Soupe à l'Oignon - French Onion Soup. Ordering the Most Famous of all French Soups and the Difference Between Parisian and Lyonnais Onion Soups.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

   
French onion soup in the manner of Paris.
www.flickr.com/photos/jeffreyww/5344349906/

Onion soup in the manner of Paris or Lyon?
   
Paris and Lyon claim the original recipes for French onion soup and the arguments among the residents of the two towns can turn heated.   That, notwithstanding thousands of years before the first printed recipe the first hunter-gatherer in France to throw a wild onion in the cooking pot owns the original French recipe.
   
The traditional differences between the two onion soups were over the Parisian use of vegetable, chicken or beef stock, or bouillon, and wine or Cognac,  The Lyonnais version used no stock and the alcohol was Madeira wine or Port.  These traditional differences are now often ignored, and so ask your server or maitre’d about the soup on your menu. If you have time during your stay in France enjoy a real Parisian onion soup and a Lyonnais one as well
  
You should expect French servers to be knowledgeable. Serving, in France, is a profession with all the attributes of a profession. Tips are not expected nor are they an important part of their income.  Restaurant staff have salaries, paid vacation time of 42 days, and 35-hour workweeks, sick leave, and pensions. 
    
Your onion soup may be on the menu under one of many names:
 
Soupe à l”Oignon à la Parisienne, Gratinée Parisienne or Gratinée des Halles among the many names used for onion soup in the tradition of Paris.
 
Gratinée Lyonnais, Soupe à l'Oignon Lyonnaise or Soupe à l'Oignon Gratinée among the many names used for onion soup in the tradition of the city of Lyon.
    
French onion soup in the manner of Lyon.
www.flickr.com/photos/roboppy/8573033252/
    
Today, whether you choose the soup served in a Parisian Bistro or a Lyonnais Buchon or in a restaurant with Michelin stars if there is a trained French chef in the kitchen the onion soup should be excellent. I am a French onion soup junkie, and from experience, both the Parisian and Lyonnais versions make excellent, and sometimes memorable, onion soups; there are no winners or losers. The only differences are the flavors.
  
When you order your French onion soup expect:
 
Your soup will be served with bubbling or almost bubbling cheese on top of toasted or grilled bread or croutons.  The heart of the dish is white onions, fried until they are a dark golden brown. To the onions, depending on the recipe used may have been added vegetable, chicken or beef stock along with a few herbs at the chef’s discretion.  Added to the stock, in the Parisian manner, will be white or red wine or Cognac and in the Lyonnais manner will be Madeira wine or port. The soup is transferred to individual bowls, and on top will be added slices of grilled or toasted bread or croutons covered in grated cheese.  Just before serving, the individual bowls are placed under the grill until the cheese melts. Then by both sight and smell, a mouthwatering soup will be put before you. Bon Appétit!
 
N.B. The term gratinée, browned, when used in connection with French onion soup, indicates that the soup has grilled cheese on top. All dishes with the word gratinée will have been browned under the grill usually with the help of grated cheese or buttered breadcrumbs,
   
About the recipes for French onion soup.
   
The original and oldest printed French recipe, along with a few purist chefs today, make onion soup without any stock; that is in the original manner of the city of Lyon. Today’s chefs who do not use stock include Raymond Blanc, as well as the late Paul Bocuse. However, the majority of recipes that I have seen from today’s French-trained, celebrity chefs working outside of France do use stock in the manner of Paris.  Those chefs include Daniel Boulud, Thomas Keller, Michel Roux Jr, Wolfgang Puck, and Gordon Ramsay.
     
The grated cheese used in French onion soup is also another ingredient that may be a source of arguments, though French Gruyere is the cheese used most often. The other cheeses used include Comte AOP, French Emmenthal, and Cantal AOP. In the UK and North America, I have enjoyed French onion soups where Cheddar was the cheese of choice.
  
N.B. French Gruyere cheese has some small holes while Swiss does not. However, French Gruyere is not the cheese famed for its many holes, that is Emmenthal.


French onion soup is not difficult to make, it just takes time.
     
