David Lebovitz podcast

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By: From my Paris kitchen

From my kitchen in Paris, talks with my favorite bakers, cookbook authors, pastry chefs, bartenders, chefs, spirits experts, along with a dose of Paris dining tips and French culinary culture. davidlebovitz.substack.com

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Chocolate Mole Brownies
Chocolate Mole Brownies episode artwork
Today at 7:07 AM

I met Carlos Moreno when he was delivering taco kits during the pandemic, when we all wanted to eat “out,” but were stuck eating in. Prior to that period Mexican food wasn’t well represented in Paris. (A lesser-known fact is that France tried to colonize Mexico twice in the mid-1800s.) I loved Carlos’ food and we had a few nice conversations on the sidewalk when he made his deliveries.

Since then he’s gone on to open his own restaurant in Paris, Comer. As I mention in the video, you might not think you want to go to a...


Talking Cookbooks with Jenna Helwig
Talking Cookbooks with Jenna Helwig episode artwork
06/03/2026

As someone who is passionate about cookbooks, I’m always up for talking about them with other cookbook collectors. I know there are lots of cookbook collectors out there, but one who really stands out is Jenna Helwig, who writes the Cookbookery Collective newsletter, which she describes as:


a hub for the cookbook community—authors, eaters, cooks, editors, publicists, publishers, agents, and aspiring authors alike. It’s a place to celebrate all cookbooks, new and old, blockbuster and under-the-radar. It’s a place to hear from your favorite authors and talk amongst ourselves in the comments section. I...


Talking French Chocolate at G. Detou (video)
Talking French Chocolate at G. Detou (video) episode artwork
05/28/2026

It’s no secret that one of my favorite places in Paris is G. Detou. In fact, I depend on it so much, for everything from chocolate to vanilla—and lots, lots more. I’ve been quoted as saying that if G. Detou didn’t exist, I couldn’t live in Paris. It’s got everything I need.

Owner Benoüt Bourloton is a busy man, spending his days keeping the shop well-stocked with a wide variety of French chocolates, as well as other delicacies. Since we’ve become friends (and what a friend to have!), I asked Benoüt if...


Chocolate-Olive Oil Spread
Chocolate-Olive Oil Spread episode artwork
05/11/2026

When I told Deb Perelman of Smitten Kitchen that I was doing a complete revision of The Great Book of Chocolate, which included adding new recipes, she insisted that I include her Chocolate-Olive Oil Spread. For those who follow Deb know that when she says something is delicious and worth making, you not only listen, but in my case, you spread the word. No pun intended.

As luck would have it, Deb was recently in Paris so I invited her into my kitchen to make her Chocolate-Olive Oil Spread. As you can see in the video, not...


Chocolate Marshmallows
Chocolate Marshmallows episode artwork
04/11/2026

One of my favorite parts about writing my chocolate book was getting to explore, and share, the world of chocolate. Chocolate is a pretty wonderful ingredient all by itself. But I wanted to feature friends in the chocolate world, so I culled recipes from bakers, pastry chefs, chocolatiers, cookbook authors, and even bartenders for the book.

For the revision of The Great Book of Chocolate, I completely rewrote the book (since so much has changed!) and wanted to include a chocolate marshmallow recipe. So I thought about Amanda Bankert of Boneshaker donuts in Paris, who...


A Chat with Elaine Sciolino
A Chat with Elaine Sciolino episode artwork
04/07/2026

Few people know, or write about, Paris as well as Elaine Sciolino. With an extensive background in journalism, Elaine was the Paris bureau chief for the New York Times and remains a contributing writer. She has also written four books on Paris and French culture.

Her book, The Only Street in Paris, put her neighborhood on the map, portraying the various merchants, food sellers, and restaurants that line the rue des Martyrs, a microcosm of life in the city.

Her recent book is Adventures in the Louvre: How to Fall in Love with...


