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Even the magazine 'Pleine Vie', which publishes a special cooking
edition every year, changes its judgment from time to time.
I'll be a little conservative, and take my definition from the
October 1999 edition, which defines 13 culinary regions:
- North-Picardy (Nord-Pas-de-Calais, Picardy, western Champagne-Ardenne).
- Normandy (Normandy).
- Brittany (Brittany, northern Loire).
- Ile-de-France (Il-de-France, central Champagne-Ardenne).
- Anjou-Touraine-Berry (Pays-de-la-Loire, Loire Valley).
- Burgundy-Lyons (Burgundy, western Rhone-Alpes).
- Jura-Franche-Comté (Franche-Comté).
- Savoie-Dauphiné (Eastern Rhone-Alpes).
- Languedoc-Provence-Corsica (excludes northern Languedoc).
- Auvergne-Limousin-Périgord (includes northern Languedoc).
- Grand South-West (southern Pays de Loire, Poitou-Charentes,
Aquitaine except the northe-east, Pyrennees except the Pays Basque).
- Basque (southern Aquitaine, south-west Pyrenees).
- Alsace-Lorraine (eastern Champagne-Ardenne, Lorraine, Alsace).
Let's take a look at each of these in turn.
North-Picardy
From the ferry ports and coastal towns of Dunquerque, Boulogne
and Calais, this region stretches east to include the industrial
city of Lille and the gothic cathedrals of cities such as Amiens.
Further south, closer to Paris, you'll find the chateaux of
Chantilly and Compiègne. To the east, the poppy-strewn fields of
World War I memorials, and the beginning of the champagne country.
There is a strong Flemish influence to the cuisine. Here, a
'baguette' may be a sweet, macaroon-like biscuit rather than a loaf
of French bread. Meat course ingredients include beer and a soft
cheese called maroilles.
Normandy
A land of lush pastures and orchards that produces pungent soft
cheeses and cider, this region also includes the harbors, cliff
walks and windy beaches of the Cotentin peninsula and the wooded
valleys of the Seine. Well-known attractions include the island of
Mont-St-Michel, Monet's garden at Giverny, and the Bayeux 'tapestry'
(strictly, a giant piece of embroidery).
Since Normandy has always had both farmers and fishermen, its
food reflects the working diets of these people. Expect to see cream
or cider in dishes with plenty of good farm vegetables. Meats
include rabbit, and various products derived from offal. Seafood is
fresh and served simply, in generous portions. This is the home of
Tarte aux Pommes, and older families will offer you Calvados at any
time of day. This is apple brandy, sometimes home-brewed under
ancient licences, and they'll offer stronger brews as the day
progresses - from 36 degrees in the morning to a fiery overproof 46
in the evening. Traditionally, a long, heavy meal includes a break
for a 'Trou Normand' - a small glass of Calvados - to settle the
stomach and prepare it for the next course.
Brittany
I like to think of the Bretons being to the Normans what the
Cornish are to the people of Devon - to an outsider the one is like
the other but even more so. But there are more Bretons than Cornish
who can still speak their ancient languages.
They are fishermen and farmers who live on a peninsula with the
English Channel on one side and Biscay on the other. The details of
their Celtic ancestry are delightfully portrayed in the Asterix
cartoon stories.
Leeks, potatoes and cauliflower are the traditional vegetables.
Saint-Jacques (scallops) are the favorite shellfish, and you'll
often find ray on the menu. Large wheels
of shortbread-like galettes are favorite gap-fillers during the day.
White wine and calvados are common ingredients. 'Soupe de Roscoff'
is a creamy cauliflower & onion soup. 'Saint-Jacques à la
bretonne' are cooked with leeks, shallots, carrots, herbs, butter
and muscadet. Try the coarse farmhouse pâtés for something with
both taste and texture.
Ile-de-France
Paris and the surrounding countryside form a comparatively
wealthy region. Dishes include plenty of egg, cheese and onions.
