Tastevin – A Sommelier's Odd Looking Cup, Worn on a Neck Chain Around the Neck. The Sign of Wines from Burgundy.

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

A tastevin for sale on Amazon.

The tastevin

The tastevin is a cup made in silver and traditionally worn on a silver chain by many a restaurant’s sommelier, its wine steward.  A tastevin may look like a silver ashtray, but its design was created to reflect light when looking at wine in dark caves lit only by candles.  The concave indentations in the traditional tastevin allow the cellar master to see if the wine was clear and to note the contrast and the depth of the wine’s color; all by the light of a candle. Only then would the cellar master sniff and taste the wine. Today the tastevin is worn by the professional sommeliers who know a great deal about wines, and especially the wines of Burgundy.
  
The sommelier
  
Wines are a very very important part of France’s gastronomic universe. Hardly any Frenchman or woman would consider sitting down to dinner without a wine or other alcoholic beverage accompanying the meal. The choice of wines on a restaurant’s wine list is the job of the sommelier. 
  
Viewing the clarity and color of the wine.
www.flickr.com/photos/isante/4817028323/
  
The sommelier has not just risen within the restaurant’s rankings though he or she will undoubtedly have worked as a server at some time.  Along the way, the sommelier will have spent from three to five years studying the wines of France and the world.  Then, after a few years, as another’s sommelier’s deputy, he or she will be given the responsibility for approving and managing a restaurant’s wine stock. 

The sommelier’s years of study included visiting the vineyards, the vintners, and the cellars.  Then they must invest time and money in acquiring the nose and taste buds that can identify the wines along with the knowledge of how to age them.  The public will have expert advice along with information on a wine’s history and its suitability for pairing with a particulate dish. The restaurant's owner will have a manager who knows how to taste and compare wines, and when to buy.  The sommelier controls stock levels and ensures the storage of the wine in a manner that allows them to age gracefully.
  
A sommelier decanting a wine.
Older wines, from ten or more years ago, along with wine produced by traditional methods, may have sediment. The bottle will have been stood upright for at least 24 hours before serving so the sediment will settle.  Then, by decanting, often through a filter, the sediment will be removed.  
www.flickr.com/photos/vinofamily/3467201365/
  
Managing the wines.
In many restaurants, the cost of the wines that are stored is the owner’s most significant investment. The wines and liquors in the cellar may cost more than the furnishings of the restaurant and its kitchen.   Aging wines is not just a matter of having a cellar with a suitable temperature it is also the manner of storage. Cellars have different temperatures at different levels, and the humidity changes slightly throughout the year. The bottles must be properly laid down and regularly turned. Wines often do not grow old gracefully on their own. Bottles that may cost hundreds of US dollars may still need to have their corks changed over the years, and that is not an inexpensive matter nor a straightforward decision.
   
228-liter barrels aging in a Burgundy cellar
www.flickr.com/photos/25850415@N02/2443502546/

The Confrérie des Chevaliers du Tastevin,

France has hundreds of Confréries. These are brother and sisterhoods dedicated to enjoying and promoting the wines, cheeses, fruits, and other food products in French cuisine. The Confrérie des Chevaliers du Tastevin, the brother, and sisterhood of the Knights of the Tastevin are based in Burgundy and promote the wines of Burgundy.  This Confrérie owns the Château of the Clos de Vougeot in Burgundy, which has been its headquarters since 1935. The Confrérie offers its members and guests excellent food and plenty of wine at their monthly meetings.
  
A ceremony with the Confrérie des Chevaliers du Tastevin.
www.flickr.com/photos/tourismesurlacotedenuits/15308052238/
  
Here, in the Clos de Vougeot the wines of Burgundy are tasted and honored.  The Confrérie also awards prizes for art honoring Burgundy and has annual charitable events. Despite its charities, its grand celebrations aim to promote the great wines of the Bourgogne, Burgundy.  That, and keeping the sommeliers of France informed and happy is its real raison d’être. The Chevaliers du Tastevin is not a small confrerie.  Its membership honors thousands of outstanding people from celebrated artists to Noble prize winners. They, in turn, acknowledge the charms of the wines of Burgundy and France.
    

Château de Clos de Vougeot

www.flickr.com/photos/navin75/15008110607/
   
The Confrérie des Chevaliers du Taste-Vin has an English language website:
  
View a YouTube video of the introduction of  new members of the Knights of the Tastevin:
  

Watching a master sommelier.
  
