Showing posts with label chamois. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chamois. Show all posts

Genièvre or Baie de Genièvre- Juniper Berries. Juniper Berries in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

    
Juniper berries
Seitseminen National Park, Finland.
Photograph courtesy of Leo-setä
       
Juniper berries are not really berries. The so-called berries are the tasty, dried, sour, blue-black, pods or cones that contain the juniper seeds. Fresh juniper pods are rarely seen as they need two years to ripen. So it is the dried juniper pods that are used for their flavor, like a herb.  The pods/berries are readily available and keep for a long time and will be found in every French kitchen and I will call them berries in this post.
   
The juniper is an evergreen bush from the conifer family, and it grows wild all over Europe. The dried pod is behind the flavor in hundreds of sauces, pastries, and of course gin.

         
Juniperus Communis
The most often seen European juniper tree and berry.
www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/7845263260/
  
Juniper berries on French menus:
Dos de Saumon au Chou Alsacien, Beurre Blanc aux Baies de Genièvre – A thick cut of Atlantic salmon prepared with the unique Quintal d'Alsace cabbage served with a beurre blanc sauce flavored with juniper berries. (The Quintal d'Alsace cabbage is a cabbage hybrid that may grow to six or more kilos (13 lbs). Nevertheless, most of these cabbages are picked when quite small, around four kilos(8.8 lbs))!
   
Les Médaillons de Chamois aux Baies de Genièvre  - Round cuts of steak from a young mountain goat from the Alps, the mountain antelope, flavored with juniper berries.  A close cousin of this mountain goat is called the isard or izard and found in the Pyrenees where it will be on menus with similar recipes.
    
The Chamois
www.flickr.com/photos/unicoletti/3501022289/
 
Juniper with its clear taste is traditionally used with game dishes. Wild game has a strong flavor, and the juniper provides some competition.  Cuts like the menu item above cannot come from an adult as steaks would be far too stringy. The meat from adults will be marinated in wine, flavored with juniper and then stewed.

Cotes de Sanglier à la St. Hubert Chops from a wild boar prepared in the manner of Saint Hubert.  St Hubert (656-727) is the Belgian patron Saint of the Belgian Ardennes’ region and its hunters. The hunters in the French Ardennes, across the border, have similar recipes and are also happy to have St. Hubert look after them. In season, game dishes are on the menus across the whole Ardennes.  This dish and many other St. Hubert dishes, were all created for wild game and any will be flavored with juniper berries. The French department of Ardennes is in the new super region of Le Grande Est.
   
Stewed wild boar with juniper berries
www.flickr.com/photos/donutgirl/6542858367/
  
Jambon de Luxeuil or Jambon de Luxeuil Les Bains- This is a cured and smoked ham. It is produced around the spa town of Luxeuil-les-Bains in the north of the department of Haute-Saône in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté.  The ham is marinated in salt and juniper berries and then lightly smoked before being hung for at least nine months.  Luxeuil-les-Bains is close to the town of Fougerolles where they make some of France’s best kirsch, the cherry liquor.
        
Les Rognons de Veau aux Baies de Genévrier Flambés au Genièvre – Veal kidneys prepared with juniper berries and served flambéed with gin.
   
La Terrine de Lapereau aux Baies de Genévrier – A hare pate flavored with juniper berries. (A hare is a lapereau and a rabbit is a lapin).
     
Ostrich pate with juniper berries.
www.flickr.com/photos/joedm/110932016/
   
Tournedos de Magret de Canard  Réduction au Quinoa et Genévrier – Thick cuts of duck breast served with a sauce made with the natural cooking liquids along with quinoa and juniper berries.
      
   
Gin
    
Behind gin’s popularity as a beverage is the physician Franciscus Sylvius (1614 –  1672). Sylvius was a respected Dutch doctor who recommended mixing juniper pods with alcohol along with other herbs that were sold in pharmacies for treating gallstones, gout and more. The Dutch names for gin are jenever, junever, and genièvre. Since Franciscus Sylvius put the drink on the market, the Dutch distilleries have never looked back.  Though how many people have been cured by drinking large quantities of gin is unknown.
     
Beefeater Gin
www.flickr.com/photos/acidhelm/8439731853/
 
The English knew about gin long before the Dutch William of Orange and his wife, Mary became King and Queen of England, Ireland, and Scotland in 1689.  Nevertheless, gin’s popularity grew with the Dutch influence. Within 60 years of William and Mary arriving in England, the country was swamped with cheap unlicensed gin shops.  Gin became the drink of the poor, and most of the gin sold did not even contain any real juniper berries.
The Dutch universally get the credit for creating gin while the English take the credit for drinking the most gin per capita. The British justified their unlimited consumption of gin when they ruled India.  Then they drank gin and tonic, with added quinine, as quinine was part of the fight against malaria.
     
Tonic water with quinine
Quinine is Phosphorescent
www.flickr.com/photos/azadam/179487975/

The juniper berry, or pod, in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan – ginebre),(Dutch -  jeneverbes), (German - wacholder), (Italian - ginepr), (Spanish - enebro). (Provençal -  genèbre), (Latin - juniperus communis).


