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I remember one August in Berlin many years ago, my mother and I came back from visiting our family in Italy and had to turn the heater on. It was that cold. In August! Things have, uh, changed in northern Europe over the past 20 years. Currently, Berlin is in the grip of a heat wave – meaning we've got temperatures hovering around 100 degrees Fahrenheit and have had them stuck there for days now.

I know, I know – New York and the whole Eastern Seaboard have humidity that we blessedly do not. But come hang out in my attic apartment and feel the hot air licking your legs like a Sicilian scirocco and tell me where you'd rather be: here or in a good old North American movie theater, where the air conditioner is cranked up to Wintry Storm and you're wrist-deep in popcorn.

Or maybe that's just where I'd rather be.

I've beaten a hasty retreat to my mother's apartment, taking a sharp knife and some tomatoes with me. That's about all I can stomach in this heat. But look what I found on the way! My very first transcribed recipe, for crostata. I'd learned how to make it from the teenaged daughter of our friend Maria one summer and after returning to Berlin, I'd written down the recipe for my mother's friend Joan. I must have been around seven or eight years old at the time. She's kept it all these years.

"Later EAT!" I love that.

So I have a few questions for you, friends. Can you cook in this heat? Or do you just survive on cereal and cold milk? If you can cook, what are you making?

And also, what's the first recipe you remember learning? The first thing you were taught to make? For me, it was that crostata. I remember feeling the oily, smooth dough beneath my fingers, the cool roughness of the wooden countertop, the smell of my aunt's oven as it heated. What was it for you?

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99 responses to “Heat Wave”

  1. Lena Avatar

    Oh make fruit soup, that’s good: http://coconutandvanilla.blogspot.com/

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  2. Tamsin Avatar
    Tamsin

    It’s not so hot in the southwest of England that I can’t bear to use the oven but I am trying to avoid it. When I lived in Italy it stayed at about 37-38C (100F) for several months over summer and I lived almost exclusively on salads – mainly caprese with beautiful ripe tomatoes and cold, creamy mozzarella. I also spent a lot of time at the ‘fruitaria’ opposite my apartment which sold fresh fruit salads and huge wedges of watermelon and pineapple. Mmm!
    When I was little my mum used to give me scraps of pastry to bake with, I often made jam tarts or mini pasties. My brother and I were always encouraged to help in the kitchen; we were pretty much my mum’s commis chefs.

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  3. Kerry Avatar

    Salads and more salads. Crispy and fresh. We are dying in the heat one coutry over from you and we got humidity to boot. I feel your pain! Speaking of pain: the Dutch lost last night. Boo hoo!
    -Kerry@foodlovas

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  4. Inge Avatar

    I´m in Holland and we share the same heatwave. At the moment, it´s still hot but also really spooky dark and raining. I think it´s coming your way tonight. Hopefully that will cool things down a bit.
    I´m just eating salads at the moment, although the cutting of the ingredients almost seems too much at times!
    The first recipe I ever made was cake. Just plain vanilla cake. From a box.

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  5. my little expat kitchen Avatar

    I know what you mean about the heat wave. It’s the same in Holland as well. They issued an extreme weather conditions alert. Well, for me it’s kind of funny because I’m from Greece so these temperatures are tolerable, to say the least.
    I am able to stand over the stove and hot oven for more than a couple of hours, so my cooking has been quite varied this past week.
    I also made ice cream. I’m not that crazy not to.
    Magda

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  6. Bianca Avatar
    Bianca

    I have been living in Paris since last Fall and this is the first time I experience killer heat in this city!!! What’s more, airconditioning is scarce so eating is really not much of an option.
    Since the temperatures rose, I have been eating only fruits from the supermarket or to-go salads. I have discovered, however, this interesting site that offers recipes for the current season.
    http://www.mybestaddressbook.com/en/addresses/search.html
    It’s worth a try I must say. But, I will definitely be trying the Crostata as soon as I manage to hit the market.

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  7. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    My first recipe was “No Bake Cookies” with my mom. Still a favorite for me 🙂

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  8. Gemma Avatar
    Gemma

    Well it’s not that hot here in Scotland! In fact is has rained for three days straight and the thermometer is reaching the dizzy height of 18oc. So we are starting to eat less stew! I made garlic and chickpea flat breads last week to go with Lamb skewers and a whole host of mezze dishes- Still feeling inspired from my recent trip to turkey!
    The first thing I can remember making was poached eggs with my dad and chocolate crispy cakes.