Sauces are lighter and less creamy than in the farming regions, and
you'll find exotic spices such as vanilla. 'Lapin sauté chasseur'
uses a sauce with the tang of lemon.
Anjou-Touraine-Berry
Expect some vegetables from warmer climates, more 'gamey' meats
and more garlic. 'Poulet en Barbouille' uses additional blood from
chicken giblets.
Burgundy-Lyons
You'll see sausages, Dijon mustard, rich deserts. Compare the
peasant dish 'andouilles à la lyonnaise' (tripe sausages in pork
fat & vinegar, with onions) with 'vacherin glacé au caramel' (a
rich desert containing egg yolks, sugar, cream, rum and
vanilla-flavored meringues)
Jura-Franche-Comté
A lush, hilly land of dairy cattle and soft comté cheese. Expect
both peasant food (local sausages, etc.,) and lighter, sophisticated
dishes (frogs' legs, coq au vin using a local 'yellow' wine). On two
successive winter holidays in the Jura, I saw sucking pig in the
charcuterie window.
Savoie-Dauphiné
Both foothills and real Alps. Peasant food uses local cheeses.
Look for trout, and alcoholic fondues. The saucisson sec is
excellent (salt-cured pork sausage with peppercorns - far preferable
to Italian salami, in my opinion). Use it, with soft cheese and a
baguette, for snacks.
Languedoc-Provence-Corsica
All the Mediterranean regions have food characterised by olive
oil, olives, tomatoes, capsicum and herbs. The west shows Spanish
influence, and Corsica a hint of southern Italy. The Languedoc is
home to bouillabaisse, originally a fishwife's meal made from what
her man couldn't sell, enlivened with garlic and white wine. A group
of restaurants in and around Marseille, determined to uphold standards, sells 'the only
vraie bouillabaisse de Marseille' at steep prices. They created this to counter
the bad impression given by uninspiring dishes served as 'our
version' of the dish by cheap restaurants - but this turns it into
haute cuisine, which is not how it originated.
To my mind, this is akin to opera singers making recordings of
folk tunes - undeniably good, but not the original form. Martin
O'Brien's superb article about Marseille
includes a description of the 'vraie bouillabaisse'.
In summer on the beaches, try filling your own bottle from a vat
of table wine, then buy a 'pan bagnat' - salade niçoise in a huge bun. Don't go to sleep
in the sun afterwards.
Auvergne-Limousin-Périgord
The land of foie gras, sangliers (wild boar), chestnuts and a vast selection
of forest mushrooms, with some excellent cheeses. Everything from
peasant food to 'escalopes de foie gras' - foie gras sautéed in
goose grease, served with white grapes cooked in strong, sweet white
wine. Try soupe de châtaignes (chestnut soup with onion, celery,
leek and garlic) on a chilly autumn evening.
Grand Sud-Ouest
This is the Biscay side of France. Bordeaux wines, plenty of
seafood - and everyone has heard of entrecôte bordelaise. Try 'cailles
au foie gras' (quail, foie gras, white grapes, white wine), or 'soupe
aux huitres' (oysters floating in a rich soup made from egg,
shallot, leek, butter and cream.
Basque
The food of the western Pyrenees reminds me slightly of
Portuguese cooking. Colorful peppers and tomatoes, olive oil,
garlic. Although the region only has a very short coastline adjacent
to the Spanish border, it has several fish dishes. 'Thon à la
basquaise' features tuna cutlets with garlic imbedded in the flesh,
garnished with onions, peppers and tomatoes.
Alsace-Lorraine
This region is strongly influenced by southern Germany. Veal and
game meats combine with the fruits and fungi of temperate climes. 'Omelette
farcie de Nancy' features slices of blood sausage (the 'black
pudding' of Scotland and northern England).
Enjoy the tour? Now, when someone talks of 'French cooking',
you'll ask them to be more explicit, and tell you which part of
France they mean.
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