President Emmanuel Macron of France described the baguette as "250 grams of magic and perfection in our daily lives." Eric Gaillard/Reuters
When the baguette was a daily part of our family's life, we were fortunate to have a personal connection to the best guide, whose photo in the story below is as fitting as the photo above:
Steven Kaplan, perhaps the baguette's most dedicated historian, says the bread has "little sites of memories" that "testify to a sensuality." Daniel Janin/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
A Slice of France, the Baguette Is Granted World Heritage Status
More than six billion baguettes are sold every year in France. But the bread is under threat, with bakeries vanishing in rural areas.
PARIS— It is more French than, perhaps, the Eiffel Tower or the Seine. It is carried home by millions each day under arms or strapped to the back of bicycles. It is the baguette, the bread that has set the pace for life in France for decades and has become an essential part of French identity.
On Wednesday, UNESCO, the United Nations heritage agency, named the baguette something worthy of humanity's preservation, adding it to its exalted "intangible cultural heritage" list. Read more of this post
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