Category Archives: France

D-Day sites in Normandy: 360 museum and D-day disembarkment museum (Arromanches), Omaha Beach museum and cemetery; Bayeax Tapestry, L’Insolite @Bayeax, Mary Celeste Pub (Arromanches) and Mollard in Paris

Hard to believe such a momentous event occurred near the deserted beach by our hotel on June 6,1944 but we learned more about it at the powerful D-day disembarkment museum next door, with a compelling audio guide accompanying displays of maps, artifacts, soldiers accounts and models of the remarkable artificial harbor created to allow the British troops to unload their tanks, jeeps and equipment.

D-day disembarkment museum

The Normandy American cemetery and Memorial at Omaha Beach in colleville-sur-Mer, a short drive west through rolling green countryside along narrow roads lined with tan stone walls and hedges, past small lovely villages with old stone buildings, that recalled war movie sets.

Omaha beach

But the reality of war was on full display at the museum, with a short film and displays about soldiers who lost their lives.

The sight of so many white marble crosses and occasional Jewish stars, laid out on a green lawn in impeccably straight rows above the ocean and Omaha Beach was as powerful as expected.There were other ww2 battlefields and museums but the three we visited (including the 360 film) offered a good rundown and feel for the past.

Bayeax

In nearby Bayeux, we visited the famous Bayeux Tapestry in a solemn stone building in the pretty old city center. Hand embroidered probably by women in the 11th century, it is displayed horizontally in a lit glass case that wraps around a dark room, with numbered panels detailing the conquest of England by William the Duke of Normandy. It looked like the ancient precursor of a comic strip, with graphic scenes of battle meticulously sewn with colored thread.

We had delicious galettes and pear cider near Bayeux’s gothic cathedral (lit at night for extra drama) at popular L’Insolite, a creperie on a cobblestone lane with old stone and half-timber buildings.

Arromanches

We joined locals in Arromanches (including our waiter from the hotel) at Mary Celeste pub in a cozy stone building, where the fellas drank beer and f & I drank hot chocolate. We introduced the Brits to the card game, hearts. And laughed a lot.

The rain we expected finally arrived the next day as we were leaving Normandy after one last breakfast in the hotel dining room with picture windows looking out on the waves crashing onto the shore, we drove to the Caen gare, dropped off our rental car at the Sixt office and stopped at Mollard, a classic brasserie in Paris circa 1867 for a late lunch in a gorgeous l’art nouveau dining room with wall and floor mosaics. I dared to eat dishes from my youth – steak tartare (my dad’s favorite) and crème caramel (my mom’s speciality). A little rich but delicious. (I couldn’t eat anywhere near the full tartare.)

After a stressful rush hour taxi search and ride to the second train station (we arrived at gare du saint lazare and had to get to gare du nord)‘we are now safely on board the Eurostar in what we suspect are special”senior seats” back to London, playing hearts with a pack of 32 (not the standard 52 😳) cards F bought at the station. more laughter.

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Driving along the Normandy coast to Arromanches

La Marine Hotel reminds me of the Michigan house I grew up in — white brick with a mansard roof. Except that we are surrounded here in the small village of Arromanches by the Atlantic Ocean and famous World War Two battlefields. My childhood home was 1930’s “French eclectic” architecture, popular with soldiers returning from Europe after the First World War.

Arromanches is pretty, with a tight cluster of buildings by a wide expanse of sand leading to the English Channel. We lucked out with a corner room offering spectacular window views of “port Winston” (as in Winston Churchill) the artificial arrival harbor created for the d-day landing.

Houlgate

We walked up the bluff to a 360 theater for a sobering 20 minute film about the D-Day offensive by American, English, and Canadian that began here on June 6, 1944, 80 years ago. About 100,000 people died during the Normandy campaign. That alone is sobering but there is added poignancy given this months US election, and rise of a right-wing, potentially isolationist government that doesn’t seem to value the alliance that fought back the Nazis.

Window view #1
Window view #2 (including D-Day museum)

Driving along a two-lane road along the coast, we passed some stunning mansions just east of Honfleur but the resort towns of trouville and Deauville seemed overbuilt and lacking the charm of Honfleur. (Granted, we didn’t stop to explore or find the charming old bits.) The seaside town of Houlgate was more low-key and inviting so we walked through the center ville and along the beach promenade past tall eccentric brick homes, stopping at a cheerful restaurant for hot chocolate and popping into the covered market to gawk at the prepared foods, cheeses, and foie gras selection.

