Salad Perigourdine (Salade Périgourdine) on the French Menu.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


  
     
Salade Perdigourdine 
      
Cuisine à la Perigourdine
  
Cuisine à la Périgourdine is one of the most revered regional cuisines of France, but it's not a single way of cooking; it's a cuisine that highlights regional products along with locally produced wines.  

Perigord was an ancient French Province that during the French revolution was included in the department of Dordogne, now included in the super region of Nouvelle Aquitaine. Changes take time in this part of France, and even after 200 years the locals still consider themselves Périgourdines. 

The home of Cuisine a la Périgourdine is the small but beautiful city of Périgueux. Perigueux is a small, walkable city, with its history reaching back to the Romans. On many local maps, there are colors dividing different parts of Perigord, the Dordogne; the colors indicate the specialties of each area.
   
The link to the English language website of the city of Périgueux is:
   
    
The city of Perigueux.
www.flickr.com/photos/36101809@N00/7159935352/   
    

  Salade Périgourdine
    
Salade Périgourdine will be served as a cold entrée, the French first course. Salade Périgourdine will be on menus all over France and the heart of a Salade Périgourdine is duck. 
       
  
Salade Périgourdine.
www.flickr.com/photos/dolboeb/13675072293/
  
Salade Perigourdine on your menu:

Salade Périgourdine: Salade, Foie Gras Maison sur Toasts aux Figues, Magrets Fumés, Gésiers Confits   Resting on a bed of lettuce is a homemade pate of fattened duck's liver served on toast, accompanied by figs. Also included are slices of, smoked duck breast, and duck gizzards confits.  A Salade Périgourdine will come with a vinaigrette dressing.

The duck:

The price you will pay for your salad will depend, very much, on how many ways duck is included. Traditionally the centerpiece of a Salade Périgourdine is duck gizzards confit. Duck gizzard confit, are duck giblets that are full of flavor and so when these tender, tasty, giblets are missing, you may enjoy a superb duck salad but it will not be a Salade Périgourdine. Duck may also be included as magret de canard fumé, smoked duck breast and foie gras de canard, fattened duck' liver.

The salad:

Whether a menu listing notes it or not Salade Périgourdine will be served on a bed of lettuce or other salad greens. Some listings may offer a salad mesclun which should be a composed salad made with at least five different salad greens. Wherever in France you order Salade Périgourdine local produce may be added to the salad and in-season fresh haricot vert, green beans, tomatoes, and local fresh white asparagus may be included.
  
                                        Salade Mesclun
www.flickr.com/photos/50496541@N03/5071215610/
     
Foie gras is liver from fattened duck or geese; for Salade Périgourdine it will be duck liver. Foie gras is not essential for a Salade Périgourdine but with its popularity in French cuisine, it is often included. There are over five different ways that foie gras may be served and your menu should clearly note which way it will be served; however, that is rarely the case. With a Salade Pergourdin you will usually be served a Pâté de Foie Gras, a foie gras pate that must, by law, include at least 50% duck or (goose liver). In the menu listing above it reads Foie Gras Maison; here the chef is showing that he or she makes the pate with their own unique technique and flavor. The pate will still be at least 50%  duck liver.
   

The original confits were made with cooked meat and/or poultry that was stored under a thick layer of fat for the winter months. That aging and cooking technique produced such wonderful flavors that confits remain very popular despite the extra work involved. Whether you are a cook or not, you know that a stew or soup tastes better on the second or third day and that is the science behind confits. Modern confits are kept in a refrigerator’s cooler, and in a good restaurant they may have been aged there for one or two weeks, but not months.  Confits are not served with the fat under which they were stored and so a duck confit will not be any fattier than the same dish prepared in any other manner. Gizzard confits, an important part of Salade Perigoudine, are duck giblets and as a result of the confit preparation are tender and tasty.
   
A salad of gizzard confit without any extras.
Photograph courtesy of LesFoodies.Com
   
The Salad Dressing:
 
The vinaigrette dressing served with a Salade Périgourdine is of great importance. Often the vinaigrette will be made with Vinaigre Xérès, sherry vinegar, or a local fruit vinegar or possibly balsamic vinegar. If the chef chooses to keep to local products, the oil in the dressing may come from the Perigord’s famous Noix du Périgord AOC/AOP, its AOP walnuts.  The walnuts themselves are also often included in a Salade Pergourdine.
    
A shelled walnut
www.flickr.com/photos/erix/6783284175/
    
  
Truffles are an underground fungus, those that are edible are rare and very much in demand.  Truffles bring a unique flavor, both on their own and on the foods they are prepared with; that creates the demand and makes them expensive. In a good restaurant, and the right season you may be lucky.  The Maitre D’ may come to your table and add to your Salade Périgourdine a few shavings of the Truffe de Périgord, the Périgord truffle. Occasionally there may be black truffle oil or truffle essence in the vinaigrette, and that is nice, but it is not the same, just a hint of what might have been.
  
