Showing posts with label Fondue Savoyarde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fondue Savoyarde. Show all posts

Beaufort AOP - One of France's Finest Cheeses. Beaufort Cheese on French Menus.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

 
Beaufort

Beaufort AOP – Beaufort AOP is a fabulous 33% fat, semi-dry cow’s cheese made from non-pasteurized milk; it is produced in both departments of the Savoie (Savoy) in the region of the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes in south-eastern France. The cheese varies in color from ivory to pale yellow, and when ripe, has a smooth and firm, creamy texture; it is matured for at least five months before it is sold. Beaufort AOP has a clean taste with an aroma that reminds you of the herbs and grasses in the high pastures. The milk comes from the Tarentaise or Abondance cows that for seven-eight months of the year graze freely in the high pastures of the Alps.


The Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
Photograph courtesy of Webzine Voyage

Beaufort AOP, is a Gruyere-type cheese, and it is the most important cheese in a Fondue Savoyard, the region’s famous cheese fondue. Beaufort is also the cheese of choice in many other traditional Savoie recipes. Locally, the producers claim that the cheese dates back to the Roman occupation of France beginning in 121 BCE. Whether or not the recipe for this cheese is really over 2,000 years old we cannot be sure, but the Romans who came to the Savoie certainly planted grapevines whose descendants still produce some of the Savoie’s wines. The Romans also left parts of roads, bridges, and other buildings and brought fruit trees, including the apricotcherryalmond, and many others. 


Beaufort  AOP
Photograph courtesy of Frédérique Voisin-Demery
www.flickr.com/photos/vialbost/4518685736/

Beaufort is a unique French cheese that has three distinct grades:

Beaufort AOP – This is the most popular grade and the cheese that will be in fromageries, cheese shops, all over France. The cheese will be produced in dairies; the milk may only come from free-grazing cows or in the winter from cows fed the same local grasses or hay from the area where they graze in summer. The cows cannot be fed silage.


Production in a Beaufort AOP dairy.
Photograph courtesy of elPadawan
www.flickr.com/photos/elpadawan/5501564549/

Beaufort d'Été, AOP - For this grade, the milk used may only come from cows grazing in the Alpage, the hills leading to the Alps, and then only during the months of June through October. 

  


Members of the Beaufort AOP production team
Photograph courtesy of Guilhem Vellut
www.flickr.com/photos/o_0/45189178791/

Beaufort Chalet d'Alpage AOP - The rarest of the three Beauforte AOP grades. The Beaufort Chalet d'Alpage cheese must be made in the farmer's Alpine mountain chalets, and the milk used must come from free-grazing cows in pastures over 1,500 meters high. The cheese can only come from a single herd, and each farmer must make their own cheese. The cheese from each farmer's herd is tested and tasted separately.

The production regulations covering Beaufort Chalet d'Alpage makes it a very noteworthy cheese; only two other French AOP cheeses have such stringent requirements. The other cheeses are the farm-made Reblochon also from the Savoie and the Fourme de Salers AOP, from the Auvergne part of the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes

  


Cave de Beaufort, Maturing Beaufort cheeses
Photograph courtesy of La Koop

Tasting the different grades of Beaufort AOP

It will be surprising if two of the three grades of Beaufort are on the cheese trolley in a restaurant. Serving ten or fifteen perfectly ripe cheeses is very expensive, and space will rarely be kept for two closely related cheeses.  Go to a local fromagerie, a cheese shop, and buy 100 grams of two of the grades; that’s enough for a tasting for four persons, and add another 100 grams each of two other Savoie cheeses. Then buy a bottle of one the Savoy’s excellent white wines and have the hotel put it in their refrigerator overnight. The next day buy a fresh baguette and have a mid-day picnic. Together with the wine, the Beaufort cheeses become a memorable and tasty experience; later, they taste even better after the first bottle of wine.

N.B. If you buy cheese to take home, do not ask to buy a whole truckle (barrel) of cheese. Individual cheeses weigh between 20 and 70 kilos each, and all the airlines would love you to check-in overweight with even the smallest whole cheese.  


Domaine Labbe Abymes, a white wine from the Savoie
Photograph courtesy of Jameson Fink
www.flickr.com/photos/jamesonfink/12917731515/

To take Beaufort cheese home, order a one-kilo wedge of cheese or more if you have space, and have the cheese vacuum packed. It will keep well even for a two-day trip home. Then at home, keep it in plastic wrap in the refrigerator, not in the freezer, there it will keep well for one month plus. Leave it for one hour before serving; Beaufort should be served at room temperature. For more about buying cheese in France and taking it home, click here.  

 N.B. A word of warning, do not loudly discuss the differences in the grades of the cheese in a restaurant when there are locals at nearby tables. If they speak some English, they may begin long monologues on the different types of Gruyere and Beaufort cheeses. The tastes of the local cheeses are very much a matter of personal preference, and arguments among the local cognoscenti can get very emotional. The monologues can go on for as long as cheese remains, and the wine flows, and you are paying, I know.


