Showing posts with label Tamarind. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tamarind. Show all posts

Cigale de Mer – The Slipper Lobster. The Slipper Lobster on French Menus.

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

 
The small slipper lobster
        
The Cigale de Mer,  Macietta or Chambri.
The slipper lobster.
  
In the area of Marseilles  the slipper lobsters are called chambri and there their tails will end up in a true Marseilles Bouillabaisse; in the area of Nice the small slipper lobsters are called macietta, and there their tails will probably be in a soup or served in a manner similar to one of the dishes noted below. 

Slipper lobsters are a whole family of short-clawed lobsters with a very distant relationship to the two-clawed lobster. The cigale de mer that are on many menus in the South of France are all caught in the Mediterranean.  Most are about 20cm (8”) in length or less and all the meat is in the tail, the “queue.”  The tail is the last third of the overall length, that’s about 7cm (3”). If a single small tail is served as the plat principal, the main course, you may be hungry.  Ask the waiter how the dish is served.

Cigale in your French-English travel dictionary.

Your French-English dictionary will translate cigale as a cicada, grasshopper or locust. However, worry not; the cigale de mer is nothing like a cicada, grasshopper or locust neither in its looks nor in its feeding habits. French culinary tradition is full of names given to dishes and or their ingredients that have no connection at all to the real looks or  the formal name.  Slipper lobsters are fairly close to the rock lobster and spiny lobster family called the langouste in French. The rock and spiny lobsters are the owners of the tasty lobster tail.  The two-clawed lobster, homard in French, is a far more distant family member.
   
Cigale de Mer – The small slipper lobster.
   
The slipper lobster tail and the rock lobster tail.
   
Slipper lobster tails are often prepared with recipes created for rock lobster tails. The meat of the Mediterranean slipper lobster’s tail is tasty, but they are smaller than rock lobster tails, often much smaller. They are also a little tougher than most rock lobster’s tails.

 Marseilles Bouillabaisse and the slipper lobster.
 
The most famous dish that includes the slipper lobster is the Marseilles Bouillabaisse.  This very special saffron and garlic fish stew dish is based on the rascasse, the scorpion fish, and other fish cooked in a special fish stock and served along with a spicy, garlicky, thick, rouille sauce added by the diner to his or her taste. To preserve this traditional dish and expose many inaccurate additions a group of chefs and restaurateurs set out the Charter of the Bouillabaisse Marseillaise.
   
Bouillabaisse
https://www.flickr.com/photos/birdies-perch/407676260/  
       
In the Charter, the only authorized crustacean is the cigale de mer, the small slipper lobster. Nevertheless, despite the charter, many restaurants that prepare Bouillabaisse today still add to the dish other crustaceans, fish, and seafood that were never part of the original recipe. Despite these restaurant's disrespect for tradition, you will not suffer if the additions are well prepared.
  
The slipper lobster on French menus:

Cigales de Mer aux Pâtes Fraiches – The meat from a slipper lobster tail served with fresh pasta.
 
Queues de Cigale de Mer Grillées – Grilled slipper lobster tails.
   
Queue de Cigale de Mer Rôtie au Beurre de Persil dans une Marinière de Coquillages aux Légumes  - A slipper lobster tail roasted in parsley butter and served with mussels  and vegetables prepared in the manner of a mariner.  In French culinary tradition, a dish prepared for a mariner will usually come with a white wine sauce. Other shellfish may also be included in this menu listing.  Ask.
    
Queues de Cigales de Mer Grillées, Sauce Tamarin et Lime -  Grilled slipper lobster  tails served with a sauce made from the tamarind, the fruit,  and lime juice.  (The tamarind fruit seen on French menus comes mostly from France’s Indian Ocean region of La Réunion). From the outside the tamarind is rather unattractive, to say the least. Nevertheless, inside, apart from the seeds the pulp is appreciated as a fruit juice and is also dried and used in tisanes, fruit teas, while for the commercial food industry the tamarind is a very important. The tamarind is used in the food industry for flavor with many other food products and is one of the ingredients of Worcestershire Sauce. 
   
The tamarind fruit.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/mmmavocado/4254551148/
      
Queue de Cigale Rôtie, Risotto  Safran et Croustillant de Kadaïf - Roasted slipper lobster tail, served with a saffron risotto and crispy Kadaïf. 
(Kadaïf is a pasta like vermicelli, those very thin pasta strands also called angels’ hair, made from wheat flour, corn starch, salt, and water. It is also called knafeh, konofa, and kadaïfia among many similar names. Kadaïf is seen all over North Africa and the Middle East as well as in Turkey and Greece and Albania.  Many different kadaïf pastries, both savory and sweet, are traditional.  The sweet pastries come with added sugar syrup and honey).
    
Shrimps, when cooked, have meat that will be white, pinkish or bluish-white and firm when cooked.  If it you are served a shrimp that is soft or pasty then it is not fresh; do not eat it. Send it back. Do not eat pasty shrimps unless they are being sold as fish paste! en Kedaïf
   
Queues de Cigales de Mer Sautées aux Cornes d’Abondance et Cresson  - Slipper lobster tails lightly fried with wild black trumpet mushrooms and watercress.
    