In a beautiful French restaurant in Basel, Switzerland, six of us sat down to dine with a French colleague who was a gourmand and a knowledgeable oenophile, a lover of fine wines.  Our colleague ordered a bottle of Gevrey Chambertin, one of Burgundy’s excellent reds.  The bottle chosen was an eight-year-old wine that came from a vintner he knew well.  After our hors-d'oeuvre and entrée, (the French first course), our host ordered a second bottle. When wine from a single vintner is aged correctly two bottles of the same vintage should taste the same.  Here, the sommelier did precisely what he was supposed to do.  He tasted the few teaspoonfuls of wine left in the first bottle using his tastevin.   Then he tasted the wine from the second bottle.  The wine passed the sommelier’s test and he poured the wine into the existing glasses. There was no need to change the glasses or to offer the wine to be tasted again.
    
A 2002 Gevery-Chambertin
www.flickr.com/photos/eprater/26005156540/

The sommelier was brilliant, no overacting. Nonetheless, his whole manner showed the importance and solemnity of the occasion. The wines were his responsibility, and his face showed quiet concentration.  With the taste of the wine from the new bottle came a light smile of appreciation and approval.  What a superb professional. The wine was the exactly the same, as expected, but this sommelier's low keyed and self-assured performance made a great meal and a great wine genuinely memorable.
   
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by
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Copyright 2010, 2017, 2023.
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Raifort – Horseradish. Horseradish on French Menus.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

    
Horseradish roots on sale in the market.

Horseradish roots can reach up to 60cm (2’) long and that is a lot of horseradish.
www.flickr.com/photos/pikerslanefarm/25955939202/

Raifort, Cran, Grand Raifort, Raifort Sauvage – Horseradish.  Fresh horseradish is the root of the plant and is practically orderless, but once cut, like an onion, it can bring tears to your eyes. The taste of horseradish, like its distant relative wasabi, is difficult to describe. It is hot and spicy but nothing like pepper or chili, it affects your tongue and your sinuses; when you taste it is clearly horseradish, not any other spice.

Sauce Raifort
 
Sauce Raifort is the most popular French horseradish sauce. This sauce is made with cream or crème fraiche along with breadcrumbs and finely ground horseradish. The minute fresh horseradish is cut it begins to lose its bite. To preserve that bite vinegar is added and that explains its inclusion in most horseradish sauces. Other additions include mustard and sugar.  To make sure that the sauce is not too spicy only about 20% of the volume is horseradish.  
  
The horseradish flower.
www.flickr.com/photos/yutakaseki/26330849864/
 
Horseradish sauces came to the rest of France from the cuisine of the Alsace. Alsace is in the region of the Grande Est in France's north-east. Now horseradish is part of French recipes from the north to the south.
 
Horseradish on French menus:
    
Bavette d'Aloyau aux Échalotes Sauce Albert - An onglet, a flank steak or skirt steak, fried, prepared with shallots and served with the horseradish-based Sauce Albert.
   
Côtes De Bœuf au Raifort en Croûte de Noix aux Agrumes A bone-in rib-eye steak with horseradish, roasted “en croute,”  in a covering of walnut and served with citrus fruits.
  
Cote de Bœuf
Bone-in rib-eye.
www.flickr.com/photos/kimvanvelzen/9897959046/

Filet de Bœuf Poêlé, Jus de Bœuf Corsé au Raifort, Galette de Pomme de Terre - A cut from the beef tenderloin, the beef fillet, fried, and served with the natural cooking juices flavored with horseradish and accompanied by a potato pancake.

Nem de Tourteau aux Algues Wakamé, Croustillant au Raifort et Agrumes A crispy spring roll of crab meat with wakame seaweed prepared with horseradish and citrus fruits. (Torteau is the edible brown crab and the most popular fresh crab in France. Wakame is the seaweed most associated with miso soup, but it has been part of French seafood recipes for hundreds of years. Now it is farmed for local consumption and export).

Pavé de Sandre Rôti sur sa Peau, Lentilles Du Puy, Sauce au Raifort A thick cut of Zander, pike-perch, roasted in its skin and served with France’s highly rated AOP green lentils from Puy and accompanied by a Sauce Raifort.
 
Truite de Mer Marinée à l'Aneth et à l'Huile de Noisettes, Mousse au Raifort et Blinis -  Sea trout marinated in dill and hazelnut oil served with a horseradish moose and blinis.
  
Sea trout and oyster tartar.
Prepared with lemon, horseradish, and chives
www.flickr.com/photos/68147320@N02/15291453881/

 
Horseradish grows wild all over Europe and has inviting white flowers. The plant may reach one meter (3’) high but the root is the only part used. Wild horseradish flowers may be picked, but few can identify them and so they miss out on the free spice that is their root. In Europe, wild horseradish flowers between May and September.   The horseradish on French menus come from farmed plants. The origins of the English name horseradish are lost in culinary history, but assuredly, this is not a plant appreciated by horses.
 
