Showing posts with label Hautes-Pyrénées. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hautes-Pyrénées. Show all posts

Porc Noir de Bigorre, AOP – An Ancient Breed of Pig That Provides the Most Highly Rated Cured Ham in France. The Porc Noir de Bigorre in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com 

The Porc Noir de Bigorre, AOP.

Pork is the most popular meat in France, though restaurants prefer to highlight more expensive cuts of beef and lamb. Nevertheless, there will be jambon cru, cured hams, and other costly cuts from some of the most famous porcine breeds in France on most menus, along with farmed and real wild boar and top-level cured ham imports. In the French lineup of famous porkers, one pig is far ahead of all others in quality and taste, and that is the Porc Noir de Bigorre AOP, the Black Pig of Bigorre. This ancient breed of pigs has been raised for at least 1,000 years around the old French Province of Bigorre, now included in the modern departments of Hautes-Pyrénées, Gers, and Haute-Garonne. (Since 1-1-2016 these departments have been part of the region of Occitanie).
   
The Porc Noir De Bigorre is free-range for 70% of the year.
 
Flavor in pork comes from fat and the Porc Noir de Bigorre is very flavorsome, coming as it does from a 55% fat to meat ratio. However, that was too much fat for many farmers after WWII when the farmers needed inexpensive fast-growing breeds with more meat per kilo, and so by the 1980s, the tasty Porc Noir was nearly extinct. Nevertheless, there were always a few farmers who kept raising these pigs as a hobby while waiting for an educated public who would pay extra for the quality and taste of the Porc Noir de Bigorre. 

By 1992 there were enough producers who had agreed breeding and quality standards to begin offering the wider public a uniquely tasting saucisson, a salami type sausage, and jambon sec, dry-cured ham, with a fabulous taste, along with other cuts. The public responded, and in short order, the farmers couldn't keep up with the demand. The Porc Noir, however, is a slow-growing pig, and its dry-cured ham is aged for at least 18 months with its very best offerings aged for twenty-four. Long aging takes up a lot of expensive climate-controlled storage, and they can't compete with popular cured hams that are only aged for seven to twelve months. Altogether, that makes for an expensive product, but at the end, the proof of the pudding is in the eating, and the Jambon de Porc Noir de Bigorre melts on your tongue. In 2017 the Porc Noir de Bigorre received its AOC, and a Pan-European AOP closely followed that. (The Porc Noir de Bigorre AOP is also one of the few hams supported by the Slow Food Movement).  
    
Slices of cured ham from the Porc Noir De Bigorre AOP.

The Porc Noir de Bigorre of French menus :

Carré de Porc Noir de Bigorre, Flan de Haricots Tarbais et Jus Corsé – A pork chop from the Porc Noir de Bigorre accompanied with a savory tart made from the Label Rouge Tarbaise dried bean and served with a Jus Corsé, a sauce made from the natural cooking juices. The dried white Haricot Tarbais bean was the first dried bean to be awarded the French Label Rouge, the red label, for its unique and consistent quality. 

A Porc Noir de Bigorre sow will also have fat piglets.

Gambas et Poitrine De Porc Noir De Bigorre Caramélisées Et Poivrées - Caramelized large shrimps with pepper accented pork belly from the Porc Noir De Bigorre.

Porc Noir Burger: Pain Burger, Sauce Fumée, Oignons Confits, Ventrèche De Porc Noir De Bigorre - A Porc Noir Burger served with a burger roll, accompanied by a smoke-flavored sauce, onions confit (slowly cooked and offered as a sweet jam with their taste made to contrast with the meat) and pork belly from the Porc Noir De Bigorre  

A store of Porc Noir hams.
  
Jambon de Porc Noir de Bigorre et Langoustine Croustillante de Kadaïf, Assaisonnés D'une Huile de Noisette du Gers, Fraîcheur de Pomme Granny et Gingembre – Cured ham from the Porc Noir de Bigorre served with crispy Dublin Bay Prawns (the real scampi) wrapped in the thin pasta strands of Kadaïf, flavored with oil from hazelnuts from the department of Gers and slices of chilled Granny Smith apples flavored with ginger.

Kadaïf is a pastry with both savory and sweet versions that were brought to France with North African cuisine, though it is found all over the Middle East as well as in Turkey, Greece, and Albania.  Kadaïf is made from pasta-like vermicelli in very thin angels’ hair strands made from wheat flour, corn starch, salt, and water. Kadaïf may be on menus as Knafeh, Knofa, and Kadaïfia.
 
 Assiette de Charcuterie: Jambon de Porc Noire de Bigorre, Rillet des d’oie, Saucisson sec, Pate de Campagne - A platter of Jambon Noir de Bigorre served with goose rillets accompanied by, a small salami type pork sausage and a country pate. (Goose rillets are goose meat that has been slowly cooked in goose fat until the meat can be made into a paste to spread on toast or bread).
   
Porc Noire Saucisson
The Black Pig of Bigorre’s salami type sausage.