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  9. Clara Avatar

    It’s stiflingly hot here in Maine, but I still baked a blueberry pie yesterday. Somehow I was so fixed on the allure of those berries and sugar and lemon, and even on the entertainment of making a chilled pie crust, that I forgot this would require getting the oven so hot. But it was worth it, especially since we didn’t eat the pie until it’d cooled off. (Love the Crostata recipe, especially the “backing” powder!)

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  10. Emily Avatar

    Melting into a drippy puddle on the East Coast of the US, my diet has become centered around cucumbers and cold beer! I had a to bake a pie for my boyfriend’s birthday, though, and truly thought I had been transported into Dante’s Inferno…until we actually go to eat the pie, which made it entirely worth it. But, I’m looking forward to going to my family in Norway, and praying that it stays cool there. Oh, and I think my first “recipe” was scrambled eggs with herbs!

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  11. Cathie Avatar
    Cathie

    With no air conditioning in the middle of Oklahoma it is much too hot to turn on an oven or even to cook on the stove! In the summer we live off of salads, antipasto platters (favorites are deli turkey, salami, olives, cheese, tomatoes from our garden, and some good chunks of bread dipped in olive oil), and sandwiches. Sometimes when it cools off at night I’ll boil a big batch of pasta to use for pasta salad for the week. When we really feel the need for a good meal there’s always the grill. My current favorite is a grilled halibut with cucumber melon salsa!

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  12. Eileen Avatar
    Eileen

    hummus. chopped avocado, mango, tomato, onion, herbs. add lettuce/spinach and you have a meal… with or without pita or bread.

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  13. Charlotte Avatar

    The first recipe I remember cooking on my own without one of my mum’s recipes was lasagna. I watched my aunt make it and came home and made it myself. And I was so proud. I was probably 14. And then I moved on to Chicken Cacciatore – a recipe I remember tearing out of my Glamour magazine!
    Summer arrived here (BC, Canada) on July 5th and was hot (34 ish) for a couple of days and has since cooled off to our regular mid-20’s. On our hottest day I made chicken BLT salad – had to cook the chicken on the stove but it was done quickly.

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  14. Gail Avatar
    Gail

    Last week it was crazy-hot in New York, and I ate snap peas — raw, refreshing — and chocolate sorbet and lots and lots of cherries.
    The first thing I learned how to make was pie crust. And to this day, 25 years later, I still use the same piece of paper, very much like the one above, that I transcribed while sitting in the kitchen with my mom. “And when it starts to look like small peas, add the ice cold water, one tablespoon at a time…”

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  15. margie Avatar

    I’m lucky enough to have moved from the one of the hottest parts of L.A. to an area near the beach, so we get ocean breezes every day. Of course, L.A. has been having such cool weather this summer that it wouldn’t have been a problem anywhere else.
    I really like salads in hot weather – my favorite is panzanella. I like to cook pasta and potatoes late at night, with the windows open – enough for several days’ worth of pasta and potato salad, and then I can dress it and put it in a huge container in the fridge. I recently made a great warm quinoa salad with tendercrisp green beans, cherry tomatoes, and fresh mozzarella.
    Other staples are bread & cheese, and fruit & yoghurt. Also cold soup: even a usually-hot soup like a thick veggie/bean stew can be great taken out of the freezer to thaw and eaten cold.
    I love our gloomy weather, but everyone else talking about their heatwaves is making me miss summer!

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  16. missboulette Avatar

    I love sweet & tangy wakame salad in summer…and another tip to stay cool in Berlin: Martin-Gropius-Bau – cool breeze and cool Olafur Eliasson

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  17. Tracy Avatar

    I remember bringing home from elementary school a simple two ingredient recipe (cream cheese and bacon bits—I believe it was homework). I stood on a chair, hovering over the counter with wooden spoon in hand mixing bacon bits and cream cheese in a large Pyrex bowl.

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  18. AngAK Avatar
    AngAK

    very curious about this recipe. was it for a fruit crostata? how did you fill it?