Leonberger meet up n Houlgate

Houlgate

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La Cour saint Catherine, entre terre et mer, Saint Catherine church, la Maison du tripot, old port, Satie museum – Honfleur (Normandy, France)

NOTE: publishing this late (somehow it wasn’t published earlier.)

A day is about right to explore the ancient (sort of) seaside village of Honfleur. The sea is largely absent, as the coast has gotten farther away but there is a small contained harbor lined with tall narrow buildings, some half-timbered, or red brick and stone or clad in thin black slate tiles.

Our sweet b&b

La Cour Saint Catherine, a small b&b on a narrow residential street, is as charming as promised with big wooden doors that open onto a Normand courtyard with a garden surrounded by a mishmash of timbered and brick buildings. To get to our room, we must climb a small narrow spiral staircase with a rope to hold onto. F& R are one flight above.

Chocolate shopping in Honfleur

It reminds me of my friend’s staircase in her tower outside London (hi Marion!) but this is not a tower. Our room is not small and round or half-round. It’s huge, with a fireplace, large bed with many pillows, a sitting area, a day bed, old paintings, big windows. tres luxurious.

The breakfast also is very large, with cheese, charcuterie, fresh baked goods, plus the usual baguette and croissants. The town is charming and not over-touristed now, although I imagine it is in the summer.

More hotel

We walked around the old harbor and along narrow winding street lined with shops, most not-great art but I found one woman selling delicate landscapes and bought one of the cliffs. I also found a good gallery near the tourist office by the harbor called Gallerie Chaye.

St.Catherine Church reminded us of a stave church in Scandinavia – with its dark wood-shingled exterior. It is an odd charming duck with two naves, each with a ceiling that looks like an upside down wooden boat. Fitting for a community of fisherman and sailors, and reportedly built by boat builders not architects. The first nave was built in 1497. When the congregation outgrew the church, it added a second nave.

The church

We had a good fancy dinner at entre mere et terre but I was even more impressed by the better reviewed SaQuaNa. It’s a sophisticated Japanese-influenced French restaurant with a wonderful patisserie. The bouillabaisse was surprisingly light and full of complicated flavor, not heavy or too fishy, and a Japanese pancake with bacon and flakey onions was like a less eggy quiche. The lemon meringue pastry and chocolate torte were amazing.

SaQuaNon

After dinner we ended up at a nearby bar, Vintage, listening to a blues rock band playing American standards, while we drank kir Normand (with cider, yum) and other regional favorites- calvados (too strong even for the guys) and an aperil spritz with cider.

The vintage

Mid-afternoon, we stumbled into a classy ladies-who-lunch salon de the, La Maison du Tripot, on a quiet street worlds away from the tourist places along the harbor and had excellent chaude chocolate and a slice of moist apple cake.

Satie museum contraption

The Satie Museum was bizarre, as promised, an interactive ode to the famous composer Eric Satie, born in Honfleur. At one point, we sat on what looked (and felt) like a rugby ball and slowly peddled on a round track, prompting a marry go round contraption to come to life. As Francine noted, we didn’t really learn much about Satie except that he was a surreal guy. So this museum was fitting.

Tea house

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Cliffs of etretat, le bel Ami- Normandy, France

Although some confusion remains about which of the two worn cliffs jutting into the ocean most resembles an elephant, we agreed that they are equally stunning as we stood on the rocky beach in Etretat, a village on the Normandy coast. Monet thought so too and duly painted them, as have others.

The light was particularly dramatic over the yellower cliff, as the sun attempted to break through the clouds, creating streaks of blue, gray and white in the sky and turning the water a pale blue. Just down the beach at the other cliff, the color of the sky and water was darker and more moody but a swath of velvety green grass blanketed the cliff top.

Mussels

We took a short steep hike up the less grassy one for more spectacular views from on high.

Although the beachfront town has a ticky tacky feel with a faded casino, we found a quaint sophisticated restaurant for mussels and frites further from the shore – Le bel Ami – and some cool old half timber and brick buildings

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Eurostar, hotel le vieux carre and Carre hotel, au p’it Verdot (wine bar) – Rouen

What a charming French city Rouen is and a perfect gateway to Normandy with its narrow cobbled lanes lined with half-timbered buildings in its old town. We are staying in one of those buildings, in the Hotel le vieux carre which is a bit ramshackle right now because it is being renovated (which we were not told was happening, which is not good.) Scaffolding covers the timbered courtyard and drop cloths line the steps up to our little room. But the place is still charming in a bohemian way, with a ground floor low-ceilinged tea parlor and sitting area with lots of cozy chairs and knickknacks. Delicious breakfast: a basket of croissants and baguettes, 2 jams, and Normandy butter, yoghurt and cheeses.

