, you’ll be offered a very generous sip.

Originally the Romans introduced wine to Gascony (along with foie gras), now vineyards have expanded and co-operatives formed promoting the local wines. The tannat based Madiran red wines are famous for their high tannin content. Little known outside of Gascony, Madiran is a powerful wine with great intensity. Perfect with pig’s trotters, cassoulet or magret (duck breast). You can spend a very happy day or two (or even a week or two) visiting the distilleries and vineyards in Gascony!

And then there is the food. Parisians feel the Gers is a backwater but they do admit the produce is superb, and superb it is. And not only is the food superb, but it is healthy too. In France, the Gers has the highest percentage of bio farms (30% of the farms are bio, compared to an average of 8.5% in other French Departments). Foie gras may be controversial to many people, it is not to the Gascons. Road signs advertise fresh foie gras straight from the farm and the butcher shops will provide fresh or mi-cuit (lightly cooked) foie gras. With foie gras comes ducks, and duck is almost always on the menu at restaurants. It was in Auch at the Hotel de France in the 1960s that the chef had the notion of cooking magret (duck breast) medium rare (prior to this, duck had always been well cooked) which changed forever how people cooked duck. The restaurant at the hotel de France is still excellent!

Duck and goose fat are generously used in cooking; it doesn’t seem to cause harm as the Gers has one of the highest life expectancies of any Department in France. The wonderful cep mushrooms are sold in the markets in late autumn and garlic is sold year round but the best is the young, sweet garlic in spring. Bigorre black ham, beautifully marbled boeuf de Gascon, Pyrenean lamb and rose veal are meaty delights to savour. Due to the location of the Gers, the fishmongers can source produce from both the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. Fresh oysters, crabs, langoustines, lobsters, cod, salmon, prawns, octopus and squid are all on display.

There is no shortage of good restaurants. From fine dining like the Domaine de Baileau, Puit Saint Jacques, Hotel de France to more relaxed restaurants such as Olivier’s Table, Chez Vous and Dareoles Bistro, there is ample choice. We are a short drive from Gimont, Mauvezin or Auch which has restaurants open every day of the week. Forty minutes away lies the delights of Toulouse.

As I sit here late at night, an Armagnac beside me, the windows open and the warm evening air wafting in, I realise how blessed we are to be living where we are. But the presence of grandchildren and children living in Australia is calling us home. We will always remember our time in France with great fondness.

To see the author’s property, for sale with Bliss, click here.

From Alsace to Gascony

Patrick & Carine

Like many others, my wife Carine and I wanted a new adventure! In my case it was actually the start of a second new life as six years ago I moved to Alsace to be with Karine – her place of birth and where she had always lived. It was there, in Alsace, that the plan to move to Gascony together was first evoked.

Carine was a true Alsacienne from the tips of her fingers to the tips of her toes. But with grown-up children on both sides it wasn’t an easy decision to make – relocating to the opposite end of France – and turning what was initially just a dream – into a reality for both our families.

That said, after a few holidays in the South West of France, it was easy to convince my beloved Alsacienne of the merits of living here and the life we could have together!  The only problem being, I was already retired and Carine still had four more years to go!

The first step in what would become a long process was putting Carine’s house in Alsace on the market, during which time we made several trips down to the Gers

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It was on one of these trips that we met Karen some three years ago! Our meeting coincided more or less with her opening of the new agency shop in Lectoure. It was quite a surprise to see that she had chosen to open an agency with no adverts in the window! It was here it became quickly apparent that Bliss Immobilier has a different approach to the other agents! Her attitude and her desire to really get to know people and understand their projects and their wishes makes a real difference – sometimes to the point of understanding needs of which we were previously unaware! We were intrigued by her approach and were often required to reflect quite differently and reconsider our ideas.

I think it’s safe to say, that little by little, over time, a friendship was born so these days we talk about far more than just real estate.

We are truly grateful to Karen as she demonstrated huge amounts of patience over the years. Three years to be precise! Not least because we were also visiting with other agents too – but it was her patience with finally paid off! It really does take time to make such a huge life change and find the perfect home!

In the end, we bought a property which Karen had been telling us almost from the start, was perfect for us! We just hadn’t realised it! There was a lot of work to be done on it – there is no denying this- but the foundations were there.