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  19. Eliza Avatar

    My loved one IS the cookie monster [or closely related to him], so i bake every week. It’s searing heat over here in Romania, and i’ve been living in a muffin sauna for the past month. Not the worst way to go, though 🙂

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  20. Julie Avatar

    i can’t even stand to be inside my apartment in this heat, let alone prepare food (even cold food). I have been eating a lot of rucola and parmesan salad (and bruschetta mmm) from my favorite italian restaurant (La Madria on Turmstrasse), followed up with pistachio & panna cotta gelato from the gelateria next door to that (which I am quite certain is the best gelato in berlin).

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  21. Erica Newhouse Avatar

    Your pasta dish is the only thing I’ve wanted to make in the heat but I do remember a very fifties little hors d’oeuvres that my grandmother would make on hot afternoons along with a big bowl of freshly brewed iced tea swimming in orange and lemon slices. You take a slice of white bread and cut it into four squares, spoon a little spot of catalina dressing on, then place a small square of white American cheese on top, garnish with half a pimento olive and bake in the toaster oven until the toast crisps up and cheese bubbles. I know they sound dreadful but as a little girl I used to love them! And, if there happens to be a floral seventies print sofa and an Afgan dog named Caba nearby, all the better.

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  22. Tyla Avatar

    I JUST found a whole stash of recipes my grandmother handwrote in the back of a cookbook she gave me. I was planning to brave the heat this weekend to try at least one of them out. What is it about handwritten recipes that is so amazing? I really think it makes things taste better…

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  23. The Rowdy Chowgirl Avatar

    Love the picture of that recipe. So sweet! My first choice for hot weather cooking is to not cook–just retreat to a restaurant with a shady patio and eat tacos and drink margaritas. Second choice, if I really must eat at home: ice cold somen noodles.

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  24. Lisa-Marie Avatar

    This first thing I learned to make was scones, and I can’t have been older than 4. I have the recipe in my writing from when I was 6.
    It has mercifully been raining, and then relatively temperate, here in Dundee this week. Beforehand it was warmer than i can stand for 3 weeks solid. I can cook when it’s warm, but only baked things, then i can sit in another room. It feels odd, because most of the time, it’s cold here, and I am eager to be by the cooker!

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  25. Sylvie Avatar

    There is not much cooking going on here at the moment either, even though this week temperatures have definitely dropped again. I can’t remember if Penne alla Panna really was the very first recipe I learned to cook, but it was definitely the first one that got me so excited that I got my friend’s dad to write it down for me after having it at their house. Both my mum and I still cook it and it’s on my blog.

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  26. Anne Avatar
    Anne

    greetings from steamy NYC. Any additional heat makes my tiny kitchen an inferno so its all salads for me. Good italian canned tuna for tuna nicoise, smitten’s peanut sesame noodles and a new great salad (be warned, makes a HUGE amount) from the NYT with barley, watermelon, dill, peppers and all sorts of good stuff…eating it for lunch all week and couldn’t be happier (well, unless I’m in airconditioning or the heat lets up!)

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  27. The Food Hunter Avatar

    I live in Phx Arizona and the 115 degree heat hasn’t stopped me yet. this weekend I made two loaves of bread and a cake. I can’t help myself

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  28. sink girl Avatar

    i live in [humidity free] park city utah. but i moved from the east coast. i can handle the high heat….as long as it is dry.
    and the first recipe i remember learning was sweet and sour chicken. my family bravely cooked a chinese feast a couple of times a year, and the sweet and sour chicken was always my responsibility. i haven’t made it or thought about it in years!

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  29. Shirin Avatar

    The recipe is so cute! I love “sift the … into a volcano.”
    I’m going to try making the crostata, it sounds so simple and delicious.

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  30. janice Avatar
    janice

    I remember making eggy challah french toast with my dad. Its super hot in Virginia, even in the mountains. But it feels really nice and there is a breeze. It isn’t as sticky as the NY metro area where I grew up, and cold icy watermelon and good farmers market tomato sandwiches hit the spot. Then again my office is freezing and I have to stand outside to thaw

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  31. Dani Avatar
    Dani

    I’m making a lot of smoothies. And eating a lot of yoghurt. But its laziness more than heat. We have a.c. and I’m originally from the Tropics so NYC can suck it. But maybe that’s because I do Bikram Yoga regularly.