The Black Pig of Bigorre live freely for 70% of the year in small herds in natural settings in open forest where they feed on wild herbs and flowers, acorns, chestnuts, and locally cultivated vegetable additions. The piglets are raised freely by their mothers until they are weaned and no antibiotics or growth hormones are permitted.

In the countryside of the old province of Bigorre:

The whole areais very much into fine foods:


The Porc Noir de Bigorre AOP will not be on every menu, so look out for it and do not pass it you by.

------------------------------------------

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman 
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com
Copyright 2010, 2019, 2023


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Barèges-Gavarnie Mutton is a Rare and Tasty Change From the Many Excellent Lamb Offerings of France.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

  

The Mouton Barèges -Gavarnie AOC
    
The Mouton Barèges-Gavarnie AOP; the sheep are something very special.  This mutton is on only French restaurant menus from June through January. Practically none of their meat is exported, so when Barèges-Gavarnie is on the menu, do not let the opportunity pass you by.
   

Le Lac d'Aumar
www.flickr.com/photos/grand-tourmalet/14992824740/
   
Mutton, you may say, is meat from old sheep that no longer supplies milk and is only good for sausages.  Now is the time to change your mind.  The menu may offer a roast from a doubloon, an 18-month to two-year-old castrated male, that is considered the best of the breed.  Another menu may offer a winter stew prepared from a two-year-old ewe. There are excellent lambs in France, but mutton has a different taste and texture, and the Mouton Barèges-Gavarnie sheep have red, marbled, tender meat.

To begin with, these are a unique breed, they are hardy and their summer pastures where they graze in complete freedom day and night at an altitude of between 1,600 meters ( 5,250 feet)  and 2,600 meters (8,300 feet) high. The temperatures change from below freezing at night to 90ºF ( 32ºC) during the day, so they need their special wool.

Until you have tasted this mutton, you will never be able to understand how very different this is to lamb. It is not a replacement for lamb; you cannot compare them.  They are very different meats with different tastes and textures.
  

The Official Logo of The Mouton Barèges -Gavarnie AOP.

Mouton Barèges-Gavarnie on the menu:

Brochette de Mouton Barèges Gavarnie à la Réglisse, Choux Vert et Châtaigne des Pyrénées – Skewers of the Barèges-Gavarnie mutton flavored with licorice served with cabbage and chestnuts from the Pyrenees.
              
Côtelettes de Mouton AOC Barèges-Gavarnie à la Crème de Serpolet - Chops from the Barèges Gavarnie mutton flavored with a cream of wild thyme sauce.

Gigot de Mouton Barèges-Gavarnie et Haricots Tarbais - Roasted leg of the Mouton Barèges-Gavernie served with the Label Rouge, red label dried beans from Tarbes in the Pyrenees.
  

Gigot de Mouton Barèges-Gavarnie
   
Navarin de Mouton Baréges-Gavarnie Printanier Navarin - A stew of Baréges-Gavarnie mutton cut into regular shapes, along with vegetables, nearly always including turnips. The navette, a turnip, is considered the source of the name navarin, a turnip stew.  A Navarin becomes a Navarin Printanier, a springtime stew when it is made with lamb and young spring turnips along with other early vegetables.
    
Civet de Mouton AOC Barèges-Gavarnie –  A slowly cooked stew from the Barèges-Gavarnie mutton.  A stew like this will be prepared with vegetables and red wine. Civet were traditional stews associated with small wild game; that meant a lapin, a rabbit, or a lièvre, a hare, and occasionally a marcassin, a young wild boar.  Now the term civet is used for many other stews like this menu listing.
                   
The Mouton Barèges-Gavarnie sheep are brought to their mountain pastures in the area called the Pays Toy, in the department of the Hautes-Pyrénées, in the late spring.
       

Heading for higher pastures
  
In the high pastures, these sheep have total freedom; not even a shepherd to watch out for them except maybe once every ten days.  Nevertheless, since writing this, I have been told that the tradition of permanent shepherds and sheepdogs is returning, as the wild animal protection laws have seen the local bear population increasing.  By November, the sheep are back in a covered shelter in the valleys and feed on hay that comes from their summer pastures.

There is, of course, a fete for the Mouton Barèges-Gavarnie, but the date and place move every year within the region. Check ahead with the Tourist Information Office website below.  This is not just a fete where the children can pet the sheep; this is also a chance to taste and enjoy, and then everyone can enjoy sheepdog trials and competitions.

For the fete and touring  in the region in summer or winter, see the English language website:
   
The same website has information on the highest spa in France, where the Barèges waters, a constant 42 °C (107.6 °F), are known for their help with bone reconstruction, rheumatism, and respiratory system.  The spa has been known since the beginning of the 17th century and is the highest in the Pyrenees. The ski resort of Barèges is one of the largest skiing centers in the region of the Midi-Pyrénées.
   

Cross-country skiing with the family
www.flickr.com/photos/grand-tourmalet/7008047935/

The English language website of Gavarnie Tourist Information office:
     
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Searching for the meaning of 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, 2016, 2018, 2024.

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