Drawings by Fiona Drenttel. Our children delight in the retelling of the story of my apprehension when, as a child, I embarked on my first airplane trip. Marking the ceremonious start of our family's four-year stay in Paris, it heralded a host of unprecedented firsts a new language, a new school, at least one weird new ice cream flavor. I was ten years old and terrified.
It soon became apparent, however, that my anxiety lay in the oddly mistaken assumption that changing planes took place
in mid-air.Today, our daughter, Fiona, is a seasoned traveler who has been airborne for a good part of her single-digit life. Other than the time, as an infant, that a British Airways flight attendant put Perrier in her bottle, her European experience has been largely uneventful. As a family we've traveled to Rome, to Zurich and frequently to London: but what would she make, I wondered, of a city of such splendors as Paris? And how had it changed, this Paris I knew so well as a child, the one that is permanently imprinted on my psyche which for all things Parisian, remains terminally arrested at the age of 10?
I decided to find out. And so, on a sweltering day last August, we embarked with a friend and her daughter on a 6-day tour of Paris: Kid Paris, the Paris of candy stores and carousels and more than a few weird new ice cream flavors.
In my childhood memories of Paris, food is the prevailing barometer. I remember places by virtue of the delectations they offered: the
poulet frites at our old bistro in the 16th, for instance, or the
palmiers at our local patisserie. And while I recall being initially vexed by the absence of such things, in the French national diet, as peanut butter and grape juice (and envious of my friends whose parents were diplomats and able, therefore, to avail themselves of such riches at the American commissary) I gradually came to know Kid Paris by eating my way through just about every arrondissement.
Now, some 30 years later, Fiona and I began our visit by stopping for our first
croissants: flaky and buttery, they required nothing but our slow appreciation of their unparalleled perfection. Until the check came and required that I deposit a whopping 32 Euros on the table.
Resisting a dual surge of jet lag and sticker shock, we proceeded down to our first stop: the legendary Parc Monceau, home to the Ecole Active Bilingue, my old school. It was exactly as I remembered it: the black-and-gold gates, the limestone facades, the sandy area outside the school where we played endless games of marbles and where, sometime in the fall of 1971, I uttered my first words in this new, exotic language provoked by what I recall as uncontainable moral outrage at a cheating companion.
"Mais tu as triché!" I bellowed, letting loose a string of angry epithets in my newly minted, pitch-perfect playground French. (My children like this story, too particularly the mental image of Mommy screaming at the top of her lungs about social injustice and, well, marbles.)
We proceeded through the park in search of the famous dark green bungalows where, as a child, I would spend considerable time reflecting over which candy to buy after school. My favorites were the
petits ours, small chocolate-covered marshmallow bears that were occasionally traded for a Carambar or even better, a Malabar the unparalleled caviar of bubble gums. Today's park bungalows, I soon discovered, have expanded to offer additional exotic samplings things like cappuccino, compote and flan grown-up goodies artfully positioned opposite the licorices and chocolates that remain as enchanting (Fiona agreed) as ever.
Later, looking for treats to bring home to Fiona's brother, we came upon large bags of Carambars in a nearby market. I was elated, but Fiona wasn't so sure. "If that's what you brought home for
me," she replied skeptically, "I'd be
really disappointed." I realized that Fiona needed her own memories, and here in the candy aisle at the Franprix, she was staking her ground. She chose the fruit-flavored Carambars and with only the gentlest prodding from her mother, a box of
crèpes dentelles and we were on our way.
The following day, we walked from the Parc Monceau to the Arc de Triomphe and all the way down the Avenue Victor Hugo. Its broad residential streets, empty in these last days of August, were just as I remembered them, with leaves already beginning to fall and not a child in sight. We stopped to admire the confections at Le Nôtre, to sample the playground at the Square Lamartine, and for a ceremonial Orangina (site of my virgin taste of this quintessential kid favorite) at the Place Tattegrain before heading wearily back to our hotel.
After the briefest of naps, we strolled to the Champs Elysees where we stopped to savor our second Orangina of the day this time, accompanied by a classic
sandwich au jambon: a buttered
ficelle graced by one perfect slice of sweet, saltless ham. It cost 3 euros and Fiona talked about it for the rest of the week: how much better it was than the hamburger at the Drugstore Publicis, the quiche at the Brasserie Lorraine, the whatever-it-was at the Restaurant Jules Verne, halfway up the Eiffel Tower, where I politely requested something
"un peu moins luxe" for the children. Our waiter begrudgingly agreed to modify the chicken entrée though not, it soon appeared, it's exorbitant price. (As child in Paris, I recall being invited one evening to an elegant restaurant by a friend whose mother brought their puppy, Figaro. The imperious waiter refused to amend the menu for us, but Figgy was served liver and risotto in a silver chalice. He was constipated for a week.) Here at the Eiffel Tower, inches from the table where Tom Cruise had allegedly proposed to Katie Holmes only days earlier, the expression "too rich for my blood" suddenly made sense to me: I will not soon forget Fiona's face when served a puree of potato and root vegetable, prompting my friend's daughter to deliver an impassioned monologue about her own love and deep longing for Kraft Macaroni and Cheese.
After touring the impressionist paintings at the Musée D'Orsay the following morning, we spent a glorious afternoon on the left bank. Following stops at Notre Dame and the Louvre, we stopped for lunch at the enchanting tea shop, Ladurée, which proved somewhat more accessible than the Jules Verne (less silver, more sandwiches) but was all still rather posh: from the seven-page dessert menu to the impeccably composed towers of pastel-tinted macaroons, the fare here seemed more enigmatic than edible. With the afternoon growing hotter, the fantasy of ice cream loomed: but where?
Years ago, my favorite Parisian ice cream was sold by a young Arab man who had a crush on my sister. He would gaze at her adoringly and pay absolutely no attention to the cone he was dispensing for me, thus ensuring a massive, gravity-defying serving and ruining my appetite for the next two days. While the ice-cream man of my youth is long gone, we did manage to sample the ices at Fouquet's (a Champs-Elysees tourist trap) and Fauchon (exotic and expensive) while over at La Samaritaine, we found a sorbet packaged in a tube. The fact that it looked more like hand cream than ice cream was a source of utter fascination to Fiona, who insisted on bringing the containers back and trying to produce our own homemade tubular versions. (Yes: we failed.)
In the end, like most children, Fiona's favorite moments were the simple ones: the
panini on the street, the
pain au chocolat at a corner boulangerie, the ride on the carousel at the Champ de Mars. It was Hemingway who described Paris as a moveable feast, and we had proved him right. Next time, though, I think we'll have to stay two weeks .