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  32. Sherri Avatar

    Its cool here in California right now, but when its hot I always cook on the grill and serve a Heirloom Tomatoe salad on the side.
    The first thing I remember cooking was Mashed Potatoes along side my Grandmother. Her secret was to add a little cheddar cheese. She use to call me her Mashed Potatoe Girl, I cherish those memories and still love Mashed Potatoes.

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  33. Luisa Avatar

    You guys are making me hungry! Such troopers – such great cooks! I wish I could come over for dinner at a different house every night. 🙂
    Liana – I need to make my own chaat. Sounds AMAZING. Going to search your site for a recipe now.
    newlywed – best comment ever. Made me laugh! Thank you. 🙂
    Martina – that sounds delicious, I could totally handle that. I never had avocado with soy and ginger, just with balsamic. Must try!
    Heena – wow, Suzanne Goin’s yogurt-cucumber thing sounds delicious. Thanks for telling me about it! Definitely will be made this week.
    Raphaelle – it’s standing room only there these days! 🙂
    Missboulette – what a great idea. I might as well spend the whole day there and see Frida, too.
    AngAK – Once you make the dough, you roll out two thirds of it, line a pie pan/cake pan/springform/whatever. Cover it with jam, leaving a small border. Then, with the remaining dough, you roll out strips and make a lattice crust. I’ve long used a different recipe from this one, though.
    Julie – ooh, I’m intrigued. Must try that gelato!

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  34. Zia Elle Avatar

    Rome…..hot hot hot……
    I love your hand write recipe page!!!!

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  35. Gillordeincatering.wordpress.com Avatar

    Here in the Scottish Borders we’ve been blessed with a little sunshine though it’s raining very heavily today. For me, summer is about fish, braaifleis and berries for pudding. Fish done En Papillote – fresh herbs from the garden, rosemary, thyme etc, Braaifleis/BBQ with plenty of salads and of course our wonderful fresh Strawbs and Raspberries with lashings of cream or ice cream.
    First dish – rocky road – Bring on the fridge cake! IT”S SUMMER TIME! 🙂

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  36. Denise @ Chez Danisse Avatar

    Your recipe is such a treasure. “Later EAT!” I love that too. I’m embarrassed to be commenting at all on this post because, as is true most summers, the weather is quite cool here in San Francisco. Still, it feels like summer to me and I’ve seen my tastes change. Lately, I prefer simple and unadorned dishes. The less prep the better. Salads, cold noodles, and plain fruit have been staples.

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  37. Louise @ Kitchen Fiddler Avatar

    I’m subsisting on lots of fresh salads and cold gazpacho these days, washed down with endless glasses of iced coffee, and the only thing worth turning the stove on for is to cook a base for homemade ice cream or sorbet! David Lebovitz’s Apricot Sorbet is my latest craze. http://kitchenfiddler.blogspot.com/2010/06/apricot-sorbet-for-kids-of-all-ages.html
    I have many early childhood memories of helping my mother make cookies, as I think many people do. But my first solo foray into the kitchen happened at age 6 when I made Rubber Ducky Floats from the Sesame Street Cookbook: scoops of lemon and pineapple sherbet arranged in a tall glass, topped with lemonade and ginger ale, and garnished with a pineapple ring. I can hardly write that with a straight face now, but you cannot imagine how proud my 6-year-old self was to serve these to my family!

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  38. Nic Avatar
    Nic

    I’m in Southern Ontario too…but my boyfriend is STILL making pizza, dumplings, the whole bit…and we don’t have AC.

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  39. Heena Avatar

    Luisa, Liana – glad to see other chaat lovers out there. I’ve been doing a lot of it recently too. It’s my favorite Indian street food – in fact just did a 1000-word blog post on it – I’m so infatuated!

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  40. Jennifer Avatar
    Jennifer

    I recently joined a farmshare here in Paris. My favorite thing when it gets around 30C is zucchini soup – one with cucumber and mint, another with avocado and buttermilk (the latter being my favorite.)
    Yesterday my partner and I bought our first Magimix, and while it’s not that hot today, I spent the afternoon making hummus, eggplant caviar and mango lassis.