Salade Périgourdine:  Gésiers Confits, Mesclun avec Cerneaux de Noix du Périgord, Magret de Canard Fume, Foie Gras Duck gizzards confit, a salad mesclun prepared with the famous AOP Perigord Walnuts, slices of smoked duck breast and fattened duck liver,
  
Ducks and Geese in Perigord.
Photograph courtesy of Pays de Bergerac
    
Salade Périgourdine - Haricots Verts, Magret Fumé, Gésier de Canard Confit, Foie Gras de Canard - Fresh green beans, smoked duck breast. Duck gizzards confit and a pate of fattened duck's liver.
   
Salade Périgourdine: Cœurs de Canard et Gésiers Confits, Lardons et Magrets Fume - Duck hearts and gizzards confit served with lardons, fried bacon pieces, and slices of smoked duck breast.   As the price of duck-based ingredients has risen, many restaurants will offer lower-priced versions of the salad; that is easily done by excluding the foie gras, the fattened duck liver pate.  The liver is not an essential part of the traditional salad; however, many menu listings will just note Salade Périgourdine, and since what the salad contains affects the price that is the time to ask what it contains.
     
Pizza Perigourdine.
Fast food has come to Perigord
  
Accompanying your salad with local wines:

Perigord, the Dordogne, is famous for its wines, including its Bergerac AOC/AOP and its Monbazillac AOC/AOP wines.
      

Around the town of Bergerac (the home the semi-fictional Cyrano de Bergerac) are the Bergerac AOC/AOP vineyards with 13 separate appellations.  These appellations include the exceptionally famous red Bergerac as well as Bergerac rose and white wines; the white wines run the gamut from dry to sweet.
  

Statue of Cyrano de Bergerac in Bergerac.
A play about a semi-fictionalized Cyrano de Bergerac brought the word panache,  “in a grand or flamboyant manner,” into the English language.
www.flickr.com/photos/flem007_uk/9096140036/
     
Before leaving home for France or when in the area, ask the local Tourist Office for a map of their Route des Vins de Bergerac.  The route offers you the option of visiting over 120 different vintners to taste, for a small contribution to the local economy, their wares. You will pass through or near beautiful villages and close to many good local restaurants; just remember to have a designated driver. The Bergerac tourist information English language website is:

 
Just outside Bergerac and across the River Dordogne is the village of Monbazillac. From around the village comes the famed Monbazillac AOC/AOP sweet wine. Their House of Wine and Tourism website is:
   
   
Chateau de Monbazillac
www.flickr.com/photos/yvondej/13578270123/
     
There are, among many others,  two excellent English language websites that cover the whole of the Perigord/Dordogne:

 
http://dordognetourist.info/news-and-info-blog

For more about dining in  Perigord/Dordogne click on the link below:
  

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2013, 2014, 2019
 
--------------------------------

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Connected posts:

Calmar, Calamar, Chipirons, and Encornets. Dining on Calamari in France; Look out for Calmar, Calamar, Chipirons and Encornets on your menu.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Calmar Frit, Sauce Marie-Rose.
Deep-fried calamari with French Cocktail Sauce.
Photograph by rusak/YayMicro.com.
  

Calmar, Calamar or Encornet  in France –  Calamari, and squid in English.
  
Calmar (calamari) is tremendously popular in France and not only on seafood restaurant menus. Calamari in France will be on restaurant menus grilled, baked, stuffed, and or stewed.  Very small calamari are called petit-calmar or chipirons, and there is a unique small calamari called an encornet.  Very small calamari maybe only 3 to 4 cms (1.5” long) and will have their own recipes designed for them.


The largest calamari on any menu, before being cut into small circles and pieces, will have been, at the very most, 30  to  40 cms (12” – 15”) long.  Larger calamari will be thrown back or become cay food. Monster squids, those that may be seen on the National Geographic channel, will not be part of any fisherman’s or fisherwoman’s catch.  Calamari, when cooked correctly, is mild and tender.  
    
Your menu may offer:  
  
Calamar Farci de Ris de Veau et Épinards – Squid stuffed with veal sweetbreads and spinach.
  
Lightly fried calmars (calamari).
www.flickr.com/photos/bunchedup/2067844109/
       
Calmars Frits Sauce Marie-RoseDeep-fried calamari rings served with the European lightly-spiced cocktail sauce.  Deep-fried calamari, like elsewhere, is the favorite calamari dish in France.  The beloved French seafood cocktail sauce is called Marie-Rose and is nothing like the North American cocktail sauce, which is heavy on the horseradish.  A Sauce Marie-Rose is much milder, just fresh mayonnaise, tomato ketchup, Worcester sauce, or a dash of Tabasco. Occasionally a chef may add a touch of Cognac or Armagnac.
  