Rouen half-timbers, cathedral

For dinner we went to the wine bar of my dreams, Au p’it Verdot, another small atmospheric place in the old city that serves charcuterie, local cheeses and cider, beer and wine and delicious desserts.

Cheese, glorious cheese

We tried the famous local soft creamy cheeses, most recognizably the Camembert but my favorite was Neufchâtel.

Our hotel
Yes, a chocolate bialette (Italian coffee pot) and more

In the morning we did Rick Steve’s short walk tour around old town which was perfect, strolling to the semi-covered market, a cool modern church shaped like a fish, down narrow lanes lined with half-timbered buildings painted in many colors, the “flamboyantly gothic” cathedral (famously painted by Monet, with an intricately decorative facade), stopping at the famous Auzou chocolate shop to buy chocolate covered and dusted almonds known as as Joan of Arc’s tears. (This is where Joan became a martyr.)

Old town

To get here, we took an uneventful trip on the Eurostar, only 2.5 hours to Paris and then another 1.5 hour train from another station here. Trying to block out news of the horrible Trump cabinet picks but not succeeding.

London St. pancras station

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Luggage at Last: Lessons learned

We finally received our luggage, five days after it never showed up at O’Hare Airport following Aer Lingus flights from Dublin and before that, Paris. Lessons learned:

  • Do not check luggage.
  • Do not put valuable stuff /things you care about in your checked luggage. Carry it on! This includes items such as: prescription glasses, prescription meds, almost completed diary, gifts for family, the right-foot sneaker — the left-foot sneaker was in my carryon bag.
  • If your checked luggage gets lost, keep bugging Aer Lingus (or whatever airline) for information (i.e. be a royal pain in the ass). We also posted our complaints on Twitter and Facebook with #AerLingus. The tweet got an AL response although who knows how much it helped. The FB post helped me find another good resource: The Aer Lingus Complaints Action Group on Facebook. Yes, there is one and people were very helpful, although it was a bit discouraging to read about people who had waits longer than ours.
  • Request “priority” or “expedited service” — I didn’t know if this existed but apparently it does, or it seemed to get a response. There were “priority” tags on our returned bags, as well as “rush” tags.
  • For Chicago area folks who lose luggage at O’Hare: Our baggage was finally delivered by Alpha-Tech Aviation Services.https://alphatechaviationsvcs.com/ This is good to know because AL told us it was Alpha Delivery Services, which it was not. The poor folks at Alpha Delivery Services, based in Kalamazoo, MI, were very kind – and sounded weary. They have gotten previous emails/calls from frantic people seeking their lost luggage and said AL has given out their number. (This is true. AL gave it to us too.)
  • I don’t know if this helped but I did try the pathetic route – mentioning that our luggage contained prescription meds and eyeglasses.
  • Don’t put cheese in your checked luggage…although ours was vacuumed packed and seemed to survive.
  • Consider buying Apple air tags for those times when luggage must be checked. (Ex: small no frills airlines that don’t allow much in the way of carryon luggage.

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Eiffel Tower, Hotel Du Champ de Mars, La Fontaine de Mars, not great start to our flight home — Paris

Catching our breath after barely making our Aer Lingus flight from Paris to Dublin. Here’s hoping we make our connection to Chicago since this flight left late. (Update: we did make our connection but had another mad dash to the next flight which was boarding when we arrived at the gate. And our luggage didn’t make it to Chicago. May take a few days. 🙁)

We weren’t the only passengers scrambling. We arrived 2.5 hours early at de Gaulle airport but not early enough, alas. We endured one horrendous long line after another (at check-in, passport control, security) and several cock-ups (computers that didn’t work for check-in, a last minute gate change that left many of us running from gate 30 to 14). I managed to lose my watch at security, despite doubling back briefly to look for it, then cutting my losses and running to the gate (#30 and then #14). GRRRR.

Eiffel Tower in the rain (that’s dirck in front)

One rumor is that the mess was spillover from yesterday’s transportation strike in France, and due to insufficient staffing, but the strike was rail and public transportation so don’t see how the airport was involved. Our kids also reported long lines and delays at de Gaulle.m when they traveled four days earlier.

Beyond that, when we arrived in Paris yesterday on rail strike day, we found out that the 1 metro line was working but soon discovered it was blowing through several stops, including ours (Concorde) so scrambled again. We ended up walking with our luggage 25 minutes to our hotel. Fortunately it was a somewhat familiar route, (at least the first 15 minutes) and the weather, though threatening, cooperated. For awhile.