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Apart from her patience we were also grateful for Karen’s professionalism. Amongst other things she was always objective regarding the different properties on our list, and able to discuss both the advantages and disadvantages of each with complete honesty.

We would also like to thank her assistant Stephanie, who is a great foil to Karen’s artistic temperament and a precious link in the chain- with a keen eye for logistics and often tricky administrative detail. Stephanie was always able to provide us with clear answers to our questions in a very short space of time.

We would like to wish BLISS IMMOBILIER every success in the future. They deserve it.

False rumors in Condom

Who: Danae Penn
Where: Condom

Image © Guy Larrieu

‘Your Life Before…’

Very travelled. I was born in Leicester and have lived in the UK, Gibraltar, Geneva, Argentina, Luxembourg and Belgium. I was an environmentalist working on discouraging cars in cities. I concentrated on improving public transport by making it more attractive to everyone (including the people who operated it) and accessible to every passenger. My most persuasive argument was a page of drawings showing 40% of the population who have reduced mobility.

‘Why did you choose Gascony?’

My husband’s health was getting so bad that his doctor urged us to move as soon as possible to a warm, dry climate. Roger was a geographer and insisted that we house-hunted in the Gers. That produced a problem in April 2000: hardly any estate agents. The local bank advised us to use a notaire (solicitor) and she found the perfect house for us, near Condom. The location, price, and condition were perfect.

Unfortunately, the garden was huge: 1½ acres (6,000 square metres). Most of it was in good condition but the final part was a hayfield which the previous owner had used for his sheep until a neighbour’s dog had killed the lambs. They had been on very bad terms ever after, put up an enormous fence and then a conifer hedge which is something Gascons do not normally do. Indeed, they do not usually have gates to their gardens and this is a sign of the most important reason to live in Gascony, even more important than the warm, dry climate: the friendliness and helpfulness of Gascons. They are not invasive or intrusive, but they are always ready to assist anyone who needs help.

Image © Bernard Crenn

My first example of this happened on Day Two when I had walked a mile to the nearest supermarket (I have bad eyesight and have not been able to drive since 1977). I was calculating how much fresh food I could buy and wheel back uphill to our new house when someone said to me “Madame Penn?” He introduced himself as my nearest neighbour and told me to buy however much I needed and he would drive me back home. Every after, he would take me shopping every day, or however often I wanted to shop.

This kindness enabled Roger and me to live, eat and drink happily, instead of surviving. Over the years I have built up a network of super people who give me lifts, for shopping as well as taking me to all sorts of places and activities in the Gers. But I also use the local taxi firm, Taxi Tenarèze, sitting in the front passenger seat of their cars and chatting to the drivers. The other famous Gascon characteristic is talking. That suits me too.

The hamlet nearest my house had a dilapidated church which had been unused since the 1930s. The roof was about to fall in but the owners (the town hall or Mairie of Condom) were not in any hurry to mend it. It was just one of many local small churches in need of repair. So three young women in the hamlet went through the bureaucratic hurdles involved in creating an association and one day I found a notice in my letter box inviting me to an inauguration meeting inside the church. After the meeting we had home-made cakes and local wine (the hamlet is among vineyards) when a very elderly woman grabbed my arm and asked me if it was true that I was English “because she had never met an Englishwoman before and why was I living here?” My neighbours and I explained to her all about my husband’s poor health and the excellent qualities of the Gascon climate. It turned out that, like several inhabitants of Condom, she was nearly 100 years old. She was herself an excellent advertisement for the healthy way of Gascon life.

From time to time the church roof restoration society held other meetings, delicious and very convivial communal meals, vide-greniers (garage sales), botanical walks, jazz band concerts… During one of these activities I was introduced to Martine “who will make you a member of the local rambling club”. This involves walking for about 12 km for three hours on Sunday afternoons and going away for a week twice a year, in France or Spain. I love it. It is excellent for my health of course, but it is a marvellous opportunity to chat with the many other members of the Amis de la Marche de Condom, learn how to look after my enormous garden, and learn how to cook various Gascon recipes. Occasionally, we all have a meal together, at very long tables with food provided and cooked by the Committee, washed down with floc (the local aperitif), local wine and Armagnac. No one ever gets drunk. They are very used to their local vine products and have been ever since they were children.