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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2013, 2017, 2019
 
--------------------------------

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The Chamois, Isard or Izard; the Mountain Antelope.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Chamois
www.flickr.com/photos/23074701@N02/36003110583/


The chamois on French menus is often translated as a mountain antelope; nevertheless, it is in fact, a mountain goat, and a very tasty goat at that. The chamois in the Alps, the izard or isard in the Pyrenees and its cousins elsewhere in France are wild; they have never been farmed. Fully grown the Alpine Chamois reaches 80cms high and have 20 cm horns; they are all legally hunted in season
 
The Chamois of the Alps and the Isard or Izard of the Pyrenees are the most well-known. In addition, two other chamois family group live in the southeast of France:
 
The Vercors Chamois that lives in the Vercors Massif.
The Chartreuse Chamois that lives in the Chartreuse Massif.
 
Outside of France, there are family members in nearly all the countries of Europe through to the Caucasus.

The Chamois and the French kitchen.
  
The meat from adult chamois needs to be well marinated before they are cooked and so the most popular dish prepared for a mature chamois is a civet, a stew.  Steaks and roasts come from young animals, and in the hunting season, the liver of young mountain goats will be on restaurant menus though it is a costly delicacy.  In Southern France cow's milk was rarely part of the menu or the local's diet before the 1930's; goats and sheep were raised for their milk and cheeses.  The young males produced no milk, and so Southern France developed many tens of excellent recipes for sheep and goat and so the goat recipes were long ago adapted for the Chamois.
  

Chamois in the snow.


A stew of chamois served with red cabbage.  This one of the most popular and traditional ways to serve mature animals from the hunt.  Most recipes allow for twenty-four hours, sometimes 48 hours, for the marinating which will be done with the aid of a robust red wine. The cabbage will be added an hour before serving. These stews, as may be expected, have a gamey aroma, but that will not be overbearing, and for most diners it will be a rare opportunity to enjoy a memorable dish.

The Chamois on French menus:

Civet de Chamois avec Chou Rouge  A stew of chamois served with red cabbage. This one of the most popular and traditional ways to serve mature animals from the hunt.  Most recipes allow for twenty-four hours, sometimes 48 hours, for the marinating which will be done with the aid of a robust red wine. The cabbage will be added an hour before serving. These stews, as may be expected, have a gamey aroma, but that will not be overbearing, and for most diners it will be a rare opportunity to enjoy a memorable dish.


Le Civet de Chevreuil à l’Ancienne
A traditional Chamois stew.

Filets d'Isard aux Mousserons  A fillet, tenderloin, from a young isard, the Pyrenean chamois; served with wild St George’s mushrooms.

Médaillons de Chamois -  Small steaks or slices of meat from a young chamois. In the French kitchen, médaillons indicate oval or round cuts.

La Selle d'Izard Garniture de Saison, le Jus aux Baies de Sureau et au Cassis - The saddle, the back from the izard, the chamois, served with the vegetables of the season and prepared with a sauce made with elderberries and the European blackcurrant. The saddle is a cut from the back with the whole saddle including both sides, together with the loin chops.  When a saddle of a young mountain goat is on the menu it will more than a portion for one or two; the restaurant will offer slices from this roast, and a cut from the saddle is one of the best cuts from young game animals.


A herd of chamois
www.flickr.com/photos/94941635@N07/16973999769/
   
La Carte de Chasse - the hunt menu.
 
When wild game is in season, many restaurants will have a menu called the Carte de Chasse, a hunt menu. The French term for the hunt, la chasse, is also used for sports fishing and the word became the chase in English.  In certain areas, some restaurants only open during the hunting season.
  
Hunting and photographing the Chamois.
  
For those who wish to go hunting or photographing, you need to be in excellent health as the only way to catch or closely observe these animals is by stalking. That means following them by foot in the upper reaches of the mountain ranges.  The Chamois find their homes in the mountains and depending on the time of year that can reach up to 2,300 meters (7,500 feet) and even 3,000 meters (9,900 feet) in the Alps and the Pyrenees.


Chamois
www.flickr.com/photos/muriel_vd/1019975485/
 
The Alpine Chamois in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan – isard), (Dutch - alpengems), (German -  gämsen), (Italian - camoscio alpino), (Spanish - rebeco, gamuza, sarrio), (Latin - rupicapra rupicapra)

 
Isard, Izard or Pyrenean Chamois in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan: isard pirinenc),(Dutch - Pyrenese gems),(German Pyrenäen-Gämse) (Italian: camoscio, camoscio pirenaico, camoscio dei Pirenei), (Spanish - ebeco pirenaico, sarrio), (Latin - rupicapra pyrenaica)

The Chartreuse Chamois in the languages of France’s neighbors: 

 (Dutch -  chartreusegems), (German - chartreuse-gämse  ),  (Italian - camurça da França), (Spanish - este de Francia  )
 
--------------------------------

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019

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

Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
French menus?
 
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.
   
Connected Posts:
 
  
 
 

 





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