Julienne or Lingue – Ling, the Fish. Meeting Julienne in Beaucaire, France.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Lingue, Élingue, Julienne.
Ling, European ling, Mediterranean ling.
Photograph courtesy of La Paysanne Des Mers

I had enjoyed Ling, the fish, in France when it used to be on the menu as lingue. However, twenty years ago, in a restaurant in Beaucaire, in south-eastern France.

 I learned that what we call a ling by any other name would taste as sweet as Julienne. Marketing had upgraded the fish’s name and the menu offered a Filet of Julienne.  At the time, I only knew of Julienne as a distinct cut used for vegetables, though my online French-English dictionary offered Julienne as a “long fish,” but that is not a very helpful description for a diner.

Fortunately, I was in a restaurant where the Maitre D’ knew his fish, and while he did not use the name Lingue, he told me that it was an excellent fish from the cod family. There are many different fish from the cod family, and I have enjoyed quite a few of them under a variety of names, so I ordered the Filet of Julienne.  The dish was well prepared, and the fish was excellent, and as expected, it had a similar taste and texture to cod. N.B. Cod is neck to neck with salmon as the most popular fish in France. 

(Beaucaire in the department of Gard in the region of Occitanie is 25 km (16 miles) from the beautiful city of Avignon).


Face to face with a Ling.
Photograph courtesy of Ed Bierman
www.flickr.com/photos/edbierman/2585185143/

Ling, have long, tubular, bodies which, at first sight when pulled from the sea, may be thought of as a conger eel.   These fish often reach close to one meter (3.3’) in length though you will rarely see a whole ling on sale at a fishmonger’s. Most ling are caught in the frozen north and reach the French markets as chilled filets.   Since ling are members of the cod family, their meat is white, firm, and slightly flaky and easily mistaken for cod when served with a sauce.

N.B. The name Julienne for this fish is confusing as one of the traditional cuts of French vegetables has long been called a Julienne. All French chefs must learn many cuts of vegetables before they graduate and a Julienne de Légumes will be long, thin cuts of vegetables, about 5cm by  2mm x 2mm (2” x .08” x .08”).


Julienne de Concombre
A julienne of cucumbers
Photograph courtesy of Stacy Spensley
www.flickr.com/photos/notahipster/4670390442/

The word Julienne or Lingue on French menus covers two very close members of the Ling fish family. There is no practical way to tell the difference when these two fish are cooked, so no harm is done. However, a third member of the Ling family is also seen on French menus called the Blue Ling, Lingue Espagnole. It is a smaller fish with a slightly different texture and taste, and is not included in this post.

Julienne and Lingue on French Menus:

Dos de Julienne au Cote du Jura – A thick cut from the back of the fish, the meatiest portion, served with a sauce made from a white wine from the department of Jura in the region of the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté. that borders Switzerland. This dish will have been prepared with a white wine though the Côtes du Jura AOP wines include reds, rosés, whites, vin jaune, and their unique Cotes du Jura Corail, a coral-colored wine.

N.B. The Vin Jaune AOP, Vin de Paille AOP, and their excellent and inexpensive sparkling Crémant du Jura are also part of the Côtes du Jura AOP appellation.

  

Catch your own Ling.
www.flickr.com/photos/kencurtis/4939447570/

Filet de Julienne à la Nantaise – A filet of ling served with one of France’s favorite sauces for fish, Sauce Nantaise. Sauce Nantaise is also called Sauce Beurre Nantaise and under the name Sauce Beurre Blanc it is one of the most popular sauces to be served with fish. Sauce Nantaise is named after the lovely City of Nantes in north-western France, in the Pays de la Loire region. Nantes itself is set on the River Loire close to the Atlantic Ocean. This menu listing was my introduction to ling under its now more popular French name Julienne.

The English language website of the Nantes Tourist Information Office is:

http://en.nantes-tourisme.com/touristic-information-3114.html


The City of Nantes.
Photograph courtesy of Pierre Guezingar
www.flickr.com/photos/popierre/21725955268

Filets de Lingue aux Brocolis et aux Amandes – Filets of ling prepared with broccoli and almonds.