Image © J D Smith

However, I do know English people too. We meet regularly in Condom in the café-bookshop called La Librairie Gourmande, or in Churchill’s, the English grocers in the Gers. I go there if I specifically need an English product, or to sell my book “False Rumours”. This is a medieval mystery novel, set in Condom in 1483, describing how my heroine-sleuth, Belina Lansac, investigates the murder of a pilgrim and at the same time saves the Princes in the Tower from being murdered on the orders of Henry VII’s mother. If you want to know more – and I hope you do – visit my website at www.belinalansac.com and find out more about Belina, her life and her cooking, washing and ironing. Other pages describe Gascony, pilgrimages to Santiago de Compostela, Richard III, and how to contact me to discuss any of the above in person!

Writing a medieval mystery novel took me several years longer than I had envisaged. I joined four local history societies but without letting on that my book on fifteenth century Gascony was a novel, not an academic book. I also belong to VMF, the nearest equivalent in France to the National Trust. I visit the fascinating historic abbeys and churches, manor houses and chateaux and their gardens. Every summer I give a talk on Gascon history, dressed in medieval clothes borrowed from the local amateur dramatic society.

My husband was an author of guide books about England, France and Spain so I already had some idea of what writing a book involves. However, I thought I should learn specifically about creative writing by joining the local Chapter Away one-week local courses organised by Karen Pegg. (www.achapteraway.com) Great fun, and very useful. As a direct result I have been able to get my book published by Nichol Press and am busy plotting the characters and murders involved in the sequel.

Image © Bernard Crenn

As you will have seen from my website, my cover designer is J D Smith who has produced a stunning design, converting a Botticelli young woman into a black-haired Gascon one.

Gascon scenery is stunning too, and I love living in such a beautiful part of France.

Connect with Danae Penn

Nina’s story 4

Hubert

Waiting is alway waiting – whether you are 6 or 60… waiting for the amazing thing to happen always feels like an eternity. At 6 you count down the days until you’re opening all those packages under the tree having not slept for more than 3 hours on the evening prior. At 60, you count down the days until you’re sitting in front of the Notaire, pen in hand, and signing the contract for your new French home. And finally, after countless house viewings, thousands of air miles, a lot of fois gras, and very muddy boots, our Christmas Day had arrived early on December 7th – we signed for Le Tuco! Our massive present was fully unwrapped and just like you say when you’re 6 (or 60) “it’s exactly what we always wanted!!!”

Key in hand, obligatory photo in front of the Notaire’s office, euphoria beyond belief, and we were off to our first night’s stay at Le Tuco!

We have driven up to the house no less than 20 times…and each time has been like the first – a cocktail of awe and awesome. You feel an overwhelming sense that somehow, you’re living in someone else’s life. These things only ever happen to others, not to you…until you pull up, park, unlock the door and realize every tile, blue shutter, old beam, and sprig of lavender — is yours! And, like a sign from above, we also had a welcome committee of 1…meet Hubert. 4 footed, wonky eyed, blotched with gray and white, Hubert was the infamous cat that the previous owner had mentioned. A “he” named Hubert – until the previous owner realized “he” had kittens. So now Hubert is a “she” with the name of a “he”. Regardless, we were thrilled as it was a sign that we were officially welcomed to Le Tuco as one of it’s own.

It was going to be en exciting first night – no heat, no hot water, no food nor utensils but cards from well wishers and a bottle of Veuve Clicquot would surly keep us warm and happy for the night. And it did! Best night’s sleep ever as we blissfully sat on the stoop in the following loop: “it’s so quite here, it’s so quiet here, it’s so quiet here.” The sun set, the moon rose and we gazed out over mother nature’s clock feeling like time had stool still for just this one night.

 

In the morning, we woke to distant sounds of roosters (which replaced the sounds of car alarms) and church bells (which replaced the sounds of planes on their final approach into Heathrow). It was a sumptuous night giving way to a sunny day and we were about to meet the A Team…the team of Artisans who would be translating Le Tuco from best to better. The team who would look at the house from the inside out as we all held hands and agreed to listen to Le Tuco talk and parley her voice into a year round home. It was a pinch yourself moment as we all discussed windows, heating, plumbing, and septic tanks etc. I never thought these things could be so interesting… until they were about our own house and spoken in French… which makes everything sound better.

As the day came to and end, so did our first 24 hours with Le Tuco. Feeling homesick even before we left the building, we knew this time was different. This time Le Tuco was ours and now that we knew Hubert was there standing guard, we felt calm as we said “A Bientot!”