I am not a chef, nor am I a particularly good cook, and this is not a cookbook; however, I can cook a reasonably satisfying French onion soup.  I use at least one and a half large onions per person, cooked slowly and carefully until they are caramelized a golden brown, not black. If the onions become black, they become bitter, as I know to my shame.
 

Making sure those onions do not burn is the most time-consuming procedure; expect a good two hours of watching and turning the onions if you are making French onion soup for ten. One and a half a large onions per person may seem to be overdoing it; however, when the onions are cooked slowly, to that golden brown color, you may be surprised by how little onion is left by the time they are caramelized.
   
The heart of the matter.
www.flickr.com/photos/hepp/6250709930/   
  
 I use vegetable stock to be inclusive for the vegetarians in my family, and I use red wine for flavor and color. I allow the soup to boil on a low flame until the volume is reduced enough to achieve the desired taste and consistency; then, I toast or grill the bread.  If I have forgotten to buy French Gruyere cheese, I use the best yellow cheese at hand with a sprinkling of Parmesan cheese if needed, to give the cheese more flavor. 
    
Toasted baguette ready for the soup.
www.flickr.com/photos/secretlondon/2869482717/
   
The purist’s recipe for French onion soup.
Paul Bocuse, without any argument, was the greatest chef in the second part of the 1900s; he came from Lyon, France. Paul Bocuse’s French onion soup is the soup of a purist; he uses no stock at all. Onions rule. 


I read Paul Bocuse’s English language book: The Cuisine of Paul Bocuse, Grafton Books. Bocuse’s recipe is onions, butter, a bouquet-garni, and a little pepper. To thicken the soup, he uses egg yolks along with a small drop of Madeira wine for additional flavor; he uses no stock.  
 
Paul Bocuse.
www.flickr.com/photos/wonderfultime/2891419060/
   
Paul Bocuse, who passed away in 2017 was, fifty years ago, among the chefs who threw out the heavy sauces and warming pans of haute cuisine. He and his friends brought in the freshest produce, and no dish was ever warmed up. Those chefs were the founders of Nouvelle Cuisine; now, they are the gray-haired establishment. Besides Bocuse's own three-star restaurant in Lyon, he was the force behind the cooking competition that has become the most important cooking competition in the world, the Bocuse Dor. The international finals of the Bocuse Dor is held bi-annually in Lyon, France.
  
The history of the Gratinée des Halles.
The Les Halles French onion soup.
     
Les Halles was Paris’s wholesale fresh produce market, and in the ’50s and ’60s Les Halles was famous for its midnight traffic jams. Parisians and visitors alike traveling to the market caused the jams as they visited its restaurants for their legendary French onion soup; served from midnight until 5.00am. From 5:00 am the restaurants returned to feeding the workers in the market. There is no single Les Halles recipe, but that name on a menu rings the bell of tradition.
    
The Les Halles produce market is no more.
  
Les Halles had been Paris’s wholesale produce market for 800 years. However, in the second half of the 20th century, the traffic congestion, not to mention the sanitation problems in the center of the Paris, was unacceptable. In 1971, Paris’s wholesale fresh produce market was moved to the Parisian suburb of Rungis near the Paris-Orly airport. Where Les Halles once stood, there is today an enormous, but in my view, not particularly attractive, below-ground shopping center, called the Forum des Halles. There is also the Les Halles Metro station and the Châtelet -Les Halles RER train station. That RER station is also the largest underground train station in the world. I wonder why I always stay away from it?
   
Visiting Rungis, the world’s largest fresh produce market.
  
For those who wish to visit the Rungis produce market, you may take the Metro line 7  to the end of the line, then take the bus 185 to Rungis Market.   By car from central Paris, it is about half-an-hour outside of rush hour. There are 22 restaurants in the new market, some of which serve onion soup.  Rungis is the largest fresh produce market in the world and offers organized tours for professionals and tourists from 05:00. If you have heard of the Tokyo fish market, Rungis is that plus fruit, vegetables, flowers, meat, poultry, game and more.
  
The Rungis English language website is:
  

   
A stall in Rungis market
www.flickr.com/photos/nsalt/2808155405/
  
The oldest recipe for the modern version of French Onion Soup.
   
