Pâtés and Terrines. An introduction to the meat, fish, vegetable and fruit pates on French menus.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

   
Meat and liver pates are sold in charcuterie-traiteurs.
The name for French full-service delicatessens.
Photograph courtesy of Christian MANGE
www.flickr.com/photos/23149310@N06/16528597829/

  
The words pâté and terrine are used interchangeably for pate on French menus. Note the word pâté, pate in English has an accent over the â and the é.  Pates are not limited to ground liver, meat, or fish served as a spreadable paste. Chefs often include other ingredients for contrasts in taste and texture. Accompanying many pates will be a fruit or vegetable jam or chutney and country bread or toast. Fruit and vegetable pâtés and or terrines may also be on the menu.
The English word tureen, meaning a covered cooking or serving dish was taken from the French word terrine in the 1800s. Then a terrine was used for baking or otherwise preparing a pate and did not also mean the pate inside the terrine. (Many other French cooking utensils have been given or received their names from the dish in which they were prepared. (e.g., A marmite is a French saltwater fish or seafood stew and also the dish in which it is made).
  
  
Look for pâté with the accents over the â and é 
 
Pâté with the accents over the â and é to a French diner only mean pate. The French word pâte with a single accent over the â has a very different meaning! That may cause some tasty confusion if you do not look out for it.   There is an explanation of the meanings behind pate with a single accent at the end of this post.
 









                    Terrines as cooking utensils.

Pates that may be on your menu in France:

Pâté Chaud – A liver and or meat pate; served hot. 

Pâté de Lapin Chaud – A hot rabbit pate.
 
Le Petit Pâté Chaud de Faisan, Fricassée de Champignons aux Senteurs de Truffes – A small, hot, pheasant pate served with sautéed button mushrooms and flavored with truffle essence.

Pâté de Campagne - A country-style pate. Country style pates are usually not finely ground and traditionally include both pork meat and pork liver. If the pâté is not pork, the menu will say so.
 
Terrine de Campagne et sa Confiture d'Oignons A country-style pork-based pate served with an onion jam.   
 
Terrine de Campagne Maison aux Pommes et Calvados – A country-style pork-based pate served with cooked apples and flavored with Calvados apple brandy.
   
Pâté de Campagne
www.flickr.com/photos/u-suke/2874026685/sizes/

Pâté de Foie Gras – A spreadable pate made from the fattened liver of ducks or geese.  Foie gras is an essential part of French cuisine; it is part of the French psyche.  The minimum amount of duck or goose liver in any dish that includes foie gras is regulated by French government regulations.  By law, a pate de foie gras must contain at least 50% fattened duck or goose liver. The other 50% usually includes pork, chicken liver, and eggs.  Pates made with different ingredients are not regulated. When pâté de foie gras is on your menu, and it does not explicitly note that the fattened liver is goose liver, oie, then it will be the less expensive fattened duck liver that is being used.
  
Pate de foie gras
www.flickr.com/photos/nikonvscanon/2835765695/

La Terrine de Foie Gras à la Gelée de Porto – A pate of fattened duck liver served with a jelly (aspic), flavored with Port wine.
 
La Terrine de Foie Gras d'Oie et sa Gelée au Pinot Gris Vendanges Tardives – A pate of fattened goose liver served with jelly from the liver’s cooking juices flavored with the sweet, white Late Harvest Pinot Gris AOC/AOP wine from the Alsace.  Sweet wines are, by tradition, served with fattened liver along with a sweet fruit or vegetable jam.  The first choice may be a white Sauterne from Bordeaux, but among many gourmands, the sweet late harvest wines of the Alsace may be preferred. I enjoy them both.

Pâté de Gibiers -  Wild game pate.  The game pate on most menus come from farmed animals.  If the pate was part of a hunting season menu that would be a "Menu de la Chasse". On a regular menu, a really wild game pate will be listed as "Pâte de Gibiers Sauvage."  Wild game animals are, during a short season, legally hunted. They include faisan, pheasant; sanglier, wild boarchevreuil, roe deer; and caille, quail.
  
Pâté de Gibier en Croûte et sa Salade de Mâche – A game pate cooked in a loaf of bread or in another covering and served with a lamb’s lettuce salad.

Pâté en Croûte de Gibier à Plumes et sa Compôte à l'Echalote – A game bird pate prepared inside a loaf of bread or other covering served with stewed, and sweetened shallots.

Pâté de Cerf aux Marrons – A venison pate served with chestnuts.

