Category: Food and Drink

  • Loubejac farmers market sets out its stalls

    Loubejac-night-market

    The night market in Loubejac takes place every Thursday during the summer months
    ON Thursday the popular night market beneath Loubejac’s church tower returns for July and August (map).

    From around 6.30pm, and with the Dordogne countryside stretched before you, chairs and long tables are laid out close to the small church and people arrive with their knives and forks, paper plates and cups for a glass of red.

    Local food and drink producers offer duck, breads, soups, salads, wine, fruits of all types and you can sit down with friends to enjoy a leisurely evening.

    This southern corner of the Dordogne will host similar events, sometimes featuring live music, but always offering a slice of real French life.

    There is a Marchés des Producteurs website which looks to promote some of the events taking place across France.

  • A pick of French herbs and spices

    Herbs and spice bottles
    SINCE I starting using a wheelchair I felt there were things I was missing out on, writes Coral Luke.

    So, while not being an avid gardener, I do know what I like to see, how it is laid out and the aroma of certain plants. I then decided to badger my husband to let me have a section of garden that I could call my own.

    I would need a way of gardening from my chair and that would not prove to be that straightforward as our garden is quite small.

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  • Honey and mohair sent to market

    Honey France

    THE Sunday market at Cazals, in the Lot (map), is a feast of colour and sounds, but one stall in particular sparkles.

    Jars of golden honey catch the morning sun, and scarves, gloves and balls of wool in deep purples, warm oranges and bold blues draw passers-by to the stall of Anne Chuillet and Michel Magne.

    After leaving the town life of La Rochelle, and established positions in education and psychology, the couple looked at ways to make a small agricultural business pay, with the appeal of bee keeping coming after Michel read a yellowed, dog-eared book on the subject.

    Angora goats

    The couple undertook agricultural training, and gained experience of working with a local bee keeper and on a goat farm, before outlining their business plan and looking to establish a small plot of land to start producing honey.

    Peche de l’abeille is that plot, found not far from Les Arques and the Zadkine Museum, up a steep winding path, offering views across the valley, their property consists of around a hundred bee hives and 30 or so Angora goats.

    Honey production is undertaken on the farm, with the honeycombs taken from the hives, placed in a drum and through centrifugal force the honey is collected and piped out into jars for labelling, as well as used as the base for other products.

    The wool off the backs of the Angora goats requires many hours preparation cleaning out bits of grass and twigs, before it is sent off via a collective to Italy where it is processed into mohair and then sent to knitters in France to produce a variety of items such as gloves and scarves.

    The couple have a strong bond and connection with their work, it produces little in profit and they both hold down other part-time positions, but they have plans for Peche de l’abeille.

    Their workshop is slowly expanding and it is hoped that visitors and school children will be able to find out more about the production of honey and care of the goats, ensuring people stay in touch with the natural world around them.

    Au Peche de l’abeille, 46250 Les Arques, 05 65 21 47 10

  • Get set for Lalbenque truffle market

    Truffle-market
    IN just a few more days, on Tuesday, 6 December the main street of an otherwise undistinguished town in south west France will be magically transformed by one of the most exciting, adrenaline-pumping and important events in the entire French culinary universe – the opening day of this year’s truffle market in Lalbenque, writes Vino Veritas.

    The usual rusty, fifteen year old Citroens normally found in Lalbenque will on that day be displaced by shiny new Mercedes and Beemers with 75 (Paris) and 69 (Lyon) plates, all herded through town by whistle-blowing traffic control officers who will never be present the rest of the year.

    Truffle brokers and speciality restaurant supply buyers from all over France, the UK and beyond will flock to Lalbenque on market day, momentarily swelling this small town’s population by up to a thousand.

    Truffle-marke-t02They are all there for only one purpose, attempting to acquire specimens of perhaps the world’s pre-eminent culinary delicacy.

    Lalbenque, 25 kilometers south of Cahors, is the largest truffle market in south western France, and from early December until early March, hundreds of kilos of France’s ‘black gold’, botanically known as Tuber Melanosporum, will be sold in Lalbenque’s weekly truffle market. (It should be acknowledged that another truffle market, somewhat larger then Lalbenque, is held at Richerenches in the Vaucluse, but the author’s experience is with the Lalbenque market.)

    All the fuss began in the 18th century, when the French gastronome and author Brillat-Savarin described these truffles as “the diamond of the kitchen”.