Médaillon de Lingue Poché et sa Crème aux Poireaux  A ling filet poached in a cream of leek sauce.  The word médaillon, a medallion in English, indicates a round or oval cut; however, with fish a médaillon, is used as an alternative name for a filet.    


Grilled Ling.
Photograph courtesy of Prayitno
www.flickr.com/photos/prayitnophotography/15873332281/

Pavé de Julienne à la Crème d'Amande et Féve Tonka - A thick cut of ling served with a cream of almond sauce flavored with the tonka bean. The tonka or tonquin bean is a plant from South American with a strong vanilla aroma. If you sniff a little more, you will also find the scent of cherries and cinnamon. In France, the tonka bean is mostly used in aniseed-flavored alcoholic drinks. N.B. The tonka bean is not a real bean; it is from the pea family. In the USA and some other countries, the sale of the tonka bean is controlled as one of its ingredients is considered poisonous when consumed in quantity..

 For more about the tonka bean, see Gernot Katzer's Spice Pages:

http://gernot-katzers-spice-pages.com/engl/index.html 

Soupe de Poisson Maison (Julienne, Moules, Langoustine) – The restaurant’s special fish soup made with ling, mussels and Dublin Bay prawns. 


Ling Sushi
Photograph courtesy of John.
www.flickr.com/photos/johnjoh/5000993394

Suprême de Julienne Sauce Champagne – A filet of ling served in a champagne sauce. The cut called suprême will usually be on menus listings for a breast of chicken, pigeonGuinea fowl, and other birds. Nevertheless, when a chef gets bored using the word filet for fish, then suprême may appear on the menu.

The town of Beaucaire

Beaucaire has a written history from the Roman times, through to its place as an important medieval market town and on to its place in history when Captain Napoleon Bonaparte added to Beaucaire's fame by writing his first, or at least his first pro-revolutionary pamphlet in 1793.   The year 1783  was the first year of the civil war, and Napoleon was at that time only an Artillery Captain.  Then he wrote Le Souper de Beaucaire, Supper in Beaucaire. In the pamphlet, a soldier is speaking with four royalist merchants in an attempt to bring them around to the benefits of the revolution.

Beaucaire appears in French literature as it is mentioned in the Count of Monte Christo, by Alexandre Dumas (père) and Les Miserables by Victor Hugo amongst mentions in many other novels.

Relaxing in Beaucaire

A maitre d'hôtel from Paris told me that at least once a year he comes to Beaucaire to fish for carpe, carp, and the silure, the Wells catfish. on the river and canals.  According to him, carp catches of seven or eight kilos are claimed every day and 15 kilos or more when no one else is around!  The other reason he chooses to come here is just as important, fishing makes you hungry and thirsty, and he loves the local wines, their Vin de Pays, now vins IGP, and the local cheeses and sausages.

Salade Beaucaire made with celery, York ham, mushrooms, and beetroots in a sauce vinaigrette may be on the menu all over Provence though it is in Occitanie. Beaucaire's restaurants are influenced mainly by Provence, and your choice of local wines will include the pleasant Vins du Pays du Gard IGP and the Vins de Pays d'Oc IGP.

Despite the peace and quiet that fishing may provide, not everyone wants to spend a week fishing in Beaucaire.  For the restless, it is only 15 km (10 miles) to the towns of Arles and Nîmes and 25 km (16 miles) away is Avignon. You may also do as we did and rent a self-drive motorboat with bedrooms, bathrooms, kitchen, and air-conditioning to use on the Beaucaire canal and more.  We traveled to the beautiful old garrison town of Aigues Mortes in the Camargue on the Mediterranean coast. When we rented one of these boats, we were very short on time with only a weekend to spare, and it was a fantastic way to see this part of France. With more time available, we would have continued to the beautiful Mediterranean fishing port of Sète. For those, who have an additional ten or fourteen days for traveling, consider continuing from Sète along the Canal du Midi, the Canal des Deux Mers all the way to Bordeaux on the Atlantic coast.

