![]() ![]() However in France, the onus is on the recipient to give a coin to the gift-giver. [In many countries, if you give someone a knife or scissors as a gift, you include some coinage. and Canada.) I got the pair that I gifted to someone in Paris at La Trésorerie (although the website doesn’t show them, so you may want to call), and in England Objects of Use carries the 9” size. In the U.S., Bernal Cutlery carries the 8-inch ones and Flotsom and Fork has the 9-inch ones. They come in 8-inch or 9-inch sizes and according to a friend’s website (who no longer sells them), the smaller ones are better for average (medium-small) hands, and the larger ones are better for larger hands. I bought a pair of the Professional Kitchen Scissors (the website isn’t super clear which scissors they are showing) for someone a few years ago and am now waiting patiently for someone to get me a pair. If you really want to treat someone special, the Pallarès scissors from Spain are like royalty. Thankfully, I have friends that go back and forth a lot and bring things both ways. that I want, but they don’t ship to France. (In some cases, I did mention it.) If they don’t ship to where you live, I hear ya there are things available in the U.S. You may find that not all the places listed ship internationally, so you’ll have to check their websites to see where they do and don’t. (Rather than something that takes up cabinet or shelf space.) However, my other love is cookbooks, so I’ve included a few here that I found worth making space in my kitchen for. But after doing a big move this year and finding space for everything, I do like it when I’m gifted something edible-or drinkable. No, not those kind, which aren’t legal in France. ![]()
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