Houston Chronicle

From the streets of Paris, my best meal ever

- By Daniel Neman

In retrospect, it was the best meal of my life. Not coincident­ally, it was also the best street food of my life.

Admittedly, much of what made the meal so memorable was the circumstan­ces.

It was just after midnight in Paris. We had just left a wine bar that closed for the night, where we’d had a glass or two of Champagne. A light mist was falling on the cobbleston­e street.

And in that most romantic of settings, I was hungry.

Across the street — cobbleston­e, as I said — was a creperie. There was a line, five or six people long, waiting to order crepes at the window that opened onto the street.

I made my way to the front of line, ordered and watched as they made it. I picked up my crepe, shaped in a cone and wrapped in waxed paper, at the next window. It was absolutely heavenly.

And it wasn’t just the hour, the mist, the cobbleston­e street and the City of Light. It was the crepe itself: mushrooms and Emmentaler cheese, with a light coating of egg cooked onto the inside of the crepe.

But what kind of a crepe was it? Here is where my memory of the meal has faded.

I’ve always assumed it was a regular, though by no means ordinary, crepe. But what if it were a buckwheat crepe, which are also popular throughout Paris? Or whole wheat?

Here, the internet has let me down. I had hoped to get a clue about the crepes from pictures or perhaps a descriptio­n, but apparently the place has closed. I have searched for it, rememberin­g not the name but where it had been located, and apparently it is no longer there.

A lot can happen in eight years.

So, naturally, I decided to try making all three types of crepes.

I started with buckwheat. Buckwheat was a mistake.

It’s not that the crepe itself was bad, although it also wasn’t terribly good. It’s just that adding buckwheat flour to a crepe, or anything else, makes it taste more earthy. Because the filling was primarily mushrooms, it was also earthy, but a different kind. So we had two earthy flavors competing with each other, and no one came out the winner.

I should have realized buckwheat was wrong, because buckwheat crepes always have sugar. I left out the sugar because my crepes were going to be savory, but buckwheat turns out to be best when it is sweet.

Next, I tried whole wheat crepes. Whole wheat was a mistake.

Whole wheat crepes taste like whole wheat bread, without any of the mitigating factors that make whole wheat bread so good. They taste like someone was making crepes and ran out of white flour, so he added whole wheat flour in the hopes that no one would notice. Believe me, you notice. That left regular, old, not-soordinary crepes.

And they were fantastic. They were the perfect counterpoi­nt to the earthy, full-flavored mushrooms, the delightful egg and the gooey cheese.

Wonderful, oui, but were they as good as the crepes of my memory?

Non.

Perhaps you just need the midnight mist, the Parisian air and the cobbleston­es. And it wouldn’t hurt to have the echo somewhere of a long accordion playing “La Vie en Rose.”

 ?? Hillary Levin / St. Louis Post-Dispatch ?? This French crepe is filled with mushrooms and cheese, with a light coating of egg cooked onto the inside.
Hillary Levin / St. Louis Post-Dispatch This French crepe is filled with mushrooms and cheese, with a light coating of egg cooked onto the inside.

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