Luxe Beat Magazine JULY 2014 | Page 12

The purpose of my market visit wasn’t for shopping or sightseeing. No, for my time in Budapest, I requested a culinary-focused itinerary from Kensington, and as a result, I was learning how to make traditional Hungarian goulash. Certainly no expert in the kitchen, my cooking instructor, Erik, would have his hands full with me. In the back of the empty Fakanál Restaurant, my cooking stage was set. Washed vegetables filled glass bowls, dry ingredients were premeasured and empty pots patiently waited on the stove. Not content with simply teaching me to make goulash, Erik wanted me to know its origins. Meaning “herdsman” in Hungarian, the spicy stew gets its vermilion color from the Hungarian paprika brought to the country by the invading Turks. The history lesson was far more difficult to follow than the cooking process. That felt effortless, chop, mix, brown, pour, simmer. Certainly, I could even replicate that at home. Palatial Pomp With the crush of the morning commute, the metro was chaotic, and without the help of Wafaa, I likely would have never located the RER Line. We climbed aboard and found two seats, which was quite fortunate. Had it been summer, the train would’ve been packed with tourists with our same agenda. For the next thirty minutes, I hummed along to the gypsy’s lively accordion and watched a grittier part of Paris pass by. Initially, I was struck by the palace’s undeniable grandeur. Priceless Baroque furnishings fill the grand rooms, and massive oil paintings encased in gold leaf frames hang from walls swathed in gorgeous silks. ALL PHOTOS BY LEAH WALKER. I pulled the curtains back and peeked out the lobby window of my SaintGermain-des-Prés hotel. A light rain fell, covering the small side street, and I watched Parisians scurrying around under the shield of umbrellas. It was a Wednesday morning, and they were going to work. I, on the other hand, was on the lookout for Wafaa, my private guide. For my January trip to the City of Light, Paris like an Heiress was my requested Kensington theme, and Wafaa would lead me to the Palace of Versailles. 12