Showing posts with label Maine et Loire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maine et Loire. Show all posts

Rouge des Prés AOP – The Very Best of French Beef. Rouge des Prés in French Cuisine.

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

 
The Rouge des Prés AOP breed of cattle, originally called the Maine-Anjou, come from the old Province of Anjou, now included in the department of Maine et Loire. (Dining in the Maine et Loire, France).
  
One of the only four AOP cattle in France.
 
When the Rouge des Prés AOP is on the menu, you will be able to taste the very best of French beef. France grades its cattle and those with an AOP are the top of the top. For seven months every year, the Rouge des Prés freely graze on fresh grass, wild herbs and flowers. In the winter the same cattle are brought into the barns where they are may only be fed the dried grasses from the area in which they graze in summer. Only in the 120 days before they go to market may grains and cereals be added to their food.  Your cut of beef will not come from a young, stringy, or tough piece of beef; all Rouge des Prés cattle must be at least two and a half years old before they go to market.  That’s enough time for them to have tender, tasty, gently marbled the meat. Drive through the department of Maine et Loire in the spring, summer, and autumn, and you will see the red and white to solid red or black cattle grazing. 
 
The breed was always dual-purpose, but beef is their primary use nowadays. Nevertheless, it’s not uncommon for farms to keep some of their Rouge des Prés cattle for milking.
  
Angers, home to the Rouge des Prés.

None of the Rouge des Prés cattle will ever have been exposed to antibiotics or growth hormones, and by law, the calves must be raised by their mothers,   The farms where these cows come from are nothing like the vast UK and USA  feedlots where 1,000 plus cows are being fattened at any one time. The average size farm for the Rouge des Prés will have forty to fifty cows, and for each and every cow, the farmer must have, by law, one hectare, 10,000 sq meters (12,000 sq yards). The farm must have more land for bulls and calves.  For the best cuts of French beef choose the Rouge des Prés.

Rouge des Prés AOC beef on French Menus:

Carpaccio de Bœuf Rouge des Près au Jus de Yuzu, Frites – A beef Carpaccio from the Rouge Des Près beef prepared with yuzu juice and served with French fries, chips. (The yuzu is a Chinese or Tibetan citrus cross which is very aromatic. The Japanese popularized the yuzu, but the fruits on most French menus are now, in season, grown in France).
   
Le Pièce de Bœuf  Rouge des Prés aux Morilles et Champignons à la Crème –  A Pièce de Bœuf means the butcher’s cut, a cut that a butcher would take home for his or her family as it is appreciated for its real value. Here, the beef is served with a creamy morel mushroom and button mushroom sauce. The French butchers’ cuts are tender and flavorsome cuts from the rump that only French butchers have the patience to prepare.
 
Onglet De Boeuf Rouge Des Prés, Sauce Roquefort, Pommes Rissolées. -  A Rouge Des Prés US hanger steak or London broil, in the UK a skirt steak, here served with a Roquefort cheese sauce and cubed potatoes fried in butter. Pommes Rissolées are the closest French cuisine gets to North American hash browns.
   
Onglet De Boeuf
www.flickr.com/photos/68147320@N02/36040895761/
 
Entrecôte Rouge des Prés Grillée Sauce Bordelaise, Girolles Fraîches – A grilled Rouge de Prés rib-eye steak served with a Sauce Bordelaise and prepared with chanterelle mushrooms. Sauce Bordelaise is a red Bordeaux wine sauce made with veal stock, butter, shallots, and herbs.

Filet De Bœuf  Maine d’Anjou Rôti, Écrasé de Pommes de Terre à l’Olive de Nyons, Sauce Au Vin Rouge De Saumur Champigny – A fillet of Rouge des Prés, (still on this menu as Main-Anjou beef).   This is a cut from the USA  tenderloin, accompanied by mashed potatoes prepared with Nyon olives and served with a red Saumur Champigny wine sauce. The Olives de Nyons AOP are roundish, black to violet colored Provençal olives.  The Saumur Champigny is one of the best red wines in the region.
   
A beef fillet, a cut from the tenderloin.
www.flickr.com/photos/nwongpr/29463060222/

Tartare De Bœuf  La Rouge Des Près  Aux Parfums De Truffe d'Été Steak Tatar from Rouge Des Près beef flavored with the summer truffle. The black summer truffle is a lightly scented truffle.