Sauce Raifort, Queen Victoria and Napoleon III.
 
Sauce Albert is a horseradish-based sauce created by Francois Tanty the Chef of Napoleon III. The occasion was the visit to France in 1853 by Prince Albert the husband of Queen Victoria.  It was the first, peaceful visit to France by a member of the British Royal Family in 500 years. Then came a full state visit by Queen Victoria in 1855.  That successful visit was followed by hordes of British tourists, who carried back their impressions of the cuisine of France and especially the City of Nice on the Mediterranean. (From 1855 began the lifelong friendship of Napoleon III, the Empress Eugénie, and the British royal family. Napoleon III, who amongst other things was responsible for the invention of margarine, is buried in Farnborough, England and his crypt was paid for by Queen Victoria).
   
For a change
Roast lamb with Yorkshire Pudding and horseradish sauce.
www.flickr.com/photos/casamatita/8609899248/
    
In the USA horseradish is commonly used as the spicy ingredient in Bloody Mary cocktails and in fish and shellfish cocktail sauces. France imported the idea of seafood cocktails from the USA and the UK. However, France uses the tastier and milder Sauce Rose for seafood cocktails which is made without horseradish. 

(In my opinion, the French made the correct decision. In the USA, I have ordered or been offered a variety of seafood cocktails with outstanding shrimps and superbly fresh oysters, and, more. But to prevent my taste buds being anesthetized I have put the horseradish sauce to the side and ordered lemon juice and black pepper for the oysters and thousand island dressing with extra Tabasco for the shrimps. Only then can I taste and enjoy the stars of the show).
  
US Jumbo shrimp cocktail.
www.flickr.com/photos/rotron/8398799111/

Horseradish is part of recipes from France to Scandinavia and on to Eastern Europe. It is the important part of the traditional British Sunday roast beef.  In parts of Northern Italy, at least from Verona to Padua, they still use the Austrian name kren (pronounced chren) and there they will serve you a white horseradish sauce as an optional sauce for your pasta.  The North of Italy had historically been occupied many times by the Austrians.

Horseradish was on the menu in Egypt, Greece and, Rome. Still today fresh horseradish is part of the traditional Jewish Passover ceremony. Horseradishes' sharp taste is used to remind the participants at the ceremony of the bitterness of slavery in Egypt. 
  
(Catalan - rave picant), (Dutch- mierikswortel, mierik),(German - meerrettich, kren), (Italian – rafano, cren), (Spanish - rábano picante),
   
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by
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Savoie - Dining in the Savoy, France. The Departments of Savoie and Haute-Savoie in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes.

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

Mont Blanc
    
Savoyarde
  
The residents, the people, of the Savoie are called Savoyardes, and the dishes from the region often have Savoyarde in their name. Then, if you find yourself having difficulties understanding some of the more elderly resident's private conversations, that’s because they are speaking Savoyarde,  a mixture of the two languages d'oïl and d'oc that sought to become modern French. 
     
 Le Canal de Savière, Chanaz
Lac du Bourget
   
The great cheeses of the Savoy.

Some of France’s most celebrated cheeses come from the Savoie region, including abundance AOP, Beaufort AOP, Chevrotin AOP, Emmental de Savoie IGP, Gruyère Français IGP, Raclette de Savoie IGP,  Reblochon AOP, Tome des Bauges AOP and  Tomme de Savoie IGP.
  
The wines of the Savoy.

There are more than twenty white, rose, and sparkling wines, all coming from just three appellations, including the Crémant de Savoie. The department of Haut-Savoie is known for its white wines while the department of Savoie has reds, roses, and whites. With a great deal of tourism and so much skiing, nearly all the region’s wines are consumed locally. So the ideal time to taste them is when you are there.

Dishes from the Savoie region on French menus:
  
Diots - Pork sausages with an Italian history.  They are made with steamed or smoked pork with most having cabbage in their recipe
  
Escalope Savoyard– A veal escalope cooked in butter and served with slices of ham while surrounded with and browned with one of the Savoie’s cheeses, usually Gruyere Française, Emmental de Savoie, Beaufort or Reblochon. 
  
Féra Fumée du Lac Léman –  Smoked broad whitefish from Lac Leman, Lake Geneva. The féra, the broad white fish, truite fario, brown trout and ombre, grayling, are fish from Savoie lakes that will be on many menus.

