Mon 6 Aug 2007
Up in the hills near Grasse at the moment, cooking for an English family and their visitors. It’s great to be away from the noise and crowds of St Tropez, a town I would NEVER visit voluntarily. In fact, you should only go there if you have more money than sense – and, being a reader of these pages, I know you’re not such a person.
I do miss being at home in Avignon, though, and I miss Delphine very much; only seeing each other for a day or two every couple of weeks get real old, real soon. That’s why I won’t be returning to the Alps again this winter, either – that and the fact that I now earn about four times as much as the top chalet chefs get paid.
On a technological note, I would like to say just how very happy I am with my (now not so) new MacBook Pro Apple laptop; works faultlessly, connects to the nearest WiFi network without a murmer, turns on when I open the lid and shuts down when I close it, and plays DVDs and other films downloaded to the hard disc beautifully clearly on the excellent 17″ screen. If you’re in the market for a new laptop, or even a desktop, look at the Mac offerings first. My current clients have a new Dell laptop and I’ve spent several afternoons trying to sort out Vista on it. Vista may have lots more security built in – although the only evidence I see is that, like the Mac, it asks if you really want to install/uninstall stuff – but otherwise it really does look like Windows XP with a facelift. And, of course, the obligatory moving of a few buttons and changing of a few labels just for the sake of it – but then I got that when I moved to the Mac platform anyway.
Hardware-wise, though, the Apple beats the Dell into a cocked hat, but then it did cost me 50% more than the Inspiron. But then I have three times the memory, twice the hard-disc space, a much bigger widescreen-format screen and a lighter, thinner package. Worth the money, I think.
And I’ve installed the Parallels Desktop software which allows me to run Windows XP – not that I’ve bothered, mind you. It’s installed, but I just don’t find the need to fire it up.
On a more interesting subject, I’ve been enjoying a little Indian and Thai cookery here, making Indian-marinated chicken salads and Thai fish cakes; French people aren’t that fascinated by ‘foreign’ cookery. But then all decent cookery is ‘foreign’ if you’re English, isn’t it?
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