Despite the cattle’s hundred-year reputation when the farmers of the Maine Anjou cattle applied for an AOC (before the AOP) and all the tests were passed the farmers were then told to change the breed’s name. .After many arguments, the farmers agreed to rename their Maine-Anjou cattle the Rouge Des Prés (which means the red meadow cattle).  Despite the name change in 2003, some chefs still put Maine-Anjou on their menus.  Why the change? I do not know; the only competition for the name that I have seen is the very tasty, farm-raised pigeon, the Royal Anjou pigeon.
  
Ballotine of  Royal Anjou Pigeon,
Black Pudding, and Spiced Juices.
      
The market garden of France.

Maine et Loire is in the Pays de Loire; the region justly referred to as the market garden of France.  The City of Angers sits across the Maine and Loire Rivers and is very close to another five. Not surprisingly, the vineyards of Anjou, the Angevine vineyards, are the largest in the whole Loire Valley.
From this region comes the Poire Anjou, the Anjou pear, and the tasty Reine-Claude plum, the greengage plum, that was brought to England from here in the early 18th century by Sir Thomas Gage. Also from here comes the much appreciated Volaille de Loué, Label Rouge, red label, poultry. The Volaille de Loué poultry includes organically raised chickens, chicken’s eggs, ducks, geese, turkeys, and guinea fowl.
  
Anjou pears
www.flickr.com/photos/74444001@N00/11240994845/

Enjoying the wines of Maine et Anjou

Many dishes on Anjou menus will include Angevine wines, and six different wines roads will take you through villages and wine roads. The website is only in French but easily understood with the Google or Bing translate apps:

 
Anjou has over 35 different AOP wines. The most well-known include: Anjou Rouge, red; Anjou Gamay, a red wine best drunk young like a Nouveau Beaujolais; Anjou Villages, red; Cabernet d'Anjou, rose; Rosé d'Anjou, rose and Anjou Blanc, white. From the Anjou, Saumur wines come: Cabernet de Saumur, rose; Coteaux de Saumur, a medium sweet white; Saumur-Champigny, red; Cabernet de Saumur, rose; Crémant de Loire sparkling white and rose wines.
   
Anjou was an ancient province in France with its capital the city of Angers; the home of the Angevines. King Henry II of England, an ancestor of the reigning British king, was born to a French Angevine family who ruled Anjou. It was only during the French revolution that Anjou was included in the new department of Maine-et-Loire.

Connected Posts:
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 

 
 
 
 
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 470 post that include over 4,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations.
    

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman 
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com
Copyright 2010, 2018, 2023.

Prunier Reine-Claude - The Greengage Plum. The Reine-Claude Plum in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


 
A bowl of Greengage Plums – The Prunier Reine-Claude
Photograph courtesy of « R☼Wεnα »
www.flickr.com/photos/rubber_slippers_in_italy/3896530635/
 
The Reine-Claude plum – The Greengage plum

The Reine-Claude is one of France’s most popular plums and its French name is dedicated to one of France’s most popular queens, Queen Claude (1499 – 1524).  Queen Claude was the consort of King Francis I of France, who reigned from 1515 to 1547. (While the most well-known Greengage plums are green don’t be surprised when you see yellow or red cultivars in the markets).


Drawing of the Reine-Claude plum.
Ernest Panckoucke (1833 ?)
Photograph courtesy of Biodiversity Heritage Library.
www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/7851517772/ 

The Reine-Claude plum was brought from France to England in the early 18th century. Then, Napoleon I, had been exiled for the second time and the French monarchy had been restored. The eternal wars between France and England ended and the first English tourists landed on French soil.  Sir Thomas Gage from England was introduced to the green Reine-Claude plum and brought some cuttings to Britain for his garden. In England the French Reine-Claude plum became the English Greengage plum. The plum quickly took Britain by storm and within 50 years, the Greengage plum had crossed the Atlantic to Canada and the USA where it settled in quickly.


Greengage plums in a French market.
Photograph courtesy of Pierre-Selim
www.flickr.com/photos/pierre-selim/8062122233/ 

The Reine-Claude, the Greengage plum, on French menus

Compressé de Lapin au Romarin et Brune de Sur-les-Bois, carottes, Reines Claude – Slices of rabbit stuffed with carrots and Greengage plums flavored with rosemary and the dark brown Belgian beer Sur-le-Bois.  This will be a cold entrée, the French appetizer. 

