It's not really about food that I like, but more about food that is similar to what I eat in Canada
I eat well here, but I challenge you to find a place that sells banana bread (I'm dying for it)! I don't have any cooking tool that I could use to bake my own, so I have to wait until I come back home.
Another example: bagels! I know only one place in Bordeaux where I could buy a sandwich made of a bagel (it's a restaurant). In Paris, I find bagels in grocery stores, but it costs 4 euros for a bag of 4 bagels (5,50 $CAN / 5,40 $US). In Montréal, I would pay 8 $CAN for a dozen of bagels. With my student budget, I just can't afford eating that.
The thing is if I do find what I want, it's often to expensive for me. There are 2 things that I buy even if they cost a lot: peanut butter (imported from the UK) and maple syrup (imported from Canada). At least I find these products in the "International" section of the grocery store. For special occasions, I sometimes buy a bottle (1L) of cranberry juice (2,50 euros: 3,40 $CAN).
My meals are pretty similar to what I used to eat at home (meat, fish, pizza, pasta, vegetables, etc.) and I'm not obsessed with canadian food, but there are things that I like and that I just can't find or buy.
The last time I went back to Montréal was in September 2010. Sometimes it's tough, but with Skype it helps a lot. This is a great invention!
For example, in December 2009, my mother was working on New Year's Eve and my sister was alone at home so we did a small online party: eating and laughing in front of the computer, singing out loud to Christmas music; it was pretty fun!
It's hard to be alone at Christmas, but I just have to think about people who are really alone, without family or friends, maybe sleeping outside in the cold and I realize that I'm lucky. I live in a warm and comfortable place, I can turn my computer on to talk to people I love, I am healthy, etc. I should absolutely not complain because I have everything I need (well, except for banana bread
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No banana bread in France, huh? It must be a North American thing. Does sound like food is expensive there. I really like blueberry bagels, and can usually get them for around $2.50 US a bag (6), with a store card. Similar to Canada, as our currencies are more or less equivalent these days.
Don't know if Amazon has free shipping over $25 (19 euros?) in France, but if they do, order that much banana bread from them! They seem to have everything now, so maybe they have that too.
Skype is pretty cool, esp. since it's free! I have a friend who Skypes with her dog when away from home (not sure how she trained the dog to do this, but who knows?
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Hang in there, Karine. The bananas won't wait, but the bread probably will.
So is Sarah popular in France? Since Paris is supposed to be such a romantic place, it seems like her music would fit right in.
Ed