Unit 2 READING MORE
\Light, refined, learned and noble, harmonious and orderly, clear and logical, the cooking of France is, in some strange manner, intimately linked to the genius of her greatest men.\
--Marcel Rouff, French journalist and writer
A CUISINE CRISIS
1 What could be more French than an outdoor market on a sunny Sunday morning? The air is filled with vital scents from the herbs and fruits and vegetables piled high in the greengrocers' creative geometrics. A whiff of the Atlantic blows off the oysters on the fishmongers' bed of ice. Wild game--hare, venison, boar--hangs from the butchers' racks, sausages and cheeses are laid out to savor and smell.
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2 This, you think, is the very essence of France, until you read those little signs that tell you the tomatoes (which are really pretty tasteless) come from Moroccan hothouses,
the grapes from South Africa, kiwis from Chile and the haricot from Kenya. You can't be sure where that boar bit the dust.
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3 The congenial quaintness of the street market, in fact, draws directly on globalization. Emile Zola once called \
food business, long since moved out of downtown to a cargo hub near Qrly airport. Quite literally, that is now where a lot of French cooking begins--and, increasingly, where the era of great French cuisine as something truly unique and exclusive to France is slowly coming to an end.
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4 For generations, the French have prided themselves on their distinctiveness. Nothing has stood for France's sense of exceptionalism more famously than its cooking. Gallic talent, taste and techniques have been exported all over the world. And therein lies part to the problem. From the Napa Valley to the Thames and Tokyo, non-French cooks have cracked the codes of the best French cuisine. Meanwhile, what was mediocre elsewhere--albeit cheap and popular--has been imported. The result: Many tourists-- as well as the French themselves--no longer see what's so special about French cooking.
4 ³¤¾ÃÒÔÀ´£¬·¨¹úÈËһֱΪËûÃǵÄÓëÖÚ²»Í¬¸Ðµ½½¾°Á¡£¶øÄÜ´ú±í·¨¹ú³¬·²ÌØÉ«¡¢×ʢ ÃûµÄ¾ÍÒªÊýËýµÄÅëâ¿ÒÕÊõÁË¡£¸ß¬È˵IJÅÖÇ¡¢Æ·Î¶ºÍ¼¼ÊõÒѾ´«²¥µ½ÊÀ½ç¸÷µØ£¬È»¶ø£¬ һЩÎÊÌâÒ²ËæÖ®²úÉú¡£´ÓÄÉÅÁ¹Èµ½Ì©ÎîÊ¿ºÓÔÙµ½¶«¾©£¬·Ç·¨ÒáµÄ³øÊ¦ÃÇÆÆ½âÁË×îÉÏ³Ë ·¨Ê½Åë⿵ÄÃØóÅ¡£Óë´Ëͬʱ£¬ÆäËûµØ·½Ò»Ð©¾¡¹ÜÓÖ±ãÒËÓÖÁ÷Ðе«È´²»ÔõôÉϵµ´ÎµÄÅë ÖÆ·¨Ò²´«ÈëÁË·¨¹ú¡£½á¹û¾ÍÊÇ£¬ºÜ¶àÓο͡ª¡ªÉõÖÁ·¨¹úÈË×Ô¼º¡ª¡ª¶¼ÒѾ¿´²»³ö·¨¹ú Åëâ¿ÓÐÈκεÄÌØ±ðÖ®´¦ÁË¡£
5 The decline goes well beyond recent surveys that show growing complaints about mediocre quality and high prices--no small concern in a country where tourisme
gastronomique earned 18 billion euros in 2002, a quarter of all tourist revenues. More and more restaurateurs say that government tax and economic policies are limiting their profits, and thereby hurting their capacity to invest and hire more staff. They have become ensnarled in the red tape for which France is infamous--not to mention edicts from Brussels that affect everything from sales taxes to the bacteria in the Brie.
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6 Not coincidentally, it was the French who taught the world that water has many very different, very marketable tastes. At the annual agricultural fair in Paris this spring, visitors not only enjoyed sipping wines, but olive oils--one a little nutty, another quite fruity, some of them, one is tempted to say, just a little impudent. Even table salt has its distinctions, with fleur de sel, the thin layer collected on the surface of salt basins in the Bordeaux region, now much appreciated. \people can leave the table full and still be talking about food,\
Alleno, 35, who brought a new star to the restaurant of the Hotel Meurice this year. His favorite specialty: sea bass sewn with golden threads.