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  41. Nico Avatar
    Nico

    Salads and pita! And all kinds of cheese. Peppers grilled on the Foreman. Pasta crudo. Japanese cucumber salad (i made up my own awesome recipe). Fruit salad. Chunky, marinated salads of all kinds according to what looks good in the market…and seasoned with the right spices or vinegar according to the ethnicity of the meal, Italian, Chinese, Mexican, whatever! Tortillas! Stir fries with those fat, chewy already-cook Korean noodles. Middle Eastern!…hummus and tabouleh with my own herbs (bulgur only needs to be soaked, not boiled). Spicy Indian chutney on rice-cooker-made rice. Crepes! We don’t have AC…but my crazy boyfriend is still making pizza and steamed dumplings! Iced coffee! And of course ice cream cones with banana hiding in the bottom of the cone!

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  42. Lynn Ray Pardo Avatar
    Lynn Ray Pardo

    thanks for the great ideas!
    I’m in the San Francisco Bay Area where melons and fruits are a plenty – We’ve been feasting on melon salads with chevre and mint, Served ice cold, mmmm:
    1. carve melon balls from cantaloupe or watermelon
    2. add tiny pieces of cold goat cheese
    3. add minced or small torn pieces of fresh mint
    (if you get bored of this, mix it up by adding a squeeze of lime and bit of lime zest)

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  43. Lynn Ray Pardo Avatar
    Lynn Ray Pardo

    Great room temp brown rice recipe:
    I made this up last week when going to a pot-luck where there wouldn’t be any way to keep food warm.
    Organic Coconut Brown Rice with Lime, Mint and Almonds!
    All organic ingredients:
    1 Cup brown rice
    2 Cups filtered water
    1 Tbsp coconut oil
    2 Tbsp toasted, unsweetened shredded
    coconut
    1/2 Cup dry roasted, chopped almonds
    1/8 Cup Tbsp raw sugar (to taste, should be just sweet, not dessert sweet)
    1 tsp.(?) Kosher salt
    1 lime, zested and juiced
    1/8 Cup(?) fresh mint leaves, minced or torn into very small pieces
    Rinse and dry toast rice
    Stir in coconut oil, til melted
    Stir in 2 cups water, bring to boil, reduce to simmer, cover and cook for 45 mins.,’til water is absorbed. Remove from heat, place a clean towel between pot and lid, and let sit for at least 5 mins.
    Fluff with fork, then fold in sugar, salt, (to taste), lime juice, most of lime zest, mint, coconut and almonds, leaving some of each to garnish on top.
    Oooh whee! this was yummy! It was just sweet enough to make it groovy at room temp but not so sweet that it couldn’t compliment anything savory or sweet!
    I pretty much eyeballed all of the measurements except the rice and water, so go for it and have fun! You could also make it with coconut milk and have a super rich dish, to boot :^)

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  44. Diane Avatar
    Diane

    Just arrived home to central Caifornia after visiting Berlin during the heat wave 38-40 degrees. I searched out cold salads while there and lots of gelatto. Today home is expected to be 104 so I have bought salad making for this week too. First cooking memory with Grandmother – picking green apples in her yard, making fresh applesauce and apple tarts. *Berlin was amazing!

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  45. Nico Avatar
    Nico

    Panini with Chinotto!

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  46. Christi Avatar

    This is my new favorite food blog! Amazing! What you do with the simple tomato is so wonderful.

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  47. Candice Tarnowski Avatar

    Dear Lady, i sympathise. We just finished a heat wave here in Montréal which demanded 5 cool baths/day just to keep the brain from feeling like a soggy cabbage. I avoided nearly all cooking but made a giant jar of gazpacho to dip into throughout the daytimes accompanied by a glass of Les Jamelles …and sometimes could bear to turn the burner on for coffee in the morning (iced).
    My first independently worked recipe was Swedish Meatballs, after school while Mum was at work.
    Your photo is great, thank you.

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  48. carole Avatar
    carole

    The first real recipe I learned to make was hollandaise sauce. My mother would let me whisk in the butter piece by piece. Yum!

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  49. jocelyn Avatar
    jocelyn

    Hiya Luisa – am sending this blog to Martin as he will absolutely luv the big about fresh figs – made my salivary glands work fast and his will too. Lots more to read but just caught that bit – hope the book is going well and you are happily esconsed in Berlin. Luv to your Mum. lol Jocelyn

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