• Out on the bread run

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    BREAD has an almost mythical status in France so a chance to go out on the daily delivery run could not be missed.

    Marie Ange Brouqui was to be my guide and as we loaded up the van, with the still warm loaves, she also checked over her route.

    It was to take in the surrounding villages, schools and farms with a longer stop at Villefranche du Périgord.

    “The bread is different compared to regular bread as it keeps fresh for longer,” Marie Ange explained.

    “This comes about from the baking process so it means that many of the homes will buy a loaf every couple of days.”

    As we hit the road you could hear the bread crusts crackling as they slowly cooled in the back of the van.

    But it also means that inside the van it is warm, useful in the winter but a problem during the long hot summers.

    Soon we disappeared up a single-track lane into the woods and discovered a small cottage or group of farm buildings.

    And with a beep of the horn someone would pop out of the house and pay a couple of Euro for a large loaf, which measures about 18 inches.

    “Many of the people we deliver to have been buying bread off us for years so they know they are going to get good quality,” Marie Ange said.

    “But times are changing and younger people especially, don’t buy their bread from the boulanger they just visit the supermarket every week.”

    Driving down a tight narrow track we would come across a collection of tumble down buildings, with smooth stone archways and a crumbling stairway to a wooden door.

    Or the valley floor would open up and a large farm often producing foie gras would come into view.

    “I used to be a post woman which comes in very useful for remembering which lane leads where,” Marie Ange said.

    “And often on the drive you will see a beautiful view or catch the sun in the leaves, it really is very calming.”

    By mid-morning the van had been loaded up again and it was off to Villefranche du Périgord.

    Here we stopped in the market square and attracted a bit of a crowd as they bought up their bread straight from the back of the van.

    We would also shoot up and down the four main roads in the village beeping the horn, or tapping on the window, as people came out.

    “I sometimes think I should stand in the middle of the square and whistle to attract everyone to the van,” said Marie Ange.

    “And you always get one or two who think they are the boulanger and ask how the bread was made, is it fresh, what does it taste like?”

    By lunchtime the deliveries are made and the ritual of the bread begins again in the boulangerie ovens – but that is another story.

  • Monpazier and its tortured history

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    MANY of the towns and villages in the Périgord were built as bastides, strongholds on the major trade routes through the region.

    One of the best is Monpazier with its fortified gates, streets laid out at right angles and covered arcades.

    Although originally built to promote trade, with the heart of the bastide centred on the market square, many soon gained defensive walls and gates.

    At Monpazier these gates can still be seen and they lead right into the market area.

    Here you will find galleries with gift shops and coffee bars, and plenty of people picking up their morning bread.

    monpazier_mrkt0911.jpgThe timber, covered market has antique measuring equipment and the legs of the roof stand on stone plinths to protect them from standing water.

    The history of Monpazier stretches back to 1284 when it was founded by the English king Edward I.

    But it was situated on the frontline of the French/English border, with an opposite bastide built at Villefranche du Périgord, around 20km away.

    It led a troubled existence with delays in its building, hostilities between Edward I and the lords and then 300 years later, the leader of a peasant revolt was tortured to death in the square.

    If you walk through Monpazier to the other side there is a fine view out across the valley, and you can see why the bastide was built where it was.

    Directions: On the D660 to the south east of Bergerac.

    More things to do in the Dordogne
    The Tuilières hydroelectric dam and fish lift
    Milling around at the Filature de Belvès
    A walk around Prats-du-Périgord, the Dordogne
    Belves Medieval Fair – stepping back in time
    Prats du Perigord, walk around the village

  • Not your usual lunch

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    THE Perigord region is famous for its horse chestnuts and mushrooms and there are plenty out in the woods at the moment.
    The parasol is a common mushroom and is delicious if fried in butter with a slice or two of onion and then piled up onto a baguette.
    There are recognisable by the small ring that at first holds the head of the mushroom tight and eventually gives up the fight and falls down the stem.
    The open, umbrella like plate can be around 15cm wide and it is dark brown in the middle.
    The parasol mushroom is found on paths in woods, in grassy clearings and can be seen from July to November.
    Horse chestnuts can also be found all over the pathways of the woods and these are like little parcels of potato after roasting.
    The best way to prepare them is to cut a cross into the top of them, but leave one uncut.
    Pop them on the fire or in the oven and when the uncut one bursts, you know the others are ready.