 Clafoutis de Reine-claude vertes
With thanks to Gordon Joly for his identification of this pie.
www.flickr.com/photos/21203562@N04/6280443188/   

Carpaccio de Poires et sa Mousseline de Reine-Claude - A dessert Carpaccio of pears served with a moose made with Greengage plums.

Foie-Gras de Canard “Mi-cuit“, Chutney de Reine Claude au Wasabi - Fattened duck liver, fried very lightly, served with a chutney made from Greengage plums spiced with Japanese wasabi.  

Greengage jam.
www.flickr.com/photos/vvvanessa/3232632866/

La Tarte Sablée aux Reine-Claude et Amandes - A tart of Greengage plums and almonds made with shortcake pastry.


Nectarine  and Greengage juice
Photograph courtesy of Alexandre Duret-Lutz
www.flickr.com/photos/gadl/196822186/

Pintadeau en Saucisson, Rémoulade de Chicon, Reine-Claude et Oeuf PochéSausages made from Guinea hen meat accompanied by a poached egg and served with sauce remoulade. Sauce  rémoulade is a mayonnaise and mustard sauce made with cooked egg yolks, oil, and mustard, usually prepared with parsley and sometimes with added cornichons. In this menu listing the remoulade  is  flavored with the slightly bitter Belgian endive and the sweet Greengage plum. (The endive, the Belgian endive, witlof or whiteleaf is called a chicon in Northern France and Belgium.

Soupe de Reine Claude, Yaourt – A cold soup made with Greengage plums and yogurt.


Greengage blossom.
Photograph courtesy of Gordon Joly
                           www.flickr.com/photos/loopzilla/8668452991/
                      

Terrine de Bœuf et Compote de Reine-Claude – A beef pate accompanied by a thick compote of Greengage plums. English compotes will not be thickened like the compote in this menu listing; this compote will have been cooked until it is close to a jam.  (The word and the original recipe for compotes came from France. For more about the French influence in the English kitchen click here).

The French Greengage plum’s history

Despite the Greengage plum’s French history, all plums originated in Asia. The Reine-Claude came to France with the usual suspects, the Romans.  The Romans brought a host of fruit trees to France including plum trees, peach trees, almond treescherry treesapricot trees, and many others. Since the Romans brought the first plum tree the French have, over the last 2,000 years, developed many unique French cultivars and hybrids and among them the Reine-Claude.

The very best French Greengages are said to grow in the department of Maine et Loire in the region of the Pays de la Loire and the departments of Lot in Occitanie and Lot et Garonne in Nouvelle-Aquitaine. Nevertheless, as far as I am concerned Greengages are a tasty plum wherever they are grown.


A Reine-Claude brandy
Goutte de Reine-Claude Doree
Laurent Cazottes NV, France
Photograph courtesy of Chambers Street Wines 

Growing up with Greengages

I loved the single, Greengage plum tree in our garden. Every year our tree produced an enormous crop of plums. Then, a long stick and a ladder were all the equipment we had to bring down the plums from the 4 meters (12 feet) high upper branches. At that time, I learned how to pick only the Greengage plums that were ready to put on the table. We would choose the largest plums and gave the plum a light test squeeze before picking.  The only problem was the birds who liked Greengages ripe or not. The birds won the picking war on the upper branches that were difficult to reach. Watching the birds enjoy Greengages was quite an event. We had to wash the plums on the lower branches very well!


A branch on a Greengage tree.
Just as I remember the Greengage tree in our garden
Photograph courtesy of Thompson-Morgan 

The Reine-Claude, the Greengage plum, in the languages of France’s neighbors:
  
(Catalan – pruna clàudia), ( Dutch -  reine claude verte), (German –edelpflaume), (Italian -  susina regina claudia), (Spanish - ciruela Claudia), (Latin - prunus domestica ssp. Italica). 

--------------------------------
 
Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
a French menu?
 
Just add the word, words, or phrase that you are searching for to the words "Behind the French Menu" (best when including the inverted commas), 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 450 articles that include over 4,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations.
 
----------

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2015, 2021
 
  
--------------------
 
Connected posts:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Responsive ad