The Hotel du Champ de Mars was charming, even with renovation going on. The hotel didn’t alert us about the renovation until two days before we checked in, offering free cancellation or 10 percent off. Seemed too little, too late. They should have notified us earlier, although it wasn’t a big deal since we arrived late afternoon, stayed one night and the construction noise didn’t start until we were eating breakfast at around 9 am. Our room was small but charming, comfortable bed and strong shower, great location near the Eiffel Tower (which from a certain angle we could see from our room window) and the Rue Cler, lined with alluring food shops. The left Bank/7th arrondissement area is where I’ve stayed in the past so I liked it, although there were more tourists than our earlier right bank/16th arrrondisement Airbnb).

Sweet Paris hotel

In a cold rain, we walked a short distance to right beside the Eiffel Tower, lit in gold lighting at night. Tres dramatic. Never been that close to it. More enormous and impressive than I realized. I would have liked more time to explore or re-explore the area. Next trip.

Paris waking up: morning view from our hotel room (Eiffel tower in distance)

One last French meal of the trip was at La Fontaine de Mars a traditional old fashioned place that old friend Alissa, recommended. Excellent. Faded wallpaper, second floor table, chicken with morels in a cream sauce, veal stew, killer chocolate mouse. Alissa shared stories about the realities of life as a famous Pulitzer Prize winning war/foreign correspondent. Memorable night.

Chocolate mousse with Alissa

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Dashing thru the snow on the TGV (fast train Lyon to Paris) after visit to Paul Bocuse food hall

Fortunately we had only a little snow and rain this morning because thanks to the one-day rail strike, we had to walk with our suitcases to the Gare Part-dieu in Lyon. No taxis available. And hey, our train is operating so we are feeling fortunate. Our helpful Lyon hotel staffer also checked and the #1 metro in Paris appears to be working so we can get at least part way from the Paris train station to our hotel. Too much fun. (Update: The #1 Metro WAS working when we arrived in Paris on strike day but it didn’t make all its usual stops and whizzed right through our stop to get to our hotel so we had another 25 minute walk with our suitcases. Fortunately the weather cooperated.)

Paul Bocuse food hall

Another stroke of luck, the food hall named after a famous Lyonnaise chef (les Halles de Paul Bocuse) was on the way to the train station (sort of) so we stopped to shop for lunch and to gawk at the gorgeous food displays lining each aisle that we wheeled our suitcases along. Some items we recognized from our meal at Le Musee. We ended up getting a baguette and a soft super creamy mild local cheese, Saint-Marcellin that we just ate on the train. Superb!

Train lunch

We’ve had a few mishaps with the trains. On our way from Paris to the small country town, Amberieu-en-Bugey (where I visited France’s diary archives, for my book) we managed to make our connecting train fine but then got off the train one stop too early. We stood outside the closed train station in mixed precipitation trying to figure out what to do and ended up going into a nearby restaurant where a diner tried to help us out (when my phone wouldn’t work due to crap internet service) until the restaurant proprietor shooed us out of the restaurant. I got the impression she thought we were disrupting her meal service.

We figured out that there were no taxis but there was a bus which, once we learned where/how to buy the ticket (in a machine new the closed rail station), got us to our destination. No taxis there either but the people I was interviewing kindly arranged for transport. (Our return driver was a local innkeeper from the countryside whose car trunk was lined with dirt and perhaps straw.)

Today, we managed to find our platform for the TGV and the place we were supposed to stand for our car (#17) but when the train pulled in, only #18 was marked. So we rushed to the next open car, which turned out to be #8. There wasn’t time to go back to 18 so we stayed put. There are plenty of open seats and the conductor was cool with it. (He explained that this train is actually two trains combined, one with cars 1-8 the other with cars 9-18 or some such but there’s no getting from one train to the second.) Whatever. We are chugging through rolling green fields, some dusted with snow, past the occasional grazing cattle, wind turbines, and village of white stucco homes with mansard roofs that remind me of my childhood home in Michigan.

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Christine! Vieux Lyon, Court Bouillon, Funicular/Basilica, botanical paintings, Mojgan Iranian restaurant – Lyon

Our friend Christine, who we met four years ago in Norway, took the train up from Provence, where she lives with her French husband (Christine is from China) to meet us for the day in Lyon, which was a treat. On a cold day that began with rain and snow and then cleared, with shocking blue sky and a bracing wind, we wandered through lovely Vieux Lyon, the old city with narrow cobble stoned lanes, pretty old stucco buildings, occasional alluring shops, bakeries and cafes. Lyon reportedly has the most Renaissance-era buildings of any city in France.