Pâté de Gibier aux Canneberges Maison, Toasts de Pain BlancWild game pate served with a special house cranberry sauce and toasted white bread.
     
Pâté en Croûte Pate cooked, and served, with a pastry, bread or other covering. The other coverings or coatings include vegetables, herbs, fruit, and leaves.  

Pâté en Croûte de Canard Mallard, Condiment Aigre-doux – A pate of mallard duck served with a sweet and sour condiment that the diner may add to his or her taste. (This is not a fattened duck pate).
  

Pâté en Croûte
www.flickr.com/photos/gail_thepinkpeppercorn/4234927109/
 
Le Pâté en Croûte, Jardinet de Saison – A pate prepared in a loaf of bread or other covering served with a small mixed salad.  (A jardinet is a small garden, here the name is used to indicate a small salad).
  
Pâté en Croûte de Perdreau et Pintade aux Poivres Verts, Salade de Navets et Coulis de Pruneaux – A pate of a young partridge and Guinea fowl prepared with green peppercorns and served with a turnip salad and stewed prunes.

Pâté Lorraine - A traditional pork meat pate, sometimes mixed with veal, from the Lorraine in the super-region of the Grande Est in Northern France. It is usually prepared with a pastry covering. It may be served hot or cold.
 
Pâté Hénaff  - Hénaff is the largest producer of pre-prepared pates and similar conserves in France – The product is highly rated and will be on some small restaurant menus.
  

Pâté Maison – The restaurant’s or chef’s special pate. When no further explanation is given, it pays to ask, or you may miss out on something special, though house pates are usually a mixed chicken liver and pork liver pate.

Pâté Forestière – A liver and or meat pâté with mushrooms.   

Paté Vigneron – A vintner’s pate.

Pâté Vigneron et sa Sauce au Vin  - A chopped meat and pork pate served with a wine sauce.

 Pâté Vigneron Chaud Maison – The house’s distinctive take on a wine grower’s pate served hot.
   
Pâté Vigneron - A vintner's pate.

Other terrines and pates:

Terrine de Foie de Volaille -  A chicken liver pate.

Terrine de Faisan aux Poires – A pheasant pate served with cooked pears.

Terrine de Gambas aux Légumes  Confits – A shrimp pate served with accompanied by vegetable confit, vegetables that have been slowly cooked, Vegetable confits often have the consistency of a jam.
  
A vegetable terrine with a salad.
www.flickr.com/photos/ladykeli/7437416918/
 
Terrine de Sanglier aux Noix, Chutney de Mirabelle – Wild boar pate prepared with walnuts and served with a Mirabelle plum chutney.  (The Mirabelle is a small yellow to reddish plum and France’s favorite for cooking).

Terrine du Pêcheur – A fisherman’s pate, a fish pate. 

Pâte, with a single accent over the â does not mean an English pate.

The word pâte, with the accent over the a, in French cuisine, has at least four different meanings, and none of them mean pate in English. The most well-known meaning of pâte indicates a pastry dough or batter.

The different types of pastry dough
all begin with the single accented pâte.

Pâte Brisée – A pastry used to make pie crusts for classic French tartes.
 
Pâte à Choux or Pâte Choux–  One of  France’s most popular puff pastries and it is the puff pastry used for éclairs, etc.,

Pâte Levée Feuilletée or Pâte à Croissants - The dough used for croissants.
   
Pâte à croissant
www.flickr.com/photos/29233640@N07/22984684289/

Pâtes on your menu may also mean pasta.
The pasta that we call spaghetti, linguine, vermicelli, etc.  

All French versions of pasta will be on the menu under the menu heading of pâtes.
     
Tagliatelles de Pâte Fraîche aux Epinards et Champignons des Bois – Fresh tagliatelle served with spinach and wild mushrooms.

Pâte Fraîche – Fresh pasta
www.flickr.com/photos/nicolasbuffler/16464743776/

Pâtes in a fromagerie, a cheese shop, or on the cheese trolley.

A fromage à pâte persillée is a blue-veined cheese. Roquefort and the Bleu d'Auvergne AOC are among the best of France’s many excellent blue cheeses. Caveat Emptor: Persillé, in French cuisine also has different meanings, mostly used for flavoring made with parsley and garlic while persil alone means parsley, the herb.
  
Fromages à pâte persillée - Blue cheese.
 
Pâte de fruits are densely made crystallized fruits.

