New Yorker 前天 18:24
Far-Flung Local Gems
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这篇文章分享了三位作者在旅行中发现的独特场所。Lauren Collins介绍了巴黎一家充满童趣的玩具店,那里的小顾客们用零花钱购买各种新奇玩意。Inkoo Kang则带我们走进伯克利的香水博物馆,体验天然香料的魅力。Ian Crouch分享了他在缅因州发现的风景优美的自然保护区,在那里可以品尝到美味的馅饼。这些地方都展现了旅行中不期而遇的惊喜和当地特色。

🧸 在巴黎,Lauren Collins发现了玩具店Le Bruit du Papier,这家店位于学校附近,吸引了许多孩子。店内出售各种新奇的商品,如汽水喷雾、糖果眼球等,也提供符合成年人口味的饮品。

👃 在伯克利,Inkoo Kang介绍了Aftel Archive of Curious Scents香水博物馆。馆内收藏了古老的书籍和各种香料,参观者可以亲自体验不同气味的魅力,感受气味的变迁。博物馆由Mandy Aftel及其家人经营,氛围温馨。

🥧 在缅因州,Ian Crouch推荐了Puzzle Mountain Bakery馅饼店。这家店以其美味的馅饼而闻名,顾客可以品尝到草莓大黄、蓝莓和苹果等多种口味的馅饼。这家店采用自助模式,顾客将现金放入旧的铸铁罐中,体验当地的淳朴风情。

In the spirit of summer travel, we’ve asked some of our writers living outside New York City to share a few of their favorite local spots. Read Lauren Collins on an irresistible Parisian toy store; Hannah Goldfield on her search for a prized fruit in Hollywood; Rebecca Mead on a beloved church grounds in London; Inkoo Kang on a quirky hyper-local perfume museum in Berkeley; and Ian Crouch on a mid-Maine nature sanctuary, with pie.—Shauna Lyon


Local Gems

Lauren Collins, in Paris

Illustrations by Jackson Gibbs

Toy stores—do those even exist anymore? I can vouch for at least one: Le Bruit du Papier, a small but mighty wonderland in the Ninth Arrondissement, strategically located directly across the street from the rec center where the kids in my neighborhood go to do judo or learn how to play the violin. This is essentially the same concept as putting a bar across from a golf course. No child can walk past the gleaming, apple-red storefront without pressing a nose to the glass and begging to be allowed to go in. What I love about Le Bruit du Papier is what I hate about Le Bruit du Papier. Its proprietor, Myriam Arthaud, knows exactly what her junior customers want. They come in packs, bearing old-school pocket money. (Coins! At Le Bruit du Papier, those are still going strong, too.) They spree on iced-tea-flavored “soda spray,” gelatinous candy eyeballs, capybara-shaped smooshies, One Piece branded Métro-card holders, and—most important—all things Legami, a Milanese maker of animal-topped pens, cutesy erasers, and other adorable crap that is all the rage with tiny Parisian shoppers. This being a French toy store, Arthaud does offer the occasional sop to adults. “There will be soft drinks for the youth and the more sober,” an invitation from the shop read, inviting patrons to come sample the new Beaujolais one recent evening. Dream on, Amazon.


Inkoo Kang, in Berkeley

The perfumer Mandy Aftel’s embrace of natural ingredients makes her an anomaly in the fragrance industry, which relies overwhelmingly on synthetic concoctions for its wares. Aftel, who has authored half a dozen books on the art, history, and uses of scent, shares her passion for olfactory possibility through the Aftel Archive of Curious Scents, the only museum in America dedicated to perfume. Operating out of the garage and back yard of her Berkeley home (a block over from Chez Panisse), it is a cozy, family-run affair; on a recent visit, between chats with Aftel herself, I was greeted by her husband and regaled with stories by her son. The museum’s collection includes centuries-old books and a bottle of ambergris (a substance produced in the digestive system of sperm whales), as well as elaborations on perfume’s long history. There are dozens of jars filled with essences that visitors are encouraged to sniff for themselves; my favorites included civet, cassia, and oud. One smelling station presents the ancient and modern extracts of the same plant for comparison. And, because smells are powerful but fleeting, guests can take home samples from the more than two hundred scents in Aftel’s work station, or, as it’s known in the fragrance world, perfume organ. With the Archive, Aftel has created a treasure trove of fragrances that may otherwise be difficult if not impossible to find—and, more important, she has created an opportunity to reorient one’s senses to the world.


Ian Crouch, in Maine

Look out from atop Table Rock, a wide perch on the northern end of Grafton Notch State Park, in western Maine (less than two hours northwest of Portland), and you might succumb, for a moment at least, to the foolishness of thinking you’ve got things figured out. It’s a nice spot, nicer than most, and you’re standing on it. Then again, having climbed about a thousand feet of trail in less than a mile, heart still pulsing at your temples, maybe you won’t be thinking at all. Even better! The black flies pierce the reverie through late June, but by July (real summer) you can linger to watch the clouds glide along, casting cool soft shadows on the distant ground, where a thin line of pavement snakes through the trees. And then, in the fall, probably having to make space for some neighbors up there—fellow-peepers—sit on the rock and hug your knees as all around the leaves go yellow, orange, red, and purple. Return to the car, head south a few miles, and pull off at Screw Auger Falls, or someplace quieter, to wash the mud off your calves in the icy Bear River. Change into the clean extra shirt you remembered to pack. Back on the road, still heading south, make one final stop, on the right: the Puzzle Mountain Bakery, in its third decade and under the stewardship of a second generation, named after a peak you just passed (more ledges, more views). It’s a pie stand, or, really, a pie hutch—a red wooden enclosure full of homemade fruit pies, maple-cream cookies, whoopie pies, and jam. They do their baking in a building down a nearby driveway, but the hutch is unmanned, and hours, Thursdays to Mondays, are flexible: cash goes in an old cast-iron tank (or Venmo if you must). There’s no bad time for pie, but there are few better times than this, sitting on the back bumper, passing tins of strawberry rhubarb, blueberry, and apple back and forth. Fingers, or maybe one fork. It’s getting late. Wipe the crumbs off your lap, wrap any leftovers for later, and start the long, or, for the lucky, shortish drive home.


Rebecca Mead, in London

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旅行见闻 玩具店 香水博物馆 馅饼
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