Altesse white wine from the Savoie
Photograph courtesy of Anna & Michal
www.flickr.com/photos/michalo/4754043065/

Beaufort AOP on Savoie menus:

Fondue Savoyarde  Recipe for dishes similar to today’s cheese fondues date back two or three hundred years, but the Savoie cheese fondue became famous with the growth of winter sports in the 1950s. Today’s Fondue Savoyarde will include at least two Savoie cheeses, with Beaufort AOP nearly always being one. The other local cheese or cheeses that may be included are Abondance, Emmental de Savoie, and sometimes a local Gruyère. The cheese will be melted in white wine, usually from the Haut Savoie. Since the taste of the fondue changes with the percentages of the different cheeses used, every restaurant’s fondue has its own unique flavor. There are also cheese fondues made with additions of the Savoie’s much-appreciated kirsch cherry liquor.


Cheese fondue
Photograph courtesy of Pedro Cerqueira
www.flickr.com/photos/pcerqueira/5402321948/
 

Risotto de Crozets au Beaufort – Crozets, the Savoie’s own pasta made into a risotto with Beaufort AOP. The name Crozet may be used in this menu listing, but for risotto, the chef may use potato flour or buckwheat flour and a different shape to the usual small pasta squares. For local specialties like this, much will depend on the chef’s grandmother’s recipe.


Another cheese fondue
Photograph courtesy of Rosmarie Voegtli      
www.flickr.com/photos/rvoegtli/25800889728/

Gratiné de Noix de St Jacques aux Noix et Beaufort – The meat from the King scallop is prepared with walnuts and then covered in Beaufort cheese and browned under the grill.

Gratin Savoyard au Beaufort - Boiled potatoes baked in butter and beef stock and covered with Beaufort AOP cheese and browned. If served with a salad, this gratin maybe a lunchtime main course when part of a fixed price menu or served as a garnish for the main course for dinner.

Maturing the Beaufort cheese

All Beaufort AOP cheeses are matured for at least five months, with some being aged for up to 12 months. During the aging, the temperature will be kept below 10 °C (50°F), with a high humidity. To ensure the cheese matures evenly and develops its aroma, it must be washed with brine and turned every two days.

The Beaufort AOP is made in four Savoie valleys:

Beaufortain ValleyHere, the small town of Beaufort (also called Beaufort-sur-Doron), with a population of close to 2,000, gave its name to the valley and the cheese. The Arêches-Beaufort area has an English language website:

https://www.savoie-mont-blanc.com/en/offre/fiche/areches-beaufort-tourist-office/478549

Tarentaise Valley An area beloved for its winter sports and located in the department of Savoie; it has an English language website:

https://www.savoie-mont-blanc.com/en/Savoie-Mont-Blanc-s-region/Tarentaise

Maurienne Valley One of the great transverse valleys of the Alps with an English language website:

http://www.maurienne-tourisme.com/

Val d’Arly - The Val d’Arly valley is in the heart of the French Alps between the Mont Blanc, Beaufortain, and Aravis in the department of Haute Savoie. Here is a uniquely varied terrain with the Mont Blanc as a stunning backdrop. The Val d’Arly has an English language website:

 https://www.savoie-mont-blanc.com/en/offre/fiche/tourist-office-of-val-d-arly/472329

   


Climbing Mont Blanc, Haute-Savoie.
Photograph courtesy of Hugh Llewelyn
www.flickr.com/photos/camperdown/50678543506/

The most famous Savoie cheeses that in addition to the Beaufort AOP are available all over France:

Abondance AOP (cow’s milk).

Persillé des Aravis (goat's milk).

Chevrotin AOP (goat’s  milk).

Emmental de Savoie IGP (cow’s milk).

Persillé de Haute-Tarentaise (goat’s milk).

Reblochon AOP  (cow’s milk).

Tomme de Savoie IGP (cow’s milk).

Persillé des Aravis (goat’s milk).

Persillé de Haute-Tarentaise (goat’s milk).

Persillé de Tignes (goat’s milk).

Tome des Bauges AOP (Cow’s milk).

The Savoie departments have many other excellent cheeses; however, with their limited production, you will only be able to taste most of them locally.

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Abondance AOP - One of the Most Celebrated Cheeses of the Savoie, Rhône Alps, France.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

   

Abondance AOP
Photo credited to JM Gaillard SIFA
    
Abondance AOC/AOP is a 45% fat, semi-dry, cow’s milk cheese made from non-pasteurized milk.  It is aged for at least five months and mostly made on the farms where the cows are milked. The cheese is a light yellow to ivory with some small holes and is firm but feels soft on the tongue; it has a light nutty and very slightly salty taste. The rind is brown to dark brown. Each cylinder of cheese is about 35 -40cm in diameter and 8cm high and weighs from 7 -10 kilos (10-22 lbs).
  

Members of a youth group in the Valley of Abondance.
 
Abondance comes from the northern part of the department of Haute-Savoie in the Rhône Alps, close to the border with Switzerland. (Since 1-1-2016 the Rhône Alps are part of the super region of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes). This is the French Alps, and in the winter the cows are brought into warm barns while the whole area is filled with ski resorts. Despite that, long before skiing was a sport the Abondance valley and the town of Abondance gave their name to the cheese. They also gave their name to the unique Abondance breed of cows who with the Taurine and Montbéliarde breeds provide the milk for the Abondance cheese. The cheese is claimed to have a history that began in the 6th century and assuredly has been made locally since the 13th century.
   