There are over ninety members of the slipper lobster found in warm waters all around the world.  The Cigale de Mer has been over-fished and has been protected in French waters since 1999.
   
Two Cigales de Mer, slipper lobsters.
  
Small slipper lobsters are mostly caught by accident when trawling the sea bottom for sole and flounder. The fishermen and women who set out their pots to catch the spiny lobster are pleased that only rarely does the relatively inexpensive slipper lobster find its way into their  spiny lobster pots. 
    
The Cigale de Mer, the Mediterranean slipper lobster in the languages of France’s neighbors:
(Catalan - escil·làrids), (Dutch - scyllaridae),  (German –bärenkrebs), (Italian – cicala di mar or magnosella), (Spanish – esciláridos, santiaguiños).
     
Connected Posts:

 
  
  
  
  
  
   
     

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com 
Copyright 2010, 2016, 2024.

  

 

Maigre – Meagre, Croaker, Drum Fish or Salmon Bass on French Menus.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

    
Maigre- Meagre

Maigre – Meagre, Croaker, Shade Fish, Drum Fish, Salmon Bass. The meagre is a tasty fish with tender and firm flesh, it is a member of the croaker and drum fish families.  Some are caught at sea, and they will be on the menu as Maigre de Ligne or Meagre sauvage, wild meagre, but many are raised on fish farms. This fish may also be on some menus as Corbine; however, there are other fish with corbine as part of their French names so read the menu carefully.

Maigre on French Menus:
   
Carpaccio de Maigre, Vinaigrette au Yuzu et Mangue Fraiche – Meagre Carpaccio served with a yuzu and fresh mango vinaigrette. Yuzu is a citrus family member with a taste somewhere between an orange and a grapefruit.
   
Sushi: Salmon and Salmon Bass.
   
Dos de Maigre, Jus de Cresson, Jardin Potager, Couteaux et Amandes de Mer A thick cut of Meagre flavored with the lightly spic juice from watercress. and served with young vegetables, razor clams, and sea almonds.
  
Dos de Maigre “Label Rouge” Cuisiné à la BasquaiseA thick cut of “Label Rouge” Meagre cooked in the Basque manner.  In the Basque manner indicates a fish cooked in piperade sauce or with the Basque Country’s much-appreciated Piment d’Espelette - Espelette Chili Pepper. The Label Rouge, red label, the mark of quality is only rarely given to farmed fish.  In this case the meagre is farmed at sea off the coast of Corsica has been the red label for its consistent quality.  Particular attention is also given to low-density farming and the fish are farmed for at least 18 months and then sold at weights between 2 and 7 kilos. 
  
Maigre, Salmon Bass, Croaker.
Photo provided by Glenda Kelly of IGFA.
Angler: Garcia Phippe. Weight: 40.75 kg
CC Fishbase.com
   
Dos De Maigre Rôti Et Légumes Croquants au Tamarin – A thick cut of roasted meagre served with crunchy vegetables flavored with tamarind. Tamarind has a sweet and sour taste. The tamarind fruit seen on French menus comes mostly from France’s Indian Ocean region of La Réunion. The tamarind is a pod-like fruit that from the outside is not very attractive, to say the least. Nevertheless, inside, apart from the seeds the pulp is appreciated as a fruit juice and is also dried and used in tisanes, fruit teas, with the commercial food industry being a very important customer. The tamarind is used in the food industry for flavor with many other food products and is one of the ingredients of Worcestershire Sauce.

    
Fried Meagre.
   
Le Maigre Label Rouge Filet À La Grenobloise, Pommes De Terre Fumées Et Coulis D'épinards - Sauce Grenobloise is a clarified butter sauce with lemon and capers and only served with fish,  The sauce originated in the city of Grenoble in South Eastern France. While Grenoble may be more famous for their AOP walnuts the Noix de Grenoble AOP their Sauce Grenobloise will be on many menus.
  
Maigre Fumé et Beurre Noisette – Smoked meagre, served with beurre noisette. A melted butter sauce. Noisettes are hazelnuts, and here the butter is melted until it resembles the color of hazelnuts and gains a nutty taste.
  
Menu listings in France favor meagre poached with cream and or wine sauces, but smaller fish are also grilled or pan-fried whole. The word maigre also means thin and lean in French, so make sure the waiter understands your order!
  
Meagre in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan – reig), (Dutch – meagre, ombervis), (German – adlerfisch, umberfisch),   (Italian – bocca d'oro, boccagialla, umbrina laccia), (Spanish- corbina, corvina, meager), (Latin - argyrosomus regius).
  
Meagre in other languages:
    
(Chinese (Mandarin) -鷹石首魚, 大西洋白姑魚 ), (Dutch – meagre), (Finish - Kotkakala ), (Greek – Κρανιός, kranios), (Hebrew - et-yam mazuy, mousar, מוסר  ), (Norwegian – Ørnefisk), (Russian - Горбыль серебристый). (Turkish -  granyoz baligi).


    
 
 
Piment d’Espelette - Espelette Chili Pepper. The Most Popular Chili Pepper in French Cuisine.

  
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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2016.
 

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