While onion soup recipes have been published since the times of the Roman empire, French Onion soup is a different matter. The oldest recipe I have seen is in a book written by Alexander Dumas Père, the author of The Count of Monte Christo and The Three Musketeers, among many many other books. 
  
Alexander Dumas Pere was also a passionate Gourmet and he wrote two books on French cuisine.  The larger of the two is Dumas’s Grand Dictionnaire de Cuisine.  That book has been translated into English in an excellent, concise version called Dumas on Food by Alan and Jane Davidson, printed by Oxford University Press. Dumas on Food gives, in English, Alexandre Dumas’s recipe for Soupe à l’Oignon à la Stanislas and the story behind its fame. The Stanislas noted in that recipe is the same Stanislas Leszczynski, Duke of Lorraine and Bar, France,ex-King of Poland, father-in-law of King Louis XV of France who gave Rum Baba and a number of other dishes their name.   
  
The National Library of France, Biblotech National de France allows you to read, without charge, the unabridged, original, French version of Dumas’s  Grand Dictionnaire de Cuisine  online; it comes in two parts. You may also download the 1,000 plus pages that are the whole book, in PDF format, for a minuscule payment.
   
The cover of the original Grand Dictionnaire de Cuisine.
Alexander Dumas Père.
   
The Biblotech National de France website, with English instructions, can be reached at http://gallica.bnf.fr. 
  
For the paragraphs on Soupe à l’Oignon à la Stanislas click on or copy and paste the link below in your browser:
  
The link above will bring you to page 764 and you may read about Soupe à l’Oignon a la Stanislas, with the recipe on the next page (765) as well as other onion soups that pleased Alexander Dumas Père.

 The search for the absolute onion soup.

A great Soupe a l‘Oignon can be an existential experience.  Following on that, on more than one occasion, I have covered Paris from arrondissement to arrondissement looking for the absolute onion soup; while dragging my family around Paris with me. I believe that once I nearly found that soup, but it still managed to escape me. One day I will find that absolute onion soup, and then my soul will be content; in the meantime, I continue looking for it in Paris and Lyon with tastings in many other parts of the world.

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2014, 2018, 2020
 
--------------------------------

Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
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Sète - The Largest Fishing Port on France’s Mediterranean Coast.Sète and Cuisine Sétoise.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

    
The central canal and port in Sète.
www.flickr.com/photos/psc49/43106980831/

For the visitor, Sète is an attractive and walkable town, and with its canals, it is also called the Venice of Languedoc. Sète's cuisine includes Provencal and Italian input along with local creations. (Since 1-1-2016 the region of Languedoc-Roussillon is part of the new super-region of Occitanie).
  
Sète and the Thau Basin.
  
Sète is also called the capital of the Bassin or Étang de Thau. This inland basin, sometimes called a lake, which it is not, is a gigantic center for fishing and the fish and seafood farming industry; it runs inland parallel to the Mediterranean coast. Nearly all of the fish and seafood on Sète’s restaurant tables come from this basin or Sète's ocean-going fishermen and women. The Thau Basin is twenty km (13 miles) long and 3 km (2 miles) wide. On the Mediterranean side of the basin are fabulous beaches, and around the basin are striking fishing villages and others that are now centers for water sports;  just a little to the North is the Languedoc wine country. All along this part of the Mediterranean coast are similar but smaller basins.
   
Map of the Thau Basin.
Copyright Google Maps 2014.
    
What to eat in Sète.
  
There is probably a Sétoise version or a Sétoise recipe for every fish and seafood dish in the south of France.  Wandering around the town I have seen menus offering Sétoise versions of Bouillabaisse and Sétoise takes on other Provencal dishes. More importantly, during my two and a half-day sojourn, I did not receive one meal or even a snack that was below excellent.
   
Sète port and city.
www.flickr.com/photos/hirondellecanada/3026004481/
   
From talking to locals and the servers in restaurants, it is clear that most local dishes either came with Italian immigrants or are Italian tweaks to local dishes. More about the Italian influence later.
      