6 ¾ø·ÇÇɺϵÄÊÇ£¬ÕýÊÇ·¨¹úÈ˽̻áÈ«ÊÀ½ç£¬Ë®ÓжàÖÖåÄÒìµÄ¿Ú棬ÕâЩζµÀ¶¼¿ÉÒÔÂô¸ö ºÃ¼ÛÇ®¡£½ñÄê´ºÌìÔÚ°ÍÀèÒ»ÄêÒ»¶ÈµÄũҵչÏú»áÉÏ£¬ÓοÍÃDz»½ö¿ÉÒÔϸÒûÃÀ¾Æ£¬»¹¿É ÒÔÆ·³¢éÏéÓÍ¡£ÓеÄéÏéÓÍÉÔ´ø¼á¹ûµÄζµÀ£¬ÓеÄË®¹ûζºÜÖØ£¬»¹ÓÐһЩ£¬Äã»áÈ̲»
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7 But the real paradox of French cooking--in France, at least--is that artistic success often spells business disaster. Starred chefs often end up drowning in red ink as they try to maintain the high standards that made their names.
7 È»¶ø·¨¹úÅëâ¿ÕæÕýÁîÈËÌäЦ½Ô·ÇµÄÊÇ£¬ÖÁÉÙÔÚ·¨¹ú£¬Åëâ¿ÒÕÊõÉϵijɹ¦ÍùÍù´øÀ´ÉúÒâ ÉϵÄÔÖÄÑ¡£ÐǼ¶³øÊ¦ÃÇΪÁ˱£³ÖËûÃǵÃÒÔ³ÉÃûµÄ¸ß±ê×¼£¬Ò»°ã¶¼»áÈë²»·ó³ö¡£ ¡±
8 Consider the value-added taxes that were \harmonized\ the 1990s. They benefit fast-food chains, since the tax on takeaway is only 5.5% percent, while they penalize sit-down restaurants, whether humble bistros or haute cuisine, which pay 19.6%. When President Jacques Chirac ran for re-election in 2002, he promised to reduce the tax, but such is the nature of the new Europe that all 25 countries will have to approve the measure for it to take effect--in 2006. The government is instituting other complicated tax breaks and stopgap measures in the meantime to try to calm the restive restaurateurs and in hopes of creating employment. But (a starred chef) Daguin is deeply skeptical. \ fiscal regime as the United States, we'd be able to create twice as many jobs,\
8 ÎÒÃÇ¿´¿´ÉϸöÊÀ¼Í90Äê´úÔÚÕû¸öÅ·ÖÞ±»¡°Í³Ò»¡±ºóµÄÔöֵ˰¡£¸Ã˰ÓÐÀûÓÚ¿ì²ÍÁ¬Ëø µê£¬ÒòΪ¶ÔÍâÂôµÄÕ÷˰ֻÓÐ5£®5£¥£¬¶ø´«Í³²Í¹ÝÔòÔâÑêÁË£¬²»¹Ü×ãµÍË×µÄС¾Æ¹Ý»¹ÊǸß
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9 Strict labor laws restricting hiring, firing and temp-work also figure in the equation. \a succession of high-stress times and quiet times,\ a former rugby player and a passionate restaurateur from Toulouse. When it comes to employment, \flexibility whatsoever. When we're busy it would be good if, like in England, we could hire a couple of extra employees to help out.\
9 ÁíÍ⣬ÑϸñÏÞÖÆ¹Í¹¤¡¢²ÃÔ±ºÍÕÐÁÙʱ¹¤µÄÀͶ¯·¨Ò²ÍÏÁ˺óÍÈ¡£¡°ÎÒÃǵÄÉúÒâæһÕóÏÐ Ò»ÕóµÄ£¬¡±À´×Ôͼ¬×ȵĵÂÄᡤ÷ÁÐ˵µÀ¡£µÂÄáÔø¾ÊÇéÏéÇòÔ˶¯Ô±£¬ÏÖÔÚÔòÒ»ÃÅÐÄ˼ ÆËÔÚËûµÄ·¹¹ÝÉÏ¡£µ±Ì¸µ½¾ÍÒµÎÊÌâʱ£¬Ëû˵£º¡°·¨¹úµÄÎÊÌâÔÚÓÚ¸ù±¾Ã»ÓÐÁé»îÐÔ¡£Èç ¹ûÔÚ»î¶àµÄʱºòÄܹÍһЩ°ïÊÖÀ´¾È¼±£¬¾ÍÏñÔÚÓ¢¹úÄÇÑù£¬ÄǾͺÃÁË¡£¡±µ«ÊÇ·¨¹úµÄ·¨