The most well-known crystallized fruits are called fruits confits.
  
Pâte de fruits.
www.flickr.com/photos/merlejajoonas/15989174821/
   
My problems with French accents.

When I began to keep notes on my breakfasts, lunches, dinners, and snacks in France, I did so along with the discussions about the dishes served. However, I ignored the French accents. The notes were only intended for my use, a crutch for my bad memory. Later, when it was suggested I print out my notes, I discovered that I had enough information for a book or two and lots of posts for a blog on French cuisine.  For the (still unpublished) book and this blog, I had to put the accents in after a large part was written. I have checked them, and despite my hard work, I may still have some errors left in and for those, I apologize.


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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2012, 2017, 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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French Olives on French Menus.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


 Olives
www.flickr.com/photos/greensurvey/1729246304/
       

France does not compete with the tonnage of other European countries, but its olives do compete on quality. 
The French are proud of their olives, and they have a right to be.
  
French olive production does not get close to the quantities produced in Spain, Italy, Greece or Tunisia; however, the south of France produces excellent olives, as well as fine olive oils.  Walk around supermarkets or open-air markets, and you will find an exemplary assortment of fabulous French olives with AOP  ratings. You may also enjoy other first-rate French olives without those unique AOP  initials at far lower prices; however, those you need to taste when buying.
    
Buying olives for a picnic
 
A picnic while traveling France is, of course, a fantastic way to taste local breads, wines, pates and cheeses, and great French olives.  Walk through the markets in town and ask at a stall to taste one of their olives, you will usually get an OK and a smile.  Taste that one and then at the next stall, ask to taste and eat another. Soon, you will have found two or three olives that you really like, and for a picnic for three or four, buy 100 grams of each. If the olives' names are not marked, ask, and write them down for future use.  At the picnic, enjoy the sensations that these French olives can bring when they compliment the cheeses and pates.


Picnic in the Jardin du Luxembourg in the center of Paris.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/nadya/2705502231/sizes/m/

Farmer's markets.
  
If you are traveling through France and want an instant picnic stop at one of the many tourist offices, and ask where the nearest farmers' market is.  In small towns and villages, farmer's markets are usually held twice a week in the mornings. The next town or village may be less than 3 km (2 miles) away, and they may have their farmers' market that day. The tourist information office will give you a list of farmer's markets for the next week or month, all within a ten or 15 km (6  or 9 miles) range.  French farmers' markets will offer nearly everything you need for a picnic; however, make sure the white wines are cold. Large cities also have farmer's markets in different quarters, ask in your hotel or at a tourist information office.

A few of the words that may assist you in identifying the tastes of  the olives on sale:

Olives a l'Ail - Olives pickled with added garlic.

Olives Cassées – Olives that have intentionally been lightly crushed before pickling; this produces a spicier taste.

Olive de Mer or Telline – Not an olive; this is a small and tasty clam!

Olives Ėclatées – Broken olives; crushed would be olives écrasées. These are the olives most often used for pizzas and similar dishes.

Olives Dénoyautée - Pitted olives. For salads, I prefer these; I know I will not break a tooth. Still taste them before buying as some can be very salty.

 Olives Farcie á l'Anchois – Olives stuffed with anchovies. 

Olivette – On your menu this will describe the olive shape that some vegetables will be cut into.  It may well be that there are no olives in the dish in question.
  
A few of France's olives.

France has over a hundred varieties of wild olive trees, but only 15 are farmed with their fruit considered good enough for sale. These cultivated olives will be on the supermarket shelves and on sale in the markets though farmer’s markets sometimes offer the fruit from old groves.
   

Aglandau; Aglandaou or Berruguette  – These are eating olives and mostly seen in the markets when pickled in brine. Some are sold as a crushed eating olive under the name Berruguete Cassées with their spicier taste. The same olives, when sold to make olive oil, are very much appreciated, and their bottles or will note the origin. These olives are grown around the department of Bouches du Rhône in the Alpes de Haute Provence. If you are in traveling in the area where these olives are grown, try the local Bouche de Rhone IGP table wines. We really enjoyed a local white wine that we bought in a supermarket and cooled it in our rented apartment's refrigerator. A big plus is that many of these wines are really inexpensive as they do not carry the AOP rating.

Olives in the market in Béziers, France.
www.flickr.com/photos/franganillo/48593874851/ 
   
Olive de Nice AOP, Olives Noire Niçoises AOP, or Olive Cailleter The AOP graded Olive Niçoise. This is probably the most appreciated and the most expensive black table olive in France; it is an absolute must in a real Salade Niçoise.  and many other recipes from in and around the City of Nice on the Côte d'Azur.
  
