Showing posts with label Michel Bras. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michel Bras. Show all posts

Laguiole AOP Cheese. One of France's finest cheeses.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Aged Laguiole cheese.
Photograph courtesy of Céline MOSNIER
www.flickr.com/photos/hirondellecanada/3073174098/

Laguiole AOP is a 45% fat (30.5% dry weight), hard, unpasteurized, cow's milk cheese; it has a light golden color with a pleasant smell and a light, slightly fruity taste. The cheese is aged from 4 to 24 months. From a blind tasting of a six-month and an 18-month Laguiole AOP, the younger cheese was excellent, while the 18-month-old cheese was more like an aged cheddar with a slight bite.


The Aubrac cow.
Photograph courtesy of Olivier Bacquet
www.flickr.com/photos/olibac/6008729138/

The Laguiole AOP cheese may only be made with milk from the Simmental and Aubrac cows. The cows graze freely for seven months a year on the Aubrac high basalt plateau between 800 and 1400 meters for close to seven months a year. In the winter, the cows are brought into barns and fed on the grasses and wild herbs collected from the Aubrac plateau during the summer. Milk production and refining of cheese must be carried out in the geographical area of the Aubrac, where less than 80 farms in the departments of Aveyron, Cantal, and Lozère are authorized to provide milk for this cheese. The cheese is named after the village of Laguiole. (The village and the cheese's name Laguiole AOP is pronounced is lay-ole, do not pronounce the g). 

There are another eight AOP cheeses linked to the Aubrac Plateau, and they have their own French language websites. These unique cheeses are Laguiole, Salers, CantalFourme d'Ambert, Pélardon, Rocamadour, Saint-Nectaire, and Bleu d'Auvergne).


The village of Laguiole.
Photograph courtesy of lns1122
www.flickr.com/photos/minijoegreen/21512662653/

Buying Laguiole Cheese

Should you decide to take a whole Laguiole AOC cheese home from France, you may encounter some difficulties; the smallest cheese weighs 20 kilos, and others weigh up to 50 kilos. I imagine all airlines would appreciate the extra income when you bring one of these cheeses as excess baggage. To avoid problems, buy a large wedge, maybe one kilo, and pack it well in a plastic bag. Where possible, buy from a professional fromager, a cheese shop, since most offer packaging in vacuum bags and may well provide a taste of a mature cheese as well. However, as this is not a soft cheese, it will travel well even if the bag is not vacuumed. Once home, keep this and all hard-yellow cheeses wrapped in plastic wrap in a refrigerator, but not in the freezer. When you open your cheese and cut a wedge, an hour before serving, rewrap your cheese and return it to the fridge; it should keep well for 8 -10 weeks if you let it last that long. Laguiole, the village, is in the department of Aveyron in the administrative region of Occitanie. For more about buying cheese in France and taking it home, click here.


Aligot.
Photograph courtesy of Tavallai
www.flickr.com/photos/tavallai/5850019237/

One of the most popular dishes made with Laguiole is Aligot, a traditional, very tasty, potato, and a cheese-based dish made in Aveyron with a young Lagouille cheese or an unsalted Tome (Tomme) Fraîche d'Aubrac. For Aligot, the cheese is mixed into mashed potatoes along with garliccrème fraiche, milk, and butter. This combination is carefully stirred until long threads of cheese and potato may be drawn from the pot. The Aligot will usually be served with a small, pork, salami type sausage. In an upscale restaurant, the Aligot may have slices of beef added. (The original Aligot recipe is claimed as their own by two neighboring departments, Hérault and Lozère, and the cheese differs in each of the departments).


The ski station in Lagouile
Photograph courtesy of Tourism Aveyron.

There is more to Aveyron and Laguiole than excellent cheeses.