Christopher Kimball Live with David Lebovitz
Christopher Kimball Live with David Lebovitz episode artwork
03/11/2026



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Podcast: Lauren Collins, Paris-based New Yorker Journalist
Podcast: Lauren Collins, Paris-based New Yorker Journalist episode artwork
02/09/2026

Since 2015, Lauren Collins, staff writer for the New Yorker, has called Paris home. The author of When in French: Love in a Second Language, Lauren moved from Switzerland to France with her French husband and continues to write for the New Yorker, following in their tradition (which includes writers such as A. J. Liebling, Anthony Bourdain, Calvin Trillin, John McPhee, and Adam Gopnick) of outstanding food writing and reporting on food-related topics.

Her articles have ranged from subjects such as the controversial French tacos, spelled with an “s,” even though it’s just one; Les Grands Buffets, the al...


David Lebovitz in conversation with Leslie Brenner
David Lebovitz in conversation with Leslie Brenner episode artwork
10/21/2025

I had a lot of fun talking with Leslie Brenner on this Live video. Leslie is the former food editor of the Los Angeles Times, and restaurant critic and dining editor of the Dallas Morning News, and we discussed quite a few topics, from how recipes have changed and evolved over the years, what motivated me to start writing cookbooks in the first place, how living in France affected my recipes, why I updated my book, Ready for Dessert, and what are some of my favorite and “must make” recipes.

[Note: There was a tech glitch and you...


A Chat with Matt Kepnes, aka, Nomadic Matt
A Chat with Matt Kepnes, aka, Nomadic Matt episode artwork
10/04/2025

Matt Kepnes, aka, Nomadic Matt, is one of the original bloggers, who I remember fondly from the early days of blogging. He started his travel blog, Nomadic Matt, in 2008 and has since turned it into a website with comprehensive information about all things travel. I’ve followed him around the globe—online, not in person. (Unfortunately!) I was happy to cross paths with him in Paris on his recent visit here and invited him into my kitchen to talk about travel in this day and age on my podcast.

Matt has a great expression. To keep...


A Chat with Cécilia Jourdan of Hello French
A Chat with Cécilia Jourdan of Hello French episode artwork
08/12/2025

You may know CĂ©cilia Jourdan from her wildly popular social media account Hello French which has close to 1.6 million followers on Instagram, and I wasn’t kidding when I said at the beginning of our podcast chat that I was very excited to finally meet her. (I’m a fan.)

Cécilia has done an amazing job bringing the French language, and many aspects of French culture, to the English-speaking world. She has covered everything from baguette etiquette to making a fresh apricot tart and describing the classic French petit déjeuner (breakfast) in English...


A Chat with Rachel Simons, owner of Seed+Mill
A Chat with Rachel Simons, owner of Seed+Mill episode artwork
07/15/2025

Tahini has gotten a lot of press in the last few years, and the delicious sesame paste has become a staple in many of our pantries. Many cultures have embraced the borderless sesame seed in some form or another, including Japanese gomashio and furikake, hummus from the Middle East, Italian Reginelle cookies, and even in burgers. In her new book, Rachel Simons explores all the possibilities and guises of this versatile ingredient: Sesame: Global Recipes & Stories of an Ancient Seed

Rachel is the co-founder of Seed+Mill, which offers top-quality tahini and halvah, a rich sesame paste...


A Chat with Dorie Greenspan
A Chat with Dorie Greenspan episode artwork
06/18/2025

It may sound clichĂ©, but I suspect for most of you, Dorie Greenspan needs no introduction. Dorie is an accomplished baker, whose books range from an oversize volume of never-fail cookie recipes, Dorie’s Cookies, to translating the recipes of master Parisian pastry chef Pierre HermĂ©, making them accessible to home bakers in Desserts by Pierre HermĂ©. And when Julia Child launched her TV show, Baking with Julia on PBS, she tapped Dorie to write the companion book, Baking with Julia.

Dorie describes herself as a part-time Parisian, so I took advantage of her time while she was i...


Podcast: A Chat with Preston Mohr, Director of the Wine Scholar Guild, on Enjoying French Wines
Podcast: A Chat with Preston Mohr, Director of the Wine Scholar Guild, on Enjoying French Wines episode artwork
04/12/2025

Living in France, it’s hard to overestimate the prevalence and importance of wine. Not only is it a marker and reflection of the place where it’s made, but it’s an integral part of French culture and cuisine. It’s a natural pairing with meals and accompanies almost every gathering with friends and family.