Fondue Savoyarde - Recipes for dishes similar to today’s Savoie cheese fondues date back two to three-hundred years. Then, the Savoie’s cheese fondues became famous with the growth of winter sports in the 1950’s. Today’s Fondue Savoyarde will include at least two or three Savoie cheeses usually chosen from Abondance, Beaufort, Emmental de Savoie or Gruyère Française. The cheese will be melted in white wine and flavored with a touch of garlic. The taste of the fondue changes with the percentages of the different cheeses used, so every restaurant’s fondue has its unique flavor. To these cheese fondues, may be added the Savoie’s much-appreciated kirsch cherry liquor.
  
Cheese fondue
www.flickr.com/photos/pcerqueira/5402321948/
   
Gratin Savoyarde  - Boiled potatoes baked in butter and beef stock and covered with one of the local cheeses and browned,  The gratin, together with a salad, may be a lunchtime main course as part of a fixed price menu, or it may be the garnish for a main course.
   
Gratin Savoyarde
www.flickr.com/photos/saucesupreme/4412122166/

Grolle Savoyarde – A multi-spouted bowl from the Savoie used to serve an alcoholic coffee drink; hot coffee mixed with orange and lemon peels or their zest along with sugar and a marc liquor. It is mostly see in ski resorts when for effect, it may be set alight when it is about to be served. The drink itself is called the  Café de l'Amitié, friendship coffee. The alcoholic liquor that is in the coffee will vary with the dish that accompanies it.

    
Omelette Savoyarde – An omelet made with sautéed potatoes and Beaufort cheese.  Sometimes it is made with added ham or lardons, bacon pieces.
  
Soupe Savoyarde – A vegetable minestrone-style soup made with smoked lardons, bacon pieces, and crozets, served over gruyere or another of the Savoie’s cheeses on toast. Crozets are the Savoie’s traditional wheat, potato or buckwheat flour square pasta shapes. For local specialties like this much will depend on the chef’s grandmother’s recipe.

Tartiflettes and Reblochonades -  A whole Reblochon cheese baked, melted over boiled potatoes with some recipes adding crème fraîche to the cheese. The cheese and potatoes are the Reblochonade. On the side may be local dried meats, sausages or ham. The meats will be on the menu as charcuteries and the Savoie has many excellent dried meat recipes and lots of different cured hams.

The two departments
  
The Savoie and Haut-Savoie were part of the Italian Dutchy of Savoie until 1860. Then, along with the city of Nice on the Mediterranean, they became part of France. (The Savoy Hotel in London is named after this region).

The Savoie region.

The Savoie
  
The Savoie is home to France’s largest natural lake, Lac Bourget, over 18 km (11 miles) long.  With four fabulous lakes including Lac d'Aiguebelette, Lac des Évettes, and Lac de Tignes. (To protect the ecosystem of Lake Aiguebelette, motor boats, even for the fishermen and women, are prohibited).  For the tired traveler, the department of Savoie is home to the city of Aix le Bains, the third largest spa in France. For the hungry Savoie is home to some of France’s best chefs.  Aix le Bains is just 9 km (6 miles) from Lake Bourget and home to the Faure Museum with its significant collection of impressionist paintings and many of Rodin's works.  Chambéry, the ancient capital of the Dutchy of Savoie and now its departmental capital is just 18km (11 miles) away from Aix le Bains. For winter sports go to Albertville home of the last French Winter Olympics.
   
The Haute-Savoie.

The Haute-Savoie is home to the tallest mountain in France the Mont Blanc, which it shares with Italy and Switzerland. The Haut-Savoie also borders Lake Geneva, also called Lac Léman, which France shares with Switzerland and there are another thirty lakes in Haute-Savoie.  Annecy, the departmental capital, is a beautiful small town set on the even more beautiful Lake Annecy.  Annecy has an abundance of restaurants in the town and around the lake, including some of France’s finest. Here, we spent a week traveling around Lake Annecy enjoying all the Savoie’s wonderful cheeses.   The Haute Savoie is also home to over 100 of France’s skiing centers, including Megève and Chamonix. In Megeve along with a week’s skiing we enjoyed two perfect, but distinct, Fondues Savoyarde.
  
The old town of Annecy.

Mineral water from the Savoie region.
 
Local mineral waters include Aix, Badoit, Evian, Thonon. Altogether more there are more than thirty local brands.
    
Fountain in the town of Evian
www.flickr.com/photos/muriel_vd/1093826811/
  
Beer from the Savoie

Local beers include Nonne, Chanaz, Cimes, Mont-Blanc, Galibier, and Faucigny.
 
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Behind the French Menu’s links include hundreds of words, names, and phrases that are seen on French menus. There are over 400 articles that include over 2,500 French dishes with English translations and explanations.  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
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

Copyright 2010, 2017, 2023

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