Apr
29
2008
May - the time that most of France seems to shut down for the various holidays that they have. The French have three public holidays in May - 1st May which is the ‘Fête du Travail’ (labour day), 8th May which is ‘Victoire 1945′ - the day World War 2 ended and finally 12 May ‘Lundi de Pentecôte’ - Pentecost. The day of the week the holiday falls on is a holiday, whether it falls on a weekend or not, so if 1st May or 8 May are a weekend, then they don’t get the day off during the week.
However, many French take the opportunity to ‘faire le pont’, which means they bridge to the weekend if the holiday falls on a Tuesday or a Thursday. Two of this years’ holidays are on Thursdays, so no doubt most French won’t work on 1st or 2nd May. To add to their holidays even more, the 8th May holiday will no doubt turn into 5 days as they’ll take off 8 & 9 May, plus 12 May. Oh, to be in France in May!!
So, not only do the French do very well with public holidays, they are also the world leaders in the number of days holiday they have per year, according to the Daily Telegraph - 37 on average in total!
Apr
23
2008
There are loads of French language learning tools out there, books, CDs, videos, DVDs, all for those with varying levels and wanting to learn the language quickly or slowly. I’m going to be looking at various tools as and when I come across them, but recently I found a good French language tool on LanguageGuide.org that has pictures with an audio of the word as you hover your mouse over the image. I really like this one, not only do you find out what the word is, but how to pronounce it at the same time!
Along with the pictorial vocabulary guide as they call it, there are grammar lessons and some readings to follow with audio.
Apr
19
2008
According to a post on ‘Talking Retail’ this week, imports of French cheese into the UK have overtaken Irish imports for the first time, making France the number one cheese importer to the UK.
I don’t know anyone who doesn’t love a good cheese and there is such a wide choice available nowadays to suit all tastes, strong ones and milder ones which I prefer. Not only does France have a diverse range of cheeses, but so does the UK. There are some great British ones to be had too (I love Cornish Yarg).
As for French cheeses, I like a good goat’s cheese, ‘tomme’ (mountain cheese) and emmenthal, but am not so keen on camembert. When it comes to buying brie (in the UK), I often go for the ‘Somerset’ variety!
Apr
11
2008
In this increasingly obese world, many of us wonder how some nations manage to stay slim and one of those nations is France. You rarely see obese or overweight French people, and they’re renowned for taking care of their body and their looks!
For those of you who would like a few pointers, here’s an article on how their eating habits keep them slim:
11 Reasons Of French Paradox - in a nutshell, eat less (don’t eat all those croissants at once!), drink red wine (but not the whole bottle!), get some exercise and eat lots of fresh fruit & veg. Mostly things we already know, but don’t like to adhere to!
Apr
06
2008
The Duke and Duchess of Hamilton have decided to boycott Selfridges while they sell ‘foie gras’, according to Thursday’s Daily Telegraph. The Prince of Wales has also banned foie gras from Royal menus.
The debate on ethically produced food is really starting to heat up, not only with boycotts on traditionally produced food such as foie gras, which is a delicacy in France, but recently in the UK too with high profile campaigns such as Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s Chicken Out campaign to encourage people to eat free range and organically produced chickens, instead of cheaply reared broiler chickens. Veal is another meat that has been hotly debated.
Will the British public follow the royals’ ban on foie gras? That remains to be seen - many top restaurants will continue to serve it until they find an alternative that tastes as good as the traditionally produced foie gras. This was Gordon Ramsay’s take on the subject after trying ethically produced foie gras from Spain on an edition of the F-Word.