I like wine, but like most people in France, I’m an amateur. I know what I like and what I don’t like. But I’m taking more of an interest in wine to deepen my knowledge. So I’m fortunate...


My conversation with Yotam Ottolenghi
My conversation with Yotam Ottolenghi episode artwork
03/15/2025

Thanks to everyone for tuning into my live video with Yotam Ottolenghi!

It was great fun to connect with Yotam and discuss everything from cooking and baking inspiration, to favorite kitchen tools and tips, as well as two “weekend friendly” recipes; Yotam Ottolenghi’s Baked Feta-Dill Frittata and my Croissants aux amandes, almond-filled croissants.

I’ll be posting the recipe for them this week - stay tuned!

If you’re not a subscriber to my newsletter, you can subscribe below to get posts, recipes, stories, podcasts and more, sent right to your Inbox...


Podcast: On Writing Cookbooks, with author Kate Leahy
Podcast: On Writing Cookbooks, with author Kate Leahy episode artwork
03/09/2025

When Kate Leahy was in Paris recently, I was happy to have a chat with her in my kitchen for my podcast. A former restaurant cook, Kate seamlessly pivoted to food writing, collaborating on books with a variety of chefs, bakers, and sommeliers, and has also penned several books on her own.

Kate co-authored La Buvette with Camille Fourmont, the owner of the charming La Buvette wine bar in Paris, and most recently, My Egypt with chef-restaurateur Michael Mina.

She also co-wrote Lavash, which explores the world of Armenian flatbreads; Cookie Love with Mindy Segal...


Moving to, and Living in Paris with author Lindsey Tramuta
Moving to, and Living in Paris with author Lindsey Tramuta episode artwork
12/11/2024

I’ve known Lindsey Tramuta almost as long as I’ve been in Paris. We live in the same arrondissement (go 11th!) and I occasionally see her out and about, when she’s not busy writing books, or magazines and newspaper articles, which are featured in such publications as The New York Times, Bon AppĂ©tit, and CondĂ© Nast Traveler.

I arrived in Paris quite unprepared, not speaking French not knowing what to expect. Lindsey moved to France the opposite way (and in my opinion, the right way), with a background in French literature, studying in France, and havi...


A Chat with Amy Pasquet about French apéritif Pineau des Charentes
A Chat with Amy Pasquet about French apéritif Pineau des Charentes episode artwork
10/16/2024

A few years ago, I visited several Pineau des Charentes producers in a region of France known as the Charente, where Cognac is made. Legend has it that it was originally made by accident when a Cognac producer centuries ago added fresh grape to a barrel of eau-de-vie (a clear distillation of grapes), intended to be aged for Cognac. He let it rest, and age, anyways, and thus, Pineau des Charentes was made.

Nowadays Pineau des Charentes comes in white, red, and rosé varieties, with the rosé version aging the shortest, to some of the reds and wh...


Podcast: A chat with Rosa Jackson, cookbook author and cooking school teacher
Podcast: A chat with Rosa Jackson, cookbook author and cooking school teacher episode artwork
06/15/2024

If anyone knows the cuisine of Nice, it’s Rosa Jackson, owner of Les Petits Farcis for over twenty years. Located in the sunny south of France, Niçoise cooking is known for its freshness and Mediterranean flavors, using ingredients that range from local olive oil and anchovies to vibrant vegetables, such as tomatoes, Swiss chard, and zucchini (and zucchini flowers), as well as fresh goat cheeses and fragrant basil.

Rosa is the author of Niçoise: Market-Inspired Cooking from France's Sunniest City, with recipes that’ll entice you: Pan bagnat sandwiches packed with fresh, crisp...


Podcast: A Chat with Jane Bertch, author of The French Ingredient: Making a Life in Paris One Lesson at a Time
Podcast: A Chat with Jane Bertch, author of The French Ingredient: Making a Life in Paris One Lesson at a Time episode artwork
04/06/2024

Can I tell you how much fun it’s been getting to know Jane Bertch over the years? I’m not exactly sure how we met, but it may have been when I was leading tours and brought our guests for a day-long market tour and cooking class at La Cuisine, her cooking school in Paris. Everyone enjoyed the day very much, including me, and over the years, we’ve shared stories about relationships, and some of the quirks involved in cross-cultural connections, working and living in France, and, of course, we’ve shared several glasses of wine and...