Sétoise specialties on Sète restaurant menus:
   
Bourride de Lotte à la Sètoise -  Bourride de Lotte is a traditional Provencal monkfish stew, and monkfish are one of the tastiest sea fish with a very firm texture. Sète’s Bourride is a creamy stew of monkfish and vegetables all flavored with white wine and aioli, the garlicky mayonnaise of the south of France.  The stew is served with more aioli on the side.
      
Getting the fish soup ready in Sète
www.flickr.com/photos/hirondellecanada/3164858800/
    
La Teille Sétoise – A traditional poulpe, octopus, pie claimed as their own by the residents of Sète with Italian heritage. The original octopus pie is now also made with calmar, squid, or seiche, cuttlefish. Whether the pie is made with octopus or its surrogates, it will be seafood in a pie with tomatoes and onions all flavored with garlic and rosemary.  This is a traditional Sétoise street food that has now made it to the big time and is on many restaurant menus.  In restaurants, the pie is served as entrée, the French starter, with individual pies often accompanied by a small green salad.
   
Les Encornets Farcis à la Sétoise – Small squid stuffed in the manner of Sète.  Setoise stuffing always includes pork sausage meat, sometimes with added veal, along with breadcrumbs and tomatoes.  The flavoring comes from spicy peppers, usually the Piment d’Espelettegarlic, dry white wine, sometimes Cognac and flavoring from the herb group the Herbs of Provence.  The dish may also be made with Sète’s beloved aioli in the recipe or served on the side.
  
Bouzigues Oysters
www.flickr.com/photos/titounet/6605810917/
   
Moules Farcies à la Sétoise Mussels, from the Thau Basin, stuffed in the manner of Sète. The mussels are stuffed with sausage meat and cooked in white wine and tomato puree.  The mussels will be served with the ever-present aioli on top.
   
Mussels
www.flickr.com/photos/myhsu/4933764329/
      
Macaronade à la Sétoise   - Macaronade in the manner of Sète. The Sète Macaronade is made with beef, not macaroni.  Sometimes Sétoise Macronades come with versions of Italian brajoles, which are stuffed meat rolls, bacon, tomatoes, and onions; all flavored with red wine, parsley, and paprika.  To accompany the dish will be grated Parmesan or Gruyere cheese.

Apart from a Macronade de bœuf or a Macaronade à la Sétoise elsewhere in France,  other macronades will, as the name suggests, be dishes made with macaroni; when it is not clear ask.
  
Soupe de Poisson de Roche à la Sétoise  - A fish soup favorite all along  France’s Méditerranéen coast. The Sétoise version is made with small fish that are caught in, or near, the criques, creeks, along the coast of Sète. The soup is flavored with garlic, and aioli,  and served with an aioli-spiced rouille sauce on the side.  Rouille is traditionally a thick sauce served in and alongside most fish soups in the South of France. They have many different tastes; in Sète the accent is on the aioli.
 
NB The dish called Rouille à la Sétoise is not a sauce, rather it is a stew of cuttlefish.
      
The fish market in Sète
www.flickr.com/photos/hirondellecanada/3160563815/
   
The wines from around Sète
 
The wines of the Coteaux du Languedoc cover a vast area, and it is one of the largest appellations in France. From the Coteaux du Languedoc came the wines that I chose for my fish and seafood dishes. The wines I chose I had not seen elsewhere, and I enjoy trying different wines in new places; with the occasional exception, local wines make an enjoyable change.
      
Picpoul de Pinet.
www.flickr.com/photos/farehamwine/12519038624/

The first wine I selected was a Coteaux du Languedoc Picpoul-de-Pinet  AOC/AOP. It is a white wine from the area around the town of Castelnau-de-Guers,  just 21 km  (14 miles) from Sète. I knew nothing about this wine and chose it for its intriguing name, Picpoul-de-Pinet;  I did not regret my choice, it was fruity and dry white. If I had not had a problem with that 20 kilo limit on flights, I would have taken a case home.

The second wine was a white Coteaux du Languedoc Mas-Jullien AOP.  It was an excellent dry white that went perfectly with the highly flavored fish dishes of Sète.
   
Traveling to Sète by road and rail.
 