The Aveyron department is a beautiful place for fishermen and women as it has five major rivers plus hundreds of streams and tens of lakes. Aveyron will be on many menus throughout France including their Bœuf Fermier d'Aubrac, Label Rouge, their mostly free-range red label Aubrac beef-cattle. Also look-out for their Label Rouge, red label, Agneau Laiton de l'Aveyron, lambs between 70-140 days; that and Aveyron's famous veal, their Label Rouge, red label, Veau d'Aveyron et du Ségala I.G.P.  

The cutlery of Laguiole

Laguiole's village is also famous for "La Maison du Laguiole," the Laguiole knife's creators. Their knives, other cutlery, kitchen equipment, and their very individual corkscrews are appreciated worldwide. If you are in the area, worry not, they do have a factory outlet shop for visitors! Many French sommeliers, wine stewards, pride themselves on only using Laguiole corkscrews; this is the Rolls Royce of the limonadier type of corkscrew. The French for a corkscrew is Tire-Bouchon, the most famous of these French corkscrews in the "Limonadier," also called the Couteau Sommelier.


Maison du Laguiole “Limonadier”
Photograph courtesy of La Maison du Laguiole

The name Limonadier comes from its original users' trade, for whom this particular corkscrew was created, they were soft drink vendors. Three hundred years ago, most wines were not sold in bottles; they were sold in barrels, though soft drinks were sold in bottles, and sealed with a cork. When this corkscrew was created, only a few fine wines were corked, and 99% of the population never saw them. The Limonadier is the corkscrew with a lever to assist in pulling the cork out. The name came from the shops, also called Limonadiers, which were early 17th-century soft drink shops and also the name of the profession of those who sold soft drinks. These stores opened the bottles of the non-alcoholic beverages they sold with the corkscrew called the Limonadier. Three-hundred years later, The French national association representing café owners is still called the Syndicat National des Limonadiers. 


A Laguiole bread knife.
Photograph courtesy of La Maison du Laguiole

If you are visiting Aveyron

The local Aveyron Tourist Information Offices will give you a list of over 100 wineries, farms, dairies, and other local producers in the department who open their farms and wineries to visitors. N.B. When visiting most farms and wineries, a small contribution to the local economy is expected. You may also have the list sent to you long before you leave home and plan your visits.

The Aveyron Tourist Information English language website is:

http://www.tourisme-aveyron.com/index_en.php

I have intentionally avoided recommending restaurants, as chefs and menus change; however, in the case of the village of Laguiole, I have made an exception. If your credit card is in good shape, consider the two-star Michelin Guide restaurant, Le Suquet, above the village. Le Suquet is owned and run by one of France's true master-chefs, Michel Bras, and his son Sébastien who, since 2009, is in charge. Fifty years with the same chef and all those Michelin Stars is long enough to consider making a recommendation. In 2017 Sébastien Bras turned down their three Michelin stars saying he no longer wished to be included in the Red Michelin Guide and "wanted to give a new meaning to my life." Nevertheless, in 2019 Michelin returned two stars, Le Suquet is simply too good.

The Le Suquet English language website is:

http://www.bras.fr/en/

Wine in Aveyron

When ordering wine, consider the Marcillac AOP, the most famous red wine of Aveyron, and try the local IGP Aveyron (previously the Aveyron Vin de Pays). These wines include whites, roses, and red.

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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright, 2010, 2016, 2020 

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or phrases on French Menus? 

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Nouvelle Cuisine? Whatever happened to Nouvelle Cuisine? Who was Fernand Point?

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

  
Nouvelle Cuisine Poster.

By Thorsten Schmitt through 123RF.
 
The creators of Nouvelle Cuisine.
 
Nouvelle Cuisine began in France in the late 1950s, its creators were a group of highly talented, and highly trained, young French chefs who sought to create a new, lighter, tastier and fresher style of French cuisine. All these chefs were influenced or taught by the most significant French chef of the mid-20th century Fernand Point (1897–1955).
  
These young chefs threw out the warming pans and lamps, the heavy sauces, the pre-prepared dishes kept in warming pans and the vast displays of Haute Cuisine, and they caused a massive row in the process.  Established and recognized chefs who had worked all their lives with traditional Haute Cuisine did not, readily, accept any changes. There were many arguments with many that were particularly vocal and public; the future of French cuisine was on the line.
    