An ancient olive press
www.flickr.com/photos/emeryjl/513686851/

Olive de Nice AOP, may also be on your menu:

Raviolis de Veau à la Ricotta; Courgettes Trompette et Olives de Nice – Ravioli made with veal and ricotta cheese and served with regular courgettes (the USA Zuchnnis) where a single flower grows at one end; that flower at the end is the trompette, trumpet; the dish is served along with the Olives de Nice.

Tapenade d'Olives de Nice AOP – A tapenade made with the Nice olives. A tapenade is a take on the Provençal anchoyade or anchoïad, see below. To make a tapenade into an anchoyade, all that needs to be done is to add câpres, capers.

Anchoyade,Anchoïade, or Anchouiado - The anchovy based spread created in Provence. If you like anchovies, olives, garlic, and olive oil, this is for you. Spread your anchoyade thickly on French country bread, sliced baguette or toast, and order a glass of cold, dry, white wine. Then sit back and close your eyes and take a bite; you may find yourself in anchovy, olive, and garlic heaven. Anchoyades will also be used as a base in sauces that accompany other dishes, usually fish.

Salade de Langoustines à l'Huile d'Olive de Nice AOP -  A salad of Dublin Bay Prawns, (the real scampi), with the Olive Oil de Nice AOP.
  
Lucques du Roussillon or Lucques de Languedoc This is a green olive mostly sold as a table olive though some do make it to the olive press Languedoc-Roussillon is an old region of France that since 1-1-2016 is included in the new super region of Occitanie.
  
Olives Cassées de la Vallée des Baux AOP – Only two types of olives carry this name, the salonenque and the aglandau from the Vallée des Baux a community in the Alpilles of Provence that was rich in Bauxite, an aluminum ore. That ore was heavily exploited until about 100 years ago; however, the connections between the Baux communities remain. The growers of these olives intentionally lightly crush these olives and preserve them in brine for the table. 

Menu listings with the olives or olive oil from Cassées de la Vallée des Baux may include
                                                                                                                                            
Ragoût d'Agneau aux Olives Cassées AOP de la Vallée des Baux-de-Provence  - A lamb stew made with the lightly crushed olives of  la Vallée des Baux AOP

Saumon Mariné à Aneth à l'Huile d'Olive AOP de la Vallée des Baux de Provence  - Atlantic Salmon marinated  with dill and the AOP olive oil from the Vallée des Baux de Provence.
   
The village of Les Baux de Provence is set on the highest promontory in this part of Provence’s rocky Alpilles, and the view from here should not be missed. Even if the village itself is very touristy, the view of the valley below is unique. A famous hotel and two Michelin starred restaurants are also set here, but for a table there book ahead.

The nearby town of Saint Remy de Provence is famous for its history, its beauty, its excellent Provençal cuisine, and, of course,  the convent that treated the painter Vincent Van Gogh when he was considered insane.  Saint Remy de Provence was also the birthplace of Nostradamus, a strange philosopher and physician, and I have written more about him later in this post.
  
A view from the heights of Les Baux de Provence
www.flickr.com/photos/tango-/8388382719/
           
Olive de Nyons AOP or Tanches de Nyons AOP – The black to violet-colored Provençal olive with a round shape and a large pit. With its own AOP, the Olive de Nyons AOP is a very special olive. The word tanches in one of its names just means olive in the Provençal language. The oil from these olives is the Huile d'Olive de Nyons AOP.

These Olives de Nyons come, rather obviously, from around the small town of Nyons in the department of Drome in the Rhône-Alpes that is part of the super region of Rhône Alpes – Auvergne; Nyons is about 70 km (44 miles) from Avignon. The Nyon's olives are picked in a very different fashion tp most others; they are allowed to ripen on the tree until they begin to shrivel, and then hand-picked between November and January. Some of these olives are sold to become a very costly extra virgin olive oil, while the others will be pickled in brine and sold, also expensively, for the table.