The valley of Abondance, Lac d'Arvouin
www.flickr.com/photos/vialbost/4647392258/
     
N.B. The Corn d'Abondance seen on some menu is not a cheese; it’s a mushroom. The Horn of Plenty, the Black Chanterelle or the Black Trumpet Mushroom.  The Horn of Plenty mushroom will also be on French menus as Craterelles or the Trompette des Morts.
 
Abondance on French menus:

Berthoud Abondance -  A Berthoud is a traditional baked cheese dish from the Savoie.  The cheese will be baked together with one of the excellent local white wines and sometimes flavored with a Madeira wine. In any case, when the cheese and wine ready you will be served potatoes, bread and dried meats to dip into the dish and enjoy.

Fines Tranches de Fromages d'Abondance Mélangées au Vin Blanc de Savoie et Gratinées au Four, Servi Avec de la Charcuterie de Savoie, Salade Verte et Pommes de Terre – Thin slices of Abondance cheese mixed with a Savoie white wine and browned in the oven, and then served with cold meats and sausages from the Savoie along with a green salad and potatoes. The Savoie has a tradition of excellent air-dried meat and cured ham, along with bacon and pork sausages.

Fondue Savoyarde aux Cèpes, Beaufort, Abondance, Emmental de Savoie – Here the Fondue is made with Abondance AOP, Beaufort AOP and French Emmental de Savoie IGP cheese with cepes, the French porcini mushroom.  The cheeses will be melted in a white wine, with a small amount of garlic. Since the taste of the fondue changes with the percentages of the different cheeses used every restaurant’s fondue has its unique flavor. Some Fondue Savoyards will benefit from the addition of the Savoie’s much-appreciated kirsch cherry liquor.

Cheese fondues are eaten with pieces of French bread that are dipped in the melted cheese on a special fork. Each diner will have been given his or her fourchette à fondue, a distinctive, long, fondue fork, which keeps the diner’s hand away from the heat of the communal pot of melted cheese in which the bread will be dipped.   N.B. These fondue forks become extremely hot at the tip, and they have burned many a tongue.  I speak with experience so transfer the bread to your plate, and then to an ordinary fork before eating.

In the 1950’s and 1960’s everyone who went skiing would come home talking endlessly about the fondues.  Today Fondue Savoyarde has lost some of its international glimmer; however, it still enjoyed in the homes of the region as it was for hundreds of years and it will be on menus in the ski resorts.
  

Fondue Savoyarde.
www.flickr.com/photos/pcerqueira/5402321948/

Tagliatelles Aux Girolles, Fromage d'Abondance et Jambon Cru de Savoie 12 Mois – Tagliatelle (the long thin flat pasta about 8 -10mm (0.3” – 0.4”) wide) served with the chantarelle mushrooms prepared with the Abondance cheese, and served with thin slices of a 12-month cured ham from the Savoie. The Jambon de la Savoie is one of France’s most appreciated cured hams. The ham will be added just before serving as cured ham, like virgin olive oil, loses it taste if cooked. This dish with its pasta, wild mushrooms, Abondance cheese, and aged Savoie ham makes my mouth water just writing about it. 

Tarte au Fromage d'Abondance, Petite Salade Verte Garnie aux Noix – A tart au fromage, a cheese cake, made with the Abondance cheese served with a small green salad garnished with walnuts.
  

Tarte au Fromage
www.flickr.com/photos/randalfino/5848894191/

Travelling and buying Abondance AOP cheese

The taste of the Abondance AOP cheese changes with age so a fromagerie, a cheese shop, may have more than one cheese on sale. Then they may let you have a sliver each cheese to choose from.  Abondance, like other semi-hard cheeses, travels well and in any case most fromageries offer vacuum packing for travel; otherwise, keep the cheese wrapped in plastic wrap. At home, this cheese will keep well for a month more if properly wrapped and kept in in the refrigerator, not a freezer. Freezers kill the taste of most cheeses. Take the cheese out of the refrigerator at least half an hour before serving.  Enjoy Abondance AOP together with a good Savoie white wine; they should bring back good memories of your travels. For more about buying cheese in France and taking it home click here.
   

Abondance on sale.
www.flickr.com/photos/vialbost/5687575643/
  
On your travels, or in a good cheese shop at home you may encounter other excellent Savoie cheeses: Beaufort AOP, Chevrotin AOP, Emmental de Savoie IGP, French Gruyere IGP, Raclette IGP, Reblochon AOP, Tome de Bauges AOP, Tomme de Savoie IGP.
 
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Searching for words, names or phrases on French Menus?

Just add the word, words, or phrase that you are searching for to the words "Behind the French Menu" and search with Google. Behind the French Menu’s links include hundreds of words, names, and phrases that are seen on French menus. There are over 400 articles that include over 3,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations.
    

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2012, 2015, 2017.

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