Podcast: A Chat with Deb Perelman of Smitten Kitchen
Podcast: A Chat with Deb Perelman of Smitten Kitchen episode artwork
03/08/2024

I remember when Deb Perelman, aka: Smitten Kitchen, came on the scene in 2006. A few of us had been blogging for a couple of years, doing our thing—when suddenly, a fresh new voice came out of the blue (and out of New York), that segued perfectly to the new way we eat, and cook—less rules, more fun, and how we write about food.

If you’re anything like me, you’ve been following her blog for years and cooking from her books. Decades later, her blog remains one of the most popular food destinat...


Podcast: A Chat (and Cooking Videos) with Trigg Brown of Win Son Bakery
Podcast: A Chat (and Cooking Videos) with Trigg Brown of Win Son Bakery episode artwork
01/06/2024

The first time I went to Win Son bakery and cafĂ© in Brooklyn, I wasn’t sure what to expect. It’s billed as a Taiwanese-American bakery, and I’m not too familiar with Taiwanese baked goods. I ordered a few things off the menu that sounded good, and after I brought them to the table, I started tasting my way around the tray, and everything I ate blew me away. Everything was delicious.

The bakery and menu items take cues from familiar favorites, such as chocolate chip cookies and donuts, but I was delighted at how brillia...


Eating in Tel Aviv with Amit Aaronsohn
Eating in Tel Aviv with Amit Aaronsohn episode artwork
10/06/2023

Before I left for Tel Aviv this summer, I rounded up advice from friends who are chefs, cookbook authors, and seasoned eaters about where to eat. I’ve lived in food-centric cities most of my life, but Tel Aviv is in a class by itself. There are so many good places to eat, it’s hard to whittle it down to just a few.

And if you’re there, and ask anyone where they think you should go, be prepared for a lengthy discussion that will result in a strongly opinionated list of suggestions. And if oth...


Podcast with Jon Bonné, author of The New French Wine
Podcast with Jon Bonné, author of The New French Wine episode artwork
07/25/2023

I didn’t expect to be as captivated as I was by The New French Wine: Redefining the World’s Greatest Wine Culture. It’s an immense two-volume book spanning nearly 850 pages, exploring the lush vineyards and wine regions of France with profiles of 800 producers and notes on around 7,000 wines. I’m no wine expert, but as soon as I started reading the first page, I was hooked.

Living in, and writing about, France, it’s often a challenge to explain the intricacies of life here. In the subtitle of his book, wine writer Jon BonnĂ© acknowledges the greatne...


Podcast: The Art of French "Joie" with Ajiri Aki
Podcast: The Art of French "Joie" with Ajiri Aki episode artwork
07/04/2023

When it comes to style, I don’t think anyone is eager to copy what I wear every day, although I do know that some people covet some of the dishes and cookware that I pick up at flea markets in France. Fortunately, we have Ajiri Aki in Paris, who founded Madame de la Maison, a fabulous online resource for carefully curated French antiques and linens. (Warning: You’ll want to order everything she has in stock.)

I’ve been a fan of Ajiri for quite some time, but it wasn’t until the release of my book Dri...


Podcast: A Chat with Dianne Jacob, author of Will Write for Food
Podcast: A Chat with Dianne Jacob, author of Will Write for Food episode artwork
06/05/2023

It’s always a pleasure to chat with Dianne Jacob of Dianne Jacob newsletter, food writing coach, teacher, editor, and author of Will Write for Food, which is the handbook for food writing, covering everything from how to break into the world of food writing, starting a blog or a newsletter, as well as valuable tips on writing recipes, what to know if you want to write your first cookbook or food memoir, and how to “bring home the bacon” from doing it.

During our chat we discussed:

* Who “owns” a recipe?

* Why we...


Podcast: Scandinavian Baking with Nichole Accettola of Kantine bakery
Podcast: Scandinavian Baking with Nichole Accettola of Kantine bakery episode artwork
04/20/2023

I had spectacular luck with I was in San Francisco and a friend suggested we meet up one morning at Kantine, a Scandinavian bakery and café. Arriving a little early, I was knocked out by the beautiful selection of pastries and breakfast offerings, which included open-faced smoked fish sandwiches on housemade sprouted rye bread, savory grain porridge, and a Scandinavian take on the breakfast sandwich, the Grovbirkes, a seed-crusted spiral of buttery puff pastry filled with warm scrambled eggs and crisp bacon. I wanted it all!