The creators of Nouvelle Cuisine's view of a chef

from the era of traditional Haute Cuisine.

Photograph though Yay Micro
   
What was Nouvelle Cuisine?
     
The young chefs working on this new and initially unnamed cuisine were considered rebels, but in reality, they were modernizers. They came to their kitchens demanding the freshest produce, lighter sauces, and dishes cooked when ordered with no dish ever being reheated.  Traditional dishes and the spirit of the recipes behind the traditional dishes remained; after all these rebels were classically trained French chefs. Now, however, famous dishes would be fresher, healthier, lighter, tastier, and more colorful. New dishes came with new ingredients, new cooking methods, and new and different tastes were brought to the table.

Only the freshest fruits and vegetables.
Photograph by Tatuyoshi Toriu (Marucyan) through RF123.

The name Nouvelle Cuisine:

The name Nouvelle Cuisine was not used by any of the pioneering chefs, at least in the beginning; they had no name for what they were doing though they knew very well that they were making changes in France's traditional cuisine.  Then Henri Gault (1929 – 2000) and Christian Millau, (1928 – 2017) both respected food critics and journalists, gave this cuisine a name, Nouvelle Cuisine, the New Cuisine. Gault and Millau would go on to found in 1955 the now famous French food and hotel guide The Gault-Millau. The Gault-Millau guide is not well known outside France but, it remains the only serious alternative for anyone wishing a different view of grading restaurants to that offered by Michelin.

The years of the imitators
 
With the publicity that Nouvelle Cuisine received came a demand for more restaurants that served this new cuisine.  Nouvelle cuisine was suddenly in vogue, and what followed gave its creators got a bad rap. Along came chefs and restaurateurs who knew little of the ideas of the cuisine’s creators, but they saw success and wanted to cash in. These imposters tried to imitate the originators and served large plates with diminutive but highly decorated portions for high prices. In just a few years most of these pseudo-Nouvelle Cuisine restaurants were recognized for what they were, and they disappeared from the scene as quickly as they came. 

Phoney Nouvelle Cuisine main course of duck breast.

Photograph through Yay Micro.

Today's French culinary establishment.

Today the surviving founders of the real Nouvelle Cuisine are France’s grey-haired establishment and the owners and of some of the France finest restaurants.  Nevertheless, time moves on, and their place at the table is being taken by a new body of chefs who have been trained in the ideas that Fernand Point instilled. Nearly every single one of the rebels’ original aims has been achieved; they have created today’s Cuisine Française, modern French cuisine.
  
Even before the slow food movement, there was slow food.
The work of the chefs in this post laid the way for the slow food movement.

Photograph by Piti Tantaweevongs through  123RF.

   
Some of those who led the way in the creation of Nouvelle Cuisine:
 
Paul Bocuse.
  
Paul Bocuse, (1926 -2018) earned his three Michelin stars for his restaurant L’Auberge du Pont de Collonges, 4 km (2.5 miles) north of the city of Lyon in 1965. It has held those three Michelin stars from 1965 with one of France’s most celebrated chefs Olivier Couvin at the helm since 2001.

Paul Bocuse was also the founder of the world’s most prestigious international French cooking competition the Bocuse d’Or World; it is the most prestigious award for French chefs in the world.  Additionally, Bocuse was the Chairman of the Institut Paul Bocuse Worldwide Alliance, the largest food and restaurant and hotel management educational institution in France.
               
The Troisgros Brothers
 
The Troisgros brothers Pierre and Jean built their Michelin three-star restaurant and unique boutique hotel the, Hôtel Moderne, in the city of Roanne in the department of the Loire in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes. The Troisgros family have been behind restaurants in Moscow, Paris, and Tokyo and with the closing of their restaurant in Roanne in 2017 Pierre and Jean’s son Michel and his son César opened Le Bois sans Feuilles in Ouches, 8 km (5 miles) west of Roanne; it has its own three Michelin stars.
 

