
David Lebovitz
Drinking French
(Ten Speed Press, March 2020)
2020 Amazon Editor’s Pick: Best Cookbooks, Food & Wine
Publishers Weekly Bestseller
IACP 2020 Award Finalist
Best New Cocktail or Bartending Book presented by DIAGEO Bar Academy
Featured on Buzzfeed‘s list of “17 LGBTQ-Authored Cookbooks To Cook From During Pride (And Beyond)”
New York Times bestselling author of My Paris Kitchen serves up more than 160 recipes for trendy cocktails, quintessential apéritifs, café favorites, complementary snacks, and more.
Bestselling cookbook author, memoirist, and popular blogger David Lebovitz delves into the drinking culture of France in Drinking French. This beautifully photographed collection features 160 recipes for everything from coffee, hot chocolate, and tea to apĂ©ritifs such as Kir and Lillet, classic and modern cocktails from the hottest Paris bars, and creative infusions using fresh fruit and French liqueurs. And because the French canât imagine drinking without having something to eat alongside, David includes crispy, salty snacks to serve with your concoctions. Each recipe is accompanied by Davidâs witty and informative stories about the ins and outs of life in France, as well as photographs taken on location in Paris and beyond.Whether you have a trip to France booked and want to know what and where to drink, or just want to infuse your next get-together with a little French flair, this rich and revealing guide will make you the toast of the town.
Praise for Drinking French
âIn the canon of drinking, there has been a conspicuous absence of information about how the French, undisputed masters of all things gastronomique, imbibe at home and in that hallowed social space, the cafĂ©. David Lebovitz is certainly the most qualified person I can think of to write this book, and he does so with deft precision. I knew this book was written with someone like me in mindâequal parts Francophile, food, and beverage enthusiastâwhen I opened to the very first recipe in the book, my beloved morning ritual: the cafĂ© au lait.â
âJeffrey Morgenthaler, author of Drinking Distilled
âI can think of no one I’d rather meet for a drink than David Lebovitz. In his authoritative yet always approachable style, Lebovitz expertly guides us through the often-unspoken rituals, customs, and traditions of properly drinking Frenchâwhether it’s a morning cafĂ© au lait, a mid-afternoon Picon biĂšre, or a late-night Boulevardier. Lebovitz uses his years of experience as a baker and pastry chef to apply his keen understanding of ratios, formulas, and balancing flavor to seamlessly shift from the sweet life to the spirited life, with inventive recipes for cafĂ© drinks, liqueurs, aperitifs, cocktails, and irresistible apĂ©ro snacks to accompany them.â
âBrad Thomas Parsons, author of Bitters, Amaro, and Last Call
âAnyone who has had the privilege of visiting Paris would certainly concur with David Lebovitzâs observation that âThere is no shortage of rules in France; they even extend to beveragesâ. Thankfully, we Francophiles have this seasoned expat to conduct us through the idiosyncrasies of cafĂ© culture. This handy recipe and resource guide doubles as the modern French handbook for cocktail party hosts.â
âJim Meehan, author of Meehanâs Bartender Manual and The PDT Cocktail Book
âIn France, drinking is more than a national sport . . . itâs an art! From our petit noir (coffee) and teas to classic apĂ©ritifs and cocktails, no cup or glass is spared from the curious and amused gaze of David Lebovitz. As an acute connoisseur of French gastronomy, his tasty collection of recipes and social observations can be imbibed in one shotâSantĂ©!â
âFrancois-Regis Gaudry, author of Letâs Eat France!
âDo you dream about moving to Paris and spending long, leisurely afternoons in cafĂ©s (hopefully with company as lively as David Lebovitz) sipping un cafĂ© noisette and, later, an apĂ©ritif? Me too. This is the exact dreamy book we need to hold us over until that day arrives.â
âDeb Perelman, author of Smitten Kitchen Every Day
Imbibe Magazine interviews David Lebovitz
David Lebovitz shares “How to Mix Drinks Like a Parisian” on The Wall Street Journal
Get two free recipes from DRINKING FRENCH in Random House Spring Cookbook Sampler
Recommended on Hip Paris in “New Books on Paris for Spring 2020”
Listen to David Lebovitz in conversation with Jennifer Eremeeva
Read David Lebovitz’s interview with Paris Update
AFAR shares “How to Pretend You’re in Paris at Home” including David Lebovitz apĂ©ro hour
Smitten Kitchen shares David Lebovitz’s Rhubarb Cordial recipe
Listen to David Lebovitz’s interview with Heritage Radio Network’s The Feed Feed
Read Nuvo Magazine‘s write up on David Lebovitz and DRINKING FRENCH
Listen to David Lebovitz on the Inside Julia’s Kitchen podcast
Watch David Lebovitz’s interview on Salon
Read David Lebovitz’s interview on Paris Unlocked
David Lebovitz has been a professional cook and baker for most of his life; he spent nearly thirteen years at Berkeleyâs Chez Panisse until he left the restaurant business in 1999 to write books. He is the author of six books, including My Paris Kitchen, The Perfect Scoop, and The Sweet Life in Paris. David has been featured in Bon AppĂ©tit, Food & Wine, Cookâs Illustrated, the Los Angeles Times, Saveur, Travel + Leisure, the New York Times, and more. He moved to Paris in 2004 and turned davidlebovitz.com into one of the first phenomenally popular food and living blogs.