After meeting owner/baker Nichole Accettola after breakfast, I invited her t...


Podcast: On Travel and Eating French Pastries with Phil Rosenthal
Podcast: On Travel and Eating French Pastries with Phil Rosenthal episode artwork
03/19/2023

When Phil Rosenthal, star of Somebody Feed Phil, comes to town, we did what we do best: Eat.

Phil was in Paris recently on tour celebrating his book, Somebody Feed Phil, the companion to his Netflix series. The cookbook is a compilation of the most requested recipes from the show, which has become wildly popular, and we had a lot of fun catching up since we first met in Paris, back in 2014, when it all began for him.

We dined well in a few great restaurants in Paris, but took a break from the savory...


Podcast: Secrets of Paris with Heather Stimmler
Podcast: Secrets of Paris with Heather Stimmler episode artwork
02/14/2023

I recently sat down with my friend Heather Stimmler, of Secrets of Paris, to talk about tourism in Paris for my podcast. Often called “the most visited city in the world,” Paris has an admirable reputation, but the word “tourist” comes with negative connotations. Personally, I love to “play tourist” and spend a day hitting museums, sightseeing, or getting to know a new neighborhood.

Whether you’re a first-time tourist, a resident, a multiple-time visitor, or just interested in Paris, you’ll learn something from Heather and I was happy to have a chat with her about tourism—and othe...


How to Eat and Enjoy French Cheese with Jennifer Greco
How to Eat and Enjoy French Cheese with Jennifer Greco episode artwork
01/25/2023

If you want to learn more about French cheeses, you can't do better than to sit down with Jennifer Greco, a French cheese and wine expert. Jennifer stopped by my kitchen with a basket of magnificent French cheeses which we sampled—and, I apologize in advance, but a few I swooned a little too much over. Yes, she knows her stuff!

I hope you enjoy the podcast—and the sampling of French cheeses—as much as I did😋

-David

To learn more about Jennifer's Cheese and Wine tastings in Paris, click here.



...


Sarah Donnelly: Paris Stand-Up Comedian
Sarah Donnelly: Paris Stand-Up Comedian episode artwork
01/13/2023

Sarah and I bonded over our mutual bewilderment over square pillows (which perplex me since people move from side to side when they sleep - not up and down), as well as traversins, the odd cylindrical bed pillows in France that all but guarantee a sleepless night.

So I was excited to attend her latest show, The Only American in Paris, a hilarious hour of comedy, with stories about her arrival in France, meeting her French husband, and raising two Parisian children.

In her fast-moving hour of comedy, Sarah shares revealing photos of her favorite...


Podcast: Classic Cocktails with French Spirits
Podcast: Classic Cocktails with French Spirits episode artwork
12/18/2022

Forest Collins of 52 Martinis, a website dedicated to featuring the best cocktail bars in Paris, stopped by my kitchen to shake, stir, and share a few of her favorite cocktail recipes with us, which use French spirits.

There's a delicious 50:50 Martini, a Jack Rose, and a Sidecar to sip on. The recipes are posted in my newsletter at: davidlebovitz.substack.com

Enjoy the podcast, and the drinks!

-David

Visit Forest Collins at her website: 52 Martinis

Listen to Forest’s podcast: Paris Cocktail Talk

Follow Forest on Instagram an...


The Bitter Side of France
The Bitter Side of France episode artwork
11/11/2022

France is well-known for its pastries and sweets, but the culture does have a bitter side, which includes bittersweet chocolate, dark and dusky chestnut and buckwheat honey, red currants, assertive gentian apéritifs, bitter almonds, amers like Picon, beers, and leafy salads tossed with bitter greens, such as frisée, roquette (arugula), and Belgian endive.

I first heard of Jennifer McLagan when I saw the striking cover of her book, Fat. Published in 2008, it was a grenade tossed against the fat phobia at the time. (Hard to believe there were stampedes in supermarkets, once upon a...