* Please note the cat pictured is not the real Hubert and indeed any resemblance to any cat called Hubert alive or dead is purely co-incidental.

Nina’s story 3

Dates & plums

This whole house hunting experience is a lot like online dating — you trawl the house sales websites looking at one random image after another. At first glance you see what seems to be perfection, the ultimate box ticker. How could it be that no one else has snapped up this gem of excellence? What could possibly be wrong? So you make a date. And you march off terribly excited and hopeful — your first date with the amazing object of your future. But when you get there, things are never as they seem. What you see in front of you is the evil twin sister of whatever you saw on the website. The house, like the date, is never as good as it seems as the cold hard truth of reality wakes you up from all the unicorn/fairy dreams. And in that split second you exhale woefully… another broken house-heart. Will you ever find the one?

Then, like a mirage in a sea of shark infested waters, you stumble across the Blissimmo website. And, somehow, you know you are now in friendly waters — waters that present you with elegance of choice, beauty of layout and, most importantly, hope! Hope that on this website, at this moment, on this day — you may find your match.

I will never forgot our first “date” with the house. After so many speed dates with so many other houses, we were desperate for a meaningful first impression… one that gives you that moment of rush; one that makes time stand still; one that reminds you that at the ripe old age of 50 you can still feel like you’re 16 — falling irrationally, spontaneously and immediately in love.

 

It was first thing in the morning and we met up with Karen our Bliss Estate Agent in order to see the house. She asked if we’d mind taking a short cut and plugged the address into her GPS — we were off! Only we weren’t off down a normal paved road but rather we were off down a forgotten farmer’s tractor track complete with pot holes, mud, and a whole lot of meadow grasses growing up through the middle of the path. And like a puppy, reluctant to take that first big jump into a lake, our small, bare, cheap budget car sat at the start of the trail revving its engine in protest as if to say, “I am not going down that path!”.

But we were determined to see “the one” so we ignored the frightened outcry of the engine, pressed down the gas pedal and drove through a variety of buzzers, lights and car alarms that formed an unending symphony of “do not do this!” Up hills, down slopes, across mud, rocks and puddles until we arrived at the property. We pulled into what looked like a simple stone barn. No windows, no doors, and a whole lot of broken wood, debris and rusted corrugated tin in the front garden. Could this be it? Could this be the one?

We got out of the car with measured caution. We couldn’t make heads nor tales of the geography of this place. Just where were we?? We walked along the long length of the building, squashing plums under foot. Each footfall gave birth to another small puzzle piece of the whole house. Where were we going and what we were going to find at the end of the path? We rounded the corner of the house and saw the unimaginable. A view that only mother nature could provide. Big, vast, open and hopeful. This house was like an artichoke — all that hard work of the journey only to get to the central heart of such a beautiful location. This was Le Tuco for us.

 

In that moment, our first date with Le Tuco had turned from naive hope to the dream of a life time. We realized how silly it was to say “We’re looking for a house”…because the truth of the matter is that the house finds you. And Le Tuco was just that experience — it reached out and took us in, uncontrollably.

We took one walk around her land and one walk around her rooms, we were in love!

The Wed: The dream was to one day marry in France.  For years we visited our dear friends who bought a chartreuse in Saint Germain De Belves. And for even more years we would sit in their pool, eat their cheese, pluck figs from their trees, feed stale bread to their sheep and dream about a French wedding at their French home..And on July 16th, 2011 the dream became a reality!  We said, “Je veux” in France… Of course, none of my American friends knew what “Je veux” meant but Keith and I knew!  And we also knew that marrying in France brought us one step closer to our French life.

The journey to the wedding wasn’t easy as we had to get what felt like a Baccalaureate in French bureaucracy.  The seemingly unending stream of papers, signatures, translations, meetings and explanations tested our stamina… but, in the end, we prevailed and held the French gold medal in admin. And, as we sat with the mayor at 11:00am on the day before our wedding, drinking a pastisse and listening to his dogs bark endlessly outside the kitchen door, we knew we had made it to the wedding finish line. Paperwork done, signatures signed, minstrels hired! “Nous voulons!”

The Wait: With the wedding now over, the wait would begin.  6 years of hatching a plan to some day return to France in some way.  I can recall Keith often saying, “I don’t know when; I don’t know where; I don’t know how…but I do know that France is in our future.”  It was a lot of “I don’t knows” but the good thing about our wait was that it allowed the dream to breathe, to bake, to brew.