    Exactly how Lalbenque assumed such an important culinary role is not altogether clear, although the scrubby calcareous soil of the surrounding area abounds with the twisted small oak trees whose roots have a symbiotic relationship with and host the growth of truffles.

    The market itself is simultaneously picturesque and unusual. Most markets bring buyers and sellers together for extended periods, to foster continuing relationships, trust and ongoing commerce. Not so at Lalbenque.

    Truffle-market-03
    On market Tuesday, beginning around 2pm, sellers stand shoulder to shoulder behind benches running in a long line along the main street, displaying the truffles they are offering that day in a basket set on the bench in front of them.

    Some sellers have but a few truffles, while others have a bounty exceeding several kilos. About a metre in front of the benches is a strategically positioned rope that prospective buyers dare not cross.

    The buyers, usually numbering in the several hundreds, stand in front of the rope and engage in discreet conversations with the sellers. Most conversations revolve around weight, since sales prices are calculated in grams and kilos, but occasionally a forward buyer even asks to have a basket handed to him across the rope for a brief inspection, requests that are often declined.

    Nervous smiles are exchanged on both sides of the rope, because both buyers and sellers know very well what is about to come. At exactly 2.30pm (with wry comments occasionally heard about this being the only time French are known to be on time), a rapid fire series of events very quickly ensues.

    Not a moment before or after, a loud police whistle is sounded, the rope drops to the ground, the buyers charge forward, earnest and somewhat frantic negotiations ensue, and five minutes later, the market is over for that week.

    Yes, its all over in a few fast paced moments. A buyer who dithers, is indecisive, or offers too low a price goes away empty handed. And a seller who initially drives too hard of a bargain is often forced to accept a bargain basement price minutes later if a prospective buyer’s offer is rejected and that buyer turns away.

    Truffle-market-04What is remarkable is that even though all sales have truffle weight, as well of course quality, as key value drivers, you will never see a scale at Lalbenque. Sellers will tell you what their basket weighs when you ask, but verification is considered an insult.

    The sellers, who are looking for repeat business in following weeks, consider it dishonourable to not state a very accurate weight. This author has participated as a buyer in many Lalbenque markets, and has never experience a short weight. If anything, the sellers slightly understate the weight of their truffles as a matter of personal pride.

    Opening day at Lalbenque, always the first Tuesday in December, is of particular interest because the elders of the organization that runs the market, the Syndicat des Trufficulteurs, parade through Lalbenque in long black ceremonial robes and plumed Three Musketeers-type hats, with golden medallions hanging around their necks.

    With much ceremonial flourish, the Mayor of Lalbenque then declares the market to be open. Lest one thinks that this is mere French pagentry, it should be acknowledged that the syndicat provides a vital function that is critical to the market’s success – truffle authentication.

    Prospective sellers at the Lalbenque market are required to arrive early, and are ushered into a back room at the Marie where syndicat experts sniff, poke pinch, examine and otherwise take steps to assure that this particular batch of truffles are genuine Tuber Melanosporum, and not Chinese counterfeits. The Chinese truffle, Tuber Sinensis, is a decidedly inferior culinary product that is often passed off as a Perigordian black truffle.

    It is frequently joked in culinary circles that half of the Perigordian truffles sold in London, Tokyo and New York are Chinese. But not at Lalbenque. The syndicat verifies Tuber Melanosporum botanical correctness, which gives comfort to buyers and presumably emboldens bidding.

    And bidding at Lalbenque is not for the faint of heart, or those with shallow pockets. In 1900, France produced 1,000 metric tons of Tuber Melanosporum a year, but incessant demand and the resulting over-harvesting has reduced today’s annual harvest to a mere 20 to 40 metric tons.

    The laws of supply and demand have driven the price of Perigordian black truffles to stratospheric heights. On 6 December, you can expect to pay upwards of €500 a kilo for good quality truffles at Lalbenque, and considerably more if summer weather has not been conducive to truffle growth, as may have been the case in 2011.

    Truffle-market-05
    And this is buying at source. Expect to pay considerably more at a gourmet store in a large urban area, including Paris.

    If you are successful at a truffle market, either Lalbenque or any one of a number of smaller truffle markets held in southern France, northern Spain, or Italy, you are in for quite a treat indeed.

    While entire cookbooks are devoted to the myriad culinary applications of truffles (I even saw a recipe for truffle ice cream), Vino Veritas will offer a few brief suggestions here.