Podcast: Buying an Apartment in Paris
Podcast: Buying an Apartment in Paris episode artwork
09/27/2022

One of my heroes in Paris is Miranda Bothe. We’ve been friends for many years, and thanks to her, I saved a bundle when buying my previous apartment; she got me through some of the rough patches that came up during the purchase, which were challenging, especially because I wasn’t familiar with the process of (and the cultural differences between) how real estate is bought and sold in the United States versus in France. So it helped to have someone on my side to negotiate, who knew the rules and had connections to the right people to stee...


Podcast: A chat with cookbook editor Susan Friedland
Podcast: A chat with cookbook editor Susan Friedland episode artwork
08/25/2022

How does a cookbook get published? What goes into creating a cookbook, and what makes a cookbook great? While the author’s job is to write the book and create the recipes, a good editor will nurture the book until it’s in its final form, ready to send to the printers, before it’s sent to bookstores and eventually lands in the hands of readers.

What does an editor do along the way? Why aren’t there metrics in American cookbooks? Why isn’t there a picture to accompany every recipe in every cookbook published? How does an ed...


Podcast: French and Italian Apéritifs with Brad Thomas Parsons
Podcast: French and Italian Apéritifs with Brad Thomas Parsons episode artwork
08/05/2022

When I told a friend that when I’m in New York, I go out for drinks with Brad Parsons, she said, “Oh, he’s the holy grail of drinking buddies!” I was introduced to Brad via Ed Anderson, who photographed my books Drinking French and My Paris Kitchen, and he photographed all of Brad’s books. After shooting My Paris Kitchen, Ed sent me a copy of Bitters, which was so well-written and covered the subject so well (a subject I wasn’t all that familiar with, but the book piqued my interest!) that I had to meet him.

B...


A chat with Pastry Chef Ali Spahr
A chat with Pastry Chef Ali Spahr episode artwork
06/20/2022

Who doesn’t love a great croissant? I certainly do. But I also love the other delicious treats that come out of the oven of Ali Spahr, pastry chef, and ace baker at Winner in Brooklyn.

Ali studied baking in France at the esteemed Ferrandi cooking school in Paris, and when Daniel Eddy, the chef/owner of Winner (who also lived in Paris) decided to open up a cafĂ© and bakery in New York, he wanted to re-create some of the “grab and go” pastries that France is known for, and tapped Ali with the task.

I mak...


BenoĂźt Marinos of La Cidrerie
BenoĂźt Marinos of La Cidrerie episode artwork
06/03/2022

One of the great things about writing a book about French drinks was going outside of my “lane,” so to speak. I was fascinated by the culture of French drinks, everything from Cognac to beer, and wanted to take a deep dive into the subject and share what I knew, and what I learned. The subject is vast and I couldn’t include an in-depth discussion of every boisson in the French canon—quite a few, like Armagnac, wine, eaux-de-vie, pastis, and even cider, merit their own books. (American cider, on the other hand, has been written about.)<...


Podcast with Artisan Baker Bryan Ford
Podcast with Artisan Baker Bryan Ford episode artwork
05/20/2022

The baking world is a big, bountiful place, and there’s a lot of ground to cover. And French breads and pastries, of course, take up a lot of that space. I met Bryan Ford, the author of New World Sourdough, back in 2019. At the time, I didn’t realize (and likely neither did he!) that he’d be one of the bright spots of a global pandemic, teaching people the art of sourdough baking during worldwide lockdowns and confinements.

Now Bryan is the host of his own television show, The Artisan’s Kitchen on Discover...


French Apéritifs with Quentin Chapuis
French Apéritifs with Quentin Chapuis episode artwork
04/04/2022

For this special podcast - my second! - I’m thrilled to have as my guest Quentin Chapuis, co-founder of the FĂ©dĂ©ration Française de l’ApĂ©ritif, otherwise known as the FFA. Founded by Quentin and two friends as a lark, the idea has grown into several excellent Ă©piceries (food shops) and apĂ©ritif bars with several locations in Paris, and others in Lille and Lyon. I loved the idea so much that I featured the FĂ©dĂ©ration Française de l’ApĂ©ritif, and a drink from Quentin, in Drinking French.

The FFA featur...