Sète is on the Mediterranean coast in the department of Hérault in the region of Occitanie. It is 31 km (19 miles) from Montpellier, the regional capital, 20 minutes by train and 40 minutes by car. For those who may be traveling along the Mediterranean Coast, Sète is two hours and a quarter-hours by car from Marseilles, 2 hours by train. In the opposite direction from Sete to Perpignan, it is 143 km (89 miles) by road,  one and a half hours by car or train. From Perpignan to the Spanish border is another 29 km (18 miles).
    
How to get to  Sète by air.

The nearest major airport is the Beziers airport 35 km (22 miles) away, followed by the larger Montpelier airport which is 45 km (28 miles) away. From the airport of Bezier and/or Montpelier you will need the bus or taxi connections to the train station in town. The trains from Beziers and/or Montpelier to Sete are just about once every hour and the traveling time, once you are on the train, is less than twenty minutes.
 
A short history of Sète.
            
The incredibly active Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Louis XIV’s Prime Minister, decided to build a canal that would join the Atlantic, at Bordeaux, to the Mediterranean.  Sète would be built at the canal's exit to the Mediterranean as a large fishing port and an inland port.  In the 17th century, the canal saved four weeks of sailing around Spain to the north of France, and the occasional battles with pirates from North Africa. Good roads connecting France from North to South hardly existed, and in winter whatever there was became impassable.   At the time, there was an island called Cette just off the mainland, and in creating the largest fishing port in the Mediterranean, the island was joined to the mainland. Today you would not realize that part of the town is an island, but having the fishing port in the center of town makes walking around a unique experience. The town itself has many canals, after all, it is called the Venice of Languedoc, so when visiting Sète take a motorboat tour of the canals; alas they have no gondolas. Before it was joined to the mainland the island’s first known name was given 2,500 years ago when the Greeks came and called it Ketos. Later it would become Ceta, Seta, Cetia, and Cette, and finally, in 1928, the city became  Sète.
     
The canal, which opened in 1681, allowed the whole region to export goods to Paris and the North of France, and of the greatest importance was wheat.  Today the canal is no longer used for trade, but you can rent a motorboat with full sleeping and cooking equipment, showers, toilets, air-conditioning, and more. Then, on your own, with one hour's instruction, you may sail from Sète to Bordeaux on the Atlantic. If you prefer you may sail in the opposite direction from Sete along the Canal du Rhone inland, close to the Mediterranean, to the town of Aigues Mortes and then up to Beaucaire,  just 25 km (16 miles) below Avignon. These motorboats allow you to stop and get out and tour or dine whenever the thought arises.
 
The Italian Influence.

Linked to the building of the fishing port and the canal were many Italian craftsmen and workers who afterward stayed to put their imprint on the city and its cuisine. Today in Sète you will meet many people with Italian surnames, a reminder that the original workforce included many Italians. They together with more Italian immigrants who came in the 1800’s, makes for a French city where half of the population has Italian heritage. Along with the Italians came many French Catalans and then later came immigrants from Morocco and Algeria. Today the port of Sète has ferries to Italy including Sicily and Sardinia, Spain including the Balearic Islands and Morocco.
     
Sète is much more than just a city with excellent restaurants, canals and a pleasant place to walk around; it also provides entertainment for its residents and tourists.  In the summer, apart from concerts and celebrations of all kinds from June through September you may watch the Sète joutes. Joutes are jousts, but without knights riding against each other on horseback; instead, here the jousting knights are Sète fishermen and women and other locals. For the joust, there are two boats, each with ten rowers who pull to meet each other as fast as they can. On each boat is a high platform with a jouster holding a lance and a shield. When they meet, the winner will have knocked his opponent into the sea!  If you are in the area in the summer call the Tourist Information Office and find the exact days and times when they are holding their joutes.  They are held on nearly every weekend and once or twice a week during the summer months. See the English language website of the Sète Tourist Information Office:

  
Sea jousts in Sète.
   
Just outside of Sète
 
After visiting Sète, there is still much to see outside the town;  Sète is on the edge of the beautiful Étang de Thau, and on its own that is reason enough to visit the area. For more about the Étang de Thau, the Thau basin, look at the English language website of the town of Marseillan which is in the north of the Thau Basin:

http://www.marseillan.com/english/index.asp

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2014, 2018. 2020 
--------------------------------

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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