    The biggest mistake a would-be truffle chef can make is muddling the delicate and subtle nuances of truffles with other flavours. The food applications that show off truffles the best, in my humble opinion, are those made with eggs, rice or potatoes, and very little else.

    Very little preparation of the truffles themselves is either necessary or desirable. You want to maximize the surface area of the truffles you are using and then heat them for just a bit to bring out the volatile odour elements.

    Take a one euro vegetable peeler (the expensive truffle shavers are a rip-off), place shavings of truffles in a small saucepan with butter, heat under very low heat for just a few moments, add the truffles to the balance of your chosen dish, and be prepared for oral ecstasy.

    The truffles you buy at Lalbenque were about four inches underground a couple of days before they are sold, and the shelf life of fresh truffles is about three weeks.

    Store them in a tight-lidded container in the refrigerator submerged in aborio rice, which allows a little air circulation but not too much, and facilitates the most delicious risotto long after the truffles themselves have been consumed.

    Hope to see you at a truffle market soon, but if you go to Lalbenque, please do not covet the same basket as Yours Truly. Truffles, available only during the shortest, darkest and coldest days of winter in France, will bring a broad smile to any food-lovers face despite the season’s other gifts.

    Vino Veritas is a pseudonym for a passionate Francophile, wine collector and foodie currently living in southern France.

    See also:
    What wine goes with your cheese? There’s an abundance of choice
    A tour de force from the Tour de France

    Visit nearby:
    Museum of Resistance in Cahors
    Lalbenque truffle market
    Abbaye Nouvelle, a place of hidden stories

  • What wine goes with your cheese? There’s an abundance of choice

    Cheese-04

    Photo by Jetalone

    AT the French dinner table, the cheese course usually follows the plat, or main course.

    If there is wine left from earlier in the meal, then this is what usually accompanies the cheese. But if by chance its time to crack open another bottle, there are some rules of thumb to follow that can flatter both the wine and the cheese, writes Vino Veritas.

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  • Giant puffball mushrooms – some as big as your head

    Puffball-mushroomsOUT on a narrow country road and what are those large white balls in a field?

    Stopping the car to get out we see they are puffball mushrooms – some as big as your head.

    The mushrooms had taken root in a circle on the edge of a field, with a second circle a little higher up the field towards the crest of the hill.

    Up close some of the mushrooms were really big, a good 30cms wide, and smaller ones would be gathered around a larger example.

    Thanks to a Wikipedia page on Giant puffball mushrooms I was able to read that they are edible in their current state – a broken one showed a solid, completely white interior.

    If you are sure you have a giant puffball mushroom one way to cook it is to begin by slicing it up into 1cm thick slices and fry with a knob of butter.

  • Preserving the bounty of your French vegetable garden

    Preserves-france
    WITH the rentreé all sewn up and relative calm returning to our households, we are probably all facing the same dilemma, writes Helen Aurelius-Haddock.

    Just what on earth are we going to do with all the produce from our gardens and fruit trees?

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  • Opening the doors at Domaine de La Gachère

    Gilles-lemoine

    Gilles Lemoine welcomed people in to Domaine de La Gachère

    FRANCE is a place of clichéd landmarks: Say Provence and infinite fields of lavender will appear along with its attendant charms and sun drenched monuments, writes Helen Aurelius-Haddock.

    Say Ile de Ré and golden sandy beaches and white sails draped around its chic harbours resonate in the mind’s eye. Say Deux Sèvres and you will be rewarded with a blank look.

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  • Discovering bee hives in the woods

    IT was raining and a lDewongrassight mist hung in the air, with drops on the knee high grass and rain on the wild strawberries and along the bank that skirts the wood overhanging the chestnut grove. 

    But summer was still in the air.
    Catching sight of the low backed lorry stacked with yellow and white
    crates in a clearing, I approached, and the driver stepped down,
    happy to explain about his beehives or 'ruches'.

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  • Make Do & Cook in the kitchen to save

    Make-do-cookMAKE Do & Cook is the latest book by Patricia Mansfield-Devine, who has lived in France for more than 10 years and is the author of the Living in France book.

    In her latest title Patricia offers advice and tips on preparing delicious meals, whilst keeping an eye on the cost. Here she writes about why it’s time to Make Do & Cook:

    Quotesstart_2 As a downshifter living in rural France, I felt almost compelled to write this book.

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