Cod, the Fish; from Rags to Riches in France. A guest post by Leonhard Becker. –


A dish created for cod, a fish that has gone upmarket.
A guest post by Leonhard Becker.
French inspired recipes and techniques.
     
    
Cod.
Photograph courtesy of the Norwegian Ministry of Fisheries and Coastal Affairs.
 
Cod is found on modern French and other European menus as fresh fish and also when rehydrated and desalted. Cod used to be considered an inexpensive fish and from the 16th through 19th centuries cod was a source of wars over fishing rights, and the right to supply dehydrated and salted cod for the European slave trade.  Everywhere cod was a fish for poor people, and in the UK, from the latter part of the 19th century and until today cod is the back-bone of the famous British fish and chips industry.

    

    
A fish and chips sign in Brighton, England.
Photograph courtesy of Anosmia.
 
Cod, the fish on French menus.
     
When fresh the French call cod cabillaud or morue fraîche; and when on the menu in a dish made from rehydrated cod called morue or stockfish. The versatility of this Atlantic fish shows up throughout Europe, and rehydrated cod is the same fish the Italians call baccalà or bacalao. 
   
 
   

Dehydrated salt cod drying in Henningsvær,
an island fishing village in Northern Norway.
Reconstituted dehydrated cod will be on French menus as morue or stockfish.
Photograph courtesy of  Nicolas Grevet.
      
Cod has won recognition of its distinct, but delicate taste and texture, and that has led to its appearance on more and more menus of fashionable French restaurants. No doubt price increases, due to scarcity, have also played their part in promoting this trend.

The French influence.
    

     

New Salt-Cod Brandade
Photograph by Leonhard Becker.

The creation of a new cod dish.
    
My modern French interpretation, pictured above, illustrates the versatility of cod. This dish is based on a Cordon Bleu Paris recipe and shows cod steaks poached in milk served on a garlic sauce; next to the steak is cod served as purée, on its own called a brandade, but here prepared inside a brick pastry roll, and finally for  the last part of the dish are golden cod croquettes. This dish I prepared using fresh cod, salted for 30 minutes; however, brandade of cod and cod croquettes are usually prepared using reconstituted salted cod.
    
This dish not only show-cases the versatility of cod but also embodies the traditional French approach where a meal is to be enjoyed using all your senses. While the greatest importance is given to the taste of the dish, the French way also requires that the diner appreciate the presentation, and that means creating a combination of colors and shapes. A successful dish allows the diner to engage the scent of the different elements, as well as to feel the textures of each part; the diner may listen to the crack of the crunchy elements or the sizzle that proverbially "sells the steak".
   
Leonhard trained as an economist in Switzerland and England and began a classical banking career after completing university. After five interesting years,  he quit to pursue his childhood dream to become a chef and went to study French haute cuisine at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris. After his graduation, he continues to push the envelope by facing new challenges including cooking for large groups of friends and experimenting with new dishes. He refuses to cook for money but strives to share his adventures on his blog foodicted.com.
  
Leonhard Becker
A guest post on the blog
Behind the French Menu by Bryan G Newman.
Copyright of Leonard Becker 2013


Charcuterie-Traiteurs in France. The Ultimate Full Service Delicatessen?

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

  
Boucherie Charcuterie Traiteur Pouzadoux
In Sainte-Maxime in Provence on the French Riviera

Few charcuteries hold to their original trade of only selling cured or pre-cooked meats, and few traiteurs keep to their trade of only selling cooked products.  Most have become Charcuterie-Traiteurs and offer the full services of a full-service delicatessen.  The largest also offer catering services for hundreds. Many charcuterie-traiteurs have expanded further by offering the services of a fromagerie, a cheese shop, and others a boucherie, a butcher’s shop; many offer an acceptable selection of wines and liqueurs.
      
Charcuterie - Traiteur Maillet
In the town of Gradignan, close to Bordeaux

 In France, especially in upscale areas, you will be absolutely staggered by some of the window displays; one look in the windows of a leading charcuterie-traiteur and you will realize that not only in the kitchens are exceptionally well-trained chefs, but the staff in charge of food presentation are undoubtedly among the best in the world.
  
Charcuterie-Traiteur
www.flickr.com/photos/jeanlouis_zimmermann/2567729331/

Charcuterie-traiteurs provide office or home delivery,  with the larger companies catering for weddings and other celebrations. For visitors to France, they are delightful places to choose picnic lunches with pate, cheese, and wine.  French families will order a take-away dinner with a soup or a salad and a main course on days when no one feels like cooking.  Others, with no prior advice, may walk into a high-end charcuterie-traiteur and order a 5-star 7-course dinner for 12 guests who will be served on the host’s best china. I have been invited to charcuterie-traiteur home catered dinners, and have enjoyed seriously well-prepared French cuisine served together with fine wines.  Then, at the end, there were perfectly aged cheeses and fabulous desserts.    
    
Sausages galore
www.flickr.com/photos/zigazou76/6250763520/

The trade of traiteurs, before the coming of restaurants was to provide cooked meals in their own homes; when restaurants with large menus took away their business they opened shops offering prepared soups, salads, stews, cooked meat and fish dishes.  Today as combined charcuterie-traiteurs there are few prepared food products that they do not sell. To compete with these high-end French delicatessens, who are taking away a great deal of the upscale food business; the larger supermarkets have added cooked-food departments, together with the requisite mouth-watering displays. For a brown-bag lunch in the park  charcuterie-traiteurs are the place to go to. Few charcuterie-traiteurs offer any seating, though some, in the summer may place tables and chairs outside.
    
Meats, pates and sausages on offer in a charcuterie-traiteur.
Photograph by cynoclub through Yay Micro
   
Traiteur Asiatic – An Asian delicatessen.  The popularity of Asian cuisine created a demand for traiteurs specializing in France, in Chinese, and or Vietnamese dishes. To keep up with the changing tastes of their clientele, many of these traiteurs have added sushi and other Asian specialties. When you want Asian cuisine as a take-away dinner, then most traiteur Asiatiques will offer a wider choice of cuisines than a regular restaurant take-away.
     
Your picnic lunch.
  
For more about buying cheese and sausages in France:

 
 


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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019
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