 When the Olive de Nyons is on the menu:

Merlan de Limousine Grillé à la Fleur de Sel, Polenta Crémeuse à l'Olive Noire de Nyons - A merlan is a very special steak cut from the rump, here it comes from Limousine beef, and there is no similar North American or UK cut. Here the steak is grilled atop fleur de sel, the hand-picked salts crystals from sea salt,  and served with creamy polenta and the black olives from Nyon. A merlan de rumsteck can be confusing if you are using a French-English pocket dictionary as the fish called whiting is called a Merlan in French!  Maybe the shape of the cut looked similar to the butcher who named it; so be careful when you are ordering? The old region of Limousin's three departments, Corrèz, Creuse, and Haute-Vienne are green and forested with hills, rivers, and lakes set close to the center of France and since 1-1-2016 part of the new super region of Nouvelle Aquitaine.


Tapenade à Vase d' Olives Noir de Nyons AOP - A tapenade is a take on the Provençal anchoyade or anchoïad. To make a tapenade into an anchoyade, all that is done is to add câpres, capers
        

The wrinkled Olive de Nyons AOP
www.flickr.com/photos/inra_dist/23158654982/
   
Olive de Nice or Cailleter – See Cailleter.

Olive de Nîmes AOP  - This is the picholine olive, easily recognized as it is a green pointed olive, long and narrow. The Olive de Nîmes AOP is grown in specific parts of the départements of Gard and Hérault, in the région of Occitanie.

The Olive de Nîmes AOP produces olives that are harvested early in the season, in the fall. At that time, the olive is considered to be low in oil; however, its curing process makes this an outstanding table olive. 
   
Salonenque  This green olive comes from the commune of Salon-de-Provence. Here they raise the salonenque mostly as a green crushed table olive. Salon-de-Provence is a charming town, and that brings it added fame. This commune that includes the town is in the Bouches-du-Rhône department, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. The distance from Salon-de-Provence to Avignon is 50km (31 miles).
  The town of Salon de Provence

Apart from being a pretty town there are other reasons to stop and look around Salon de Provence   I will begin with the museum of soap.  Once the town was famous for soap and its factories competed  with the Marseilles soap factories; all  the soap was made with local olives. Then  WWI and  the 1929 great depression saw the  end of most of the soap factories and so today just one factory with a museum and shop remains:  Visit the Marius Fabre soap factory and  shop, it is  definitely worth it as a different and interesting and educational stop, even if you do not buy any soap and only spend 20 minutes, it is a view into times, and soaps, gone by.
  
Soap from Marius Fabre, Salon de Provence.  
Photograph courtesy of Daniel70mi Falciola

www.flickr.com/photos/provence___provenza/10146117503/
  
The next reason to visit Salon de Provence requires at least a few days of preparation; unless you already know about Nostradamus (1503 – 1566)?

Nostradamus was a weird and mysterious philosopher, physician, clairvoyant, prophet, lunatic, and more. Salon-de-Provence has a Maison de Nostradamus, the house of Nostradamus; he spent the last nineteen years of his life here. By the way, just 40 km (25 miles) away is the town of  Saint-Remy de Provence, which also claims Nostradamus as their own; Nostradamus was born there, and so they have their own Nostradamus museum. The competition over the most important site of Nostradamus's home is fierce.


Nostradamus's fame comes mostly from his weird and opaque prophesies. The prophecies are inside verses of four and six lines, called quatrains and sixains.  It is through these verses that his admirers credit him with predicting wars, anti-Christ's, including Napoléon I and Hitler. Innumerable additional prophesies are to be found, if you believe, including predicting the horror of 9/11.   
  
   Statue of Nostradamus
This statue of Nostradamus is in the Museum of Tabriz, Iran,
Did you wonder what the Iranians are up to?
www.flickr.com/photos/farrokhi/5035625539/
  
Before you read some of Nostradamus's verses (most are on the internet) and see what strange happenings he sets in our futures, be aware that like many other of his predictions, his date for the end of the world was wrong. If he were right, I would not be updating this post!

I have read a few of Nostradamus's verses and many interpretations. I own Nostradamus's complete verses along with other strange books that I have picked up in second-hand book shops. Most often, the interpretations of Nostradamus's verses are even weirder and more convoluted than what Nostradamus himself wrote. See:



The answer, when I have questioned those who interpret Nostradamus's verses, is that all religious writings are written in code, and they have the code while I do not. In the meantime, go back to enjoying the olives in the market or on the menu.

Olives Noire Provençal – Black olives from Provence.
  

Provençal Olive Grove
Photograph courtesy of verseguru 
www.flickr.com/photos/verseguru/489196/
  
--------------------------------

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010,  2014, 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.

Connected Posts:





 
 
   
 

 
 


 

  
 


 

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