Calamari With Sauce Marie-Rose.
www.flickr.com/photos/nwongpr/8354723469/
   
Risotto à l’Encre de Seiche et Calamars – Risotto, prepared with the ink from both cuttlefish and calamari. Cuttlefish called seiche in French, and calamari both have dark inks with slightly different flavors.  The ink that will be used for the dish on your menu shows the chef's personal preferences, in this case, both.
    
Calamars Sautés à la Provençale et sa Purée à l'Encre de Seiche – Calamari fried in the manner of Provence and served with mashed potatoes flavored and colored with cuttlefish ink. For seafood prepared in the manner of Provence, the calamari will be fried in olive oil with tomatoes and flavored with garlic.
  
Calamari, cerignola olive & tellicherry peppercorn gremolata,
(The Cerignola olive is a very large, mild, Italian olive).
www.flickr.com/photos/stuart_spivack/2979255108/


Small calamari on the menu.
  
The French names used for small calamari are encornets or petit-calamars; they are called chipiron in France's Basque country, t Pays Basque. However, do not be surprised that the names used change with the area you are visiting.  Casserons are tiny cuttlefish and are often confused with tiny calamari.  Worry not; you will not taste the difference, and these tiny cuttlefish may be on another menu as supies, supions, sépiole, or sépion. 
  
Chipirons aux Champignon sà la Plancha. –  A particular small squid cooked with mushrooms on a plancha.  A plancha, in the Basque language, is a planxa; it is a very thick metal slab that is used in traditional Southern French and Basque restaurants to achieve a taste somewhere between grilling and frying. 
    
Petit-Calmars à la Plancha, sur un Lit de Pâtes à l'Encre - Calamari cooked on the plancha and served on a bed of pasta cooked in calamari’s ink.
  
The encornet on French menus


The encornet is a highly prized small squid with its own recipes. When cooked, I acknowledge that you cannot identify an ecornet by sight; I can only advise you to sit down and enjoy it.

Fricassée d'Encornets aux Olives – Encornets stewed with olives.
  
Friture d'Encornet à la Fleur de Sel et son Chutney de Tomate – Lightly fried encornets sprinkled with Fleur de Sel and served with a tomato chutney. Fleur de Sel, the flower of salt, a dried sea-salt from the salt crystals on the very top of the salt pan;
        
Chilled pan-fried encornet, couscous
www.flickr.com/photos/stuart_spivack/3290891027/
  
Salad Tiède d'Encornets Farcis au Caviar d'Aubergine – A warm salad of encornets stuffed with eggplant caviar.
      
Calamari and cuttlefish ink.
  

Calamari and cuttlefish and octopus have a black ink that  is used in the sea as a smoke screen to escape predators. In a restaurant’s kitchen, the ink is used to color and flavor sauces for other seafood dishes. Calamari and cuttlefish ink, encre noir, are the most popular.
  
Confusion with the French names of calamari and cuttlefish.
  
Do not be surprised that calamari, baby calamari and baby cuttlefish will be found under a variety of names in different parts of France.  Fishermen and women never respected borders and France’s borders have historical connections with the many languages. France, Spain, and Italy have  long interconnected histories and language influences.  
   
 In the French Basque country, the Pays Basque, which up against the Pyrenees, you will hear Basque spoken all the time. Then part of ancient Catalonia is in the Occitanie region of France and so part of France’s population has Catalan as a second language. France also borders Andorra where the official language is Catalan. To add to this tower of babel much of southern France has Occitan as a second language along with Occitan dialects such as Provencal and Nicoise.  Italian influenced the Savoy departments and the city of Nice was part of Italy until 150 years ago.  Then in areas close to the Italian border, you may hear Piedmontese, a language still spoken in the Italian region of Piedmont next to France’s South Eastern corner. The language of the Roma, French Gypsies, also provides additional input in France’s south-west.
  

What’s the difference between calamari, cuttlefish and octopus?


Those who have not yet tried calamari sometimes assume that calamari, cuttlefish and octopus, are all variations on a theme; however, they are very different and have different tastes and textures. They are not at all the same and apart from tiny calamari and baby cuttlefish they will all be served with different recipes. For the record squid and cuttlefish both have ten tentacles or feelers while an octopus has eight tentacles.   

Squid, Calamar, Encornet, or Calamari in the languages of France’s neighbors
   

(Catalan - calamar), (Dutch - pijlinktvis), (German – kalmare), (Italian – calamaro or calamari), (Spanish – calamares). (Latin - loligo vulgaris).

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2012, 2015, 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.
  
Connected Posts:


 
 
 
 


 
 
 
 

 
 

 

            


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