Our French house soufflé…just a mixture of a few main ingredients that would produce one magical result.  We let the dream cook for 6 long years until we finally pulled our French fantasy out of the oven — fully formed and ready to enjoy.  It was time to take our bite out of France and have our own little slice of French pie.

The Wow:  On August 21, 2017 we arrived in the Gers for the very first time on a very first visit.  It was like coming home — yet we never lived there.  We were wow’ed as we felt like Christopher Columbus discovering a new land. It was love at first sight and with every great love story ours was from minute one. It started with the landscape — big, rolling, green, and silly with sun flowers.  It then moved onto the architecture — yellow stone, blue shutters and very large spaces between the houses.  And it ended with the traffic – there was none!  This was our Oz and now all we had to do was find our Emerald Kingdom!

We looked at 47 houses from 238 websites all of which looked the same. Like Goldilocks, there was something amiss with each and every one of them — too large, too small, funny smelling, low ceilings, no light, bad karma. And then we came across bliss…and BLISS — the local estate agents who hand pick their houses like unique flowers to form a bouquet of properties that make you dream.

One of those flowers was Le Tuco… and boy did we dream.

Nina’s story 1

“In The Beginning There Was The Middle…”

It’s human nature to begin at the beginning. But sometimes the beginning is actually in the middle. So, I will begin in the middle because, in this case, the middle is really our beginning…

In the middle of our lives, 8 and a half years ago our French experience began. But like all of life’s little surprises, we didn’t know it at the time. I had just met my husband, Keith, and we fell in love — the English RAF officer and the America television executive. He was Richard Gere… I was Debra Winger.. and we worked. We had so many new things to share with one another — he would say lovely and I would say orgasmic, and we meant the same thing. I would be loud and repetitive and he would be soft and say things once. We would often disagree on the pronunciation of many words and his stock reply to this disagreement was a the standard English logic — “We invented it!”

But there was always one thing that drew us together beyond our one love, one soul, one beating heart path…and that was the dream of France.

All those years ago, it was just that…a dream. We were so busy merging two lives, raising four kids, balancing multiple in laws and juggling a variety of jobs that a life in France seemed like mercury. We could see it, hold it — but only for a fleeting moment as it rolled away through our fingertips only to pop up again when we least expected it. It was one of those dreams that you have at 6:45am, just before you rise, where you feel it’s so very real yet so very fleeting. It comes, it grabs you, and then as fast as it came, it rolls away just out of your grasp and you’re left with the vague perfume of something so sweet.

Little did I know that the scent of France was within Keith and me years before we even met. France was always a place Keith dreamed of living. He’s English to the core but his surname, Revell, suggested that maybe, just maybe, he could have been French in another life. His father had re-traced the Revell name back to the 1600’s but, sadly, found no evidence of any French lineage…anywhere. So Keith decided to change the course of history and integrate France in his bloodline. He started by doing a degree in French, which included a teaching stint in Blois, followed by Staff College at L’Ecole Militaire in Paris. He has climbed every major French mountain range on his bike and has added the purchase of a Citroen 2CV to his mid life crisis budget list. France was in his system and, like riding a bike, he would never forget.

As for me, my French roots were a little more tenuous. My mom was a Jewish, American girl raised in the Bronx, NY but always believed that there was some cruel misunderstanding at the outset of her life that, somehow mixed my mom up with another baby — sending my mom down the path of living in the USA while the other baby ended up in France. How could it be? As a result, my mom would spend much of her life learning all things French — the language, the food, the culture, the men — to such a degree that she often blurred her own lines of American reality with the much dreamier line of French fiction. I often recall my mother standing at the counter of McDonald’s asking the server if they had a “Pain Au Chocolate”? The server would adopt a completely puzzled look on her face as the server had absolutely no idea what my mother was referring to. My mother would then turn to me and say, “how do you say that in English?” And please remember, my Mother is a Jewish girl from the Bronx! I would die of embarrassment, of course, but these experiences marked the beginning of my fascination with all things French. Growing up, my mom made the French dream a daily reality and it dangled in front of my development like distant fireflies.

So, when Keith and I finally met, in the middle of our lives, we converged at the intersection of all things French. We shared our individual dreams and mixed them together to form one larger French dream of one day marrying in France followed by one day living there…