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Word: chelminski (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Wine Country: A Day in Beaujolais With its medieval villages, rolling hills and lanes of lush Gamay vines, Beaujolais - which wine writer Rudolph Chelminski likens to a "Hollywood set for an ideal vineyard region" - is well worth the two-hour train ride from Paris. Visit Domaine Lapierre and the vineyards of the other members of the Morgon Gang of Four in Villié-Morgon, where you can sip and sleep at Domaine Jean Foillard's bed and breakfast, tel: (33) 4 74 04 24 97, overlooking the vine-covered Côte de Py hills...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Revival of Beaujolais | 2/11/2009 | See Source »

...rankings are to France what the Nobel Peace Prize is to Norway. "More than presidents (whom [the French] laugh at) ...and more than religious leaders (now employed as vague accompanists to the rituals of getting born, marrying and dying), France trusts the Michelin to discover The Truth," wrote Rudolph Chelminski, who has documented Loiseau's ascent. In 1966 Alain Zick shot himself in the head after his Paris restaurant lost a Michelin star. When Strasbourg chef Emile Jung lost a star last year, he said, "No words can ease the pain that eats at our hearts and that has killed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Shadow of a Falling Star | 3/10/2003 | See Source »

Still, the sparkle of the three etoiles was not quite enough. "Bernard was pretty much a manic depressive," says Chelminski. He once told a fellow chef he would kill himself if he lost a star. "All these exceptional beings who give you the impression of so much assurance, they are all very fragile," Loiseau's widow Dominique said on television last week. "They all have such strong moments of doubt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Shadow of a Falling Star | 3/10/2003 | See Source »

...rankings are to France what the Nobel Peace Prize is to Norway. "More than presidents (whom [the French] laugh at) ... and more than religious leaders (now employed as vague accompanists to the rituals of getting born, marrying and dying), France trusts the Michelin to discover The Truth," wrote Rudolph Chelminski, who has documented Loiseau's ascent. In 1966, Alain Zick shot himself in the head after his Paris restaurant lost a Michelin star. When Strasbourg chef Emile Jung lost a star last year, he said: "No words can ease the pain that eats at our hearts and that has killed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Recipe for Tragedy | 3/2/2003 | See Source »

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