I look forward to dining at Le Bois sans Feuilles as its predecessor Le Maison Troisgros was the finest restaurant I have ever been to anywhere, period. Along with incredibly fresh, delicious and uniquely presented food; the service was low-keyed and serene, but absolutely perfect, with a master sommelier.

Alain Chapel

Alain Chapel (1937 – 1990) is no longer with us; but while he lived, he had his three-star Michelin restaurant Alain Chapel in Mionnay, north-east of Lyon.

 Alain Senderens

Alain Senderens, (1939 – 2017) was the executive chef at the Parisian Michelin three-star restaurant the Lucas Carton. In 2005, he closed the Lucas Carton, calling it pompous and returned his three Michelin stars. On the same premises, Senderens opened a new restaurant called Senderens, with Jérôme Banctel as the chef de cuisine. Senderens is not inexpensive, but it serves incredible meals at half the prices of the Lucas Carton.  Despite Alain Senderens’ original snub of the Michelin awards Michelin awarded his new restaurant, in 2006, two of the three stars that he had previously returned.

Francois Bise
   
Francois Bise is no longer with us, but his three-star Michelin Guide restaurant Auberge du Père Bise is set close by the beautiful Lake Annecy in the department of Haute-Savoie in the Rhône Alps. Under his daughter Sophie Bise, the Auberge du Père Bise had three stars and under its new owner the chef Jean Sulpice it already has two Michelin stars.

Georges Blanc

Georges Blanc built The Village Blanc with its Relais & Chateaux hotels, spa, and restaurants in the village of Vonnas in the department of Ain in the Auvergne - Rhône Alps. The George Blanc restaurant in the Village Blanc holds three Michelin stars and Georges’ sons Frédéric and Alexandre work with their father.

Michel Guérard

Michel Guérard built his Michelin three-star restaurant Le Prés d’Eugénie along with its hotel and spa in Eugénie-les-Bains, in the department of Landes, Nouvelle Aquitaine. Michel Guérard is also the creator of Cuisine Minceur, a lighter, healthier style of cooking that avoids most fat and cream.
  
Eugénie-les-Bains where Michel Guérard has his spa and restaurant developed alongside the original spa of Saint-Loubouer, close to Biarritz. The site was loved by Empress Eugénie, wife of Emperor Napoleon III and his restaurant is named after her. That original spa is now part of Eugénie-Les-Bains.

Louis Outhier

Louis Outhier created his Michelin three-star restaurant L'Oasis in Mandelieu-la-Napoule, 10km (6 miles) from Cannes. He was awarded his three Michelin Stars in 1969 and kept them until he retired in 1988.  The restaurant was vacant for ten years until one of his protégés Stephane Raimbault purchased the restaurant in 1999.  L'Oasis of Stephane Raimbault has since been awarded two Michelin stars and is run by the three brothers Stéphane, Antoine and François Raimbault.
 
Now you tell me what happened to Nouvelle Cuisine?
   
Fernand Point
The architect and prime mover.
    
Francois Bise, Georges Blanc, Paul Bocuse, Alain Chapel, Louis Outhier, and Pierre and Jean Troisgros all trained under Fernand Point.  Fernand Point’s own restaurant was La Pyramide in the town of Vienne, in the department of Isère, in the Auvergne - Rhône Alpes.  La Pyramide, was, in 1933, among the first restaurants to receive the Michelin three-star rating when they were first awarded in that year.  In 1933, there were just 19 French restaurants with three stars, now in 2018, there are 28. La Pyramide remains on the street name after Fernand Point and is owned and run by the chef Patrick Henriroux; it has two Michelin stars.
   
Ma Gastronomie

The only book attributed to Fernand Point and published posthumously.

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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2013, 2019
 
--------------------------------

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" (best when including the inverted commas), and search with Google, Bing, or another browser.  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.

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