I bought some bright pink pralines (a Lyon speciality) at Pralus Pastry Shop (27 rue Saint Jean), recommended by the woman we say next to at dinner at Le Musee. The special bread dotted with pink pralines looked too sweet to eat. At a shop specializing in botanical drawings, Vincent Jeannerot’s Aquarelles Botaniques, we bought elegant linen tea towels (as gifts) and a print.

With Christine in Vieux Lyon

Lunch was at Court Bouillon, recommended by our hotel owner Laurent and it was excellent, (although Christine seemed less impressed…she’s truly French now.😂). Later we took the funicular up to see the dramatic white Basilica that towers over the city high on a hill, not unlike Paris’s Sacre Coeur. It was stunning up close, set against the blue sky, and crazy ornate inside. The view from on high looking down at the city and confluence of the two rivers was very dramatic. It was also very cold thanks to the wind. We got a coffee and hot chocolate at an elegant cafe next door.

Dinner was Iranian food, for a change, but similarly elegant to the French meals we’ve had. The chef at Mojgan is female and came out to chat. Very lovely. She has three school age kids and didn’t start cooking until after they were born. She studied with Paul Bocuse, has won a big chef award and is the rare female chef in France, let alone Iranian-born female chef cooking French-inspired Iranian food. (pomegranate juice with sparkling wine; eggplant with some exotic spices, duck with Fois gras sauce etc.)

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Le Musee (bouchon), soul brothers (bar), Hotel Des celestins – Lyon

We had one of our best and most fun meals at Le Musee, a famous traditional bouchon — sort of the lyonnaise version of a Bistro. When we walked past the small humble looking dining room with its old plaster and wood walls, red and white checkered table cloths, and scuffed wooden chairs at 7:15, it was empty. Uh oh.

We’d reserved weeks ago, and were promised it would be packed even on a Tuesday night. So it was when we arrived again at 8 pm, with diners sitting elbow to elbow at long tables. We sat with a nice young couple from Normandy (the woman grew up in Lyon) and had a lively conversation about food, France, the US. (We later learned that no self-respecting French person books dinner before 8 pm…good to know. I made several reservations for 7:30.)

Inside Lyon Bouchon

I don’t know exactly what we ate but it was delicious and the warm, welcoming atmosphere added to the specialness of the meal. All the servers looked happy, a good sign. The gregarious owner went around to every table with a handwritten menu, formed a huddle with diners and explained the entrees and plats de jour, in our case, in halting English (with help from our neighbors). He ended up picking several things for us (in halting French, I mentioned no blood sausage etc). We started with long mushrooms in a creamy sauce topped with greens in a mustardy dressing and a slice of cakey bread with a chunk of sausage in it (akin to pigs in a blanket).

For our mains, we each got a plate with creamy scalloped potatoes and a tasty sliced carrot concoction, then a dish to share of tender pork cheek in a savory brown sauce and an oval shaped dumpling coating white fish, served in a cream sauce. Dessert was a scoop of chocolate mousse beside a bright red/pink slab of what looked like a fruit pie/tart, but was not made with fruit. Instead it was with a lyonnaise specialty – – pink pralines, which are nubby, bright pink, very sweet, sugar-coated almonds. No-name wine was served by the bottle and half bottle, followed by a killer local liquor aperitif (that I couldn’t drink) served on the house. The food sounds weird and heavy but somehow it wasn’t.

Traboule tour

Toward the end of the meal, before anyone had paid, the owner stood in the middle of the dining room and invited diners to join him in the alleyway behind the restaurant for a brief tour of one of Lyon’s famous covered passageways (traboules) so we all got up and moved out into an adjoining courtyard surrounded by high towering walls. My French is lacking so we couldn’t pick up most of what he said (apparently there was mention of prostitutes) but it was fun to see this raconteur entertaining the crowd, with people laughing and smoking. Then we all dutifully returned to the warm restaurant and lined up to pay our bills. (Ours was a remarkably reasonable 89 euros .)

Hotel des Celestians is well-located (in a fancy shopping area of presqu’ile, a peninsula between two rivers, an easy and scenic walk to the old city/vieux Lyon) and a small, affordable place to stay, with very helpful staff who booked restaurants for us and an outgoing owner who went to Cornell’s famous hotel school (at the same time I was there, in the liberal arts college). Fun talking to him about Ithaca and greatly appreciated his restaurant recommendations.

We stopped for a drink at a chic but welcoming bar, Soul Brothers, near Le Musee that had nice looking charcuterie boards.

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