The Beaucaire canal was built in the 17th century and became part of the Canal du Rhône à Sète. When it was finished, produce from Avignon, Arles, Nimes, and the area around could be transported in quantity and quickly to the Mediterranean and onwards to the Atlantic and Paris.

Course Camarguaise

For summer entertainment, Beaucaire has Course Camarguaise acrobatic exhibitions, mostly with cows, not bulls. Here, the cows are neither mistreated nor killed; they are working professionals. In the Course Camarguaise, the cows have a rosette tied between the horns, and the aim is to grab it and win a prize.

        


A Course Camarguaise acrobatic display with cows,
not a bullfight.
Photograph courtesy of jmt-29
www.flickr.com/photos/jmt-29/7409532374/

The players here are accomplished acrobats dressed all in white; at the end of the show, they let the public join in to try and grab the rosette from a calf.  Do not join in lightly; these calves are old hands at the game, and they know a greenhorn when they see one.

https://www.provence-camargue-tourisme.com/?lang=Anglais


A Beaucaire parking lot.
Photograph courtesy of GK Sens-Yonne.
www.flickr.com/photos/sens-yonne/15718143065/

Arles is Close to Beaucaire

The day after enjoying the Julienne in a Beaucaire restaurant, I took the opportunity to visit the primary fresh produce market in Arles. The city of Arles is the gateway to the Camargue, and it is a 25-minute drive from Beaucaire. Arles is also famous for the pictures of sunflowers that Vincent van Gogh painted there. Unfortunately, none of Van Gogh’s original paintings remain in Arles. Here, Van Gogh invited Paul Gauguin as a guest to his home and would later cut off his ear, making Gauguin take him to a hospital and then to a lunatic asylum. You may visit the home of Van Gogh in Arles and view the hospital where he was taken.  

The Arles Produce Market

In the Arles market, among some other food research I was engaged in, I asked a wholesale fishmonger about the fish called Julienne. Fortuitously, I had found a knowledgeable fishmonger who put up with my problematic French. He confirmed that Julienne is the fish called Lingue in commercial French, with Julienne now used as a more marketable name. Then, pointing to boxes just received marked with chilled, but not frozen, filets of Ling that he gets every two days from his wholesaler. From the dates on the box, I could see the fish were packed in Norway and had taken four days from ship to shop. The fishmonger added that he occasionally receives whole fresh Ling from the Mediterranean, but his restaurant and fishmonger customers prefer the chilled variety that comes already skinned and deboned.

Roman Arles.

Apart from fish, Van Gogh, and Paul Gaugin, Arles has the best-preserved Roman amphitheater in Europe. The Arles English Language Tourist Information Office website is:

https://www.arlestourisme.com/en/


The Roman amphitheater of Arles.
Photograph courtesy of Phillip Capper
www.flickr.com/photos/flissphil/2960427559/

A fish from North America called Ling

There is a fish called Ling or Red Hake caught off the East coast of the United States; however, this is a much smaller fish and from a different family to the Ling seen in Europe and the Mediterranean.

 
The names of the European Ling (Julienne, Lingue or Élingue) in the languages of France’s neighbors:
 
(Catalan - llenga de bacallà), (Dutch – leng), (German – leng, blauleng ), (Italian – ciclopi, molva),  (Spanish – barbada, maruca), (Latin - molva molva).
 
The names of the  Spanish Ling, Mediterranean Ling, ( Juliana , Lingue Bleue) in the languages of France’s neighbors.”
 
Common name , (Dutch - middellandse-zeeleng),(German - mittelmeer-leng), (Italian - molva occhiona), (Spanish – escolá, llengua de bacallá), ( Latin -molva macrophthalma).
 
The other member of the Ling family not included in this post:
Blue Ling - Lingue Espagnole, Lingue bâtarde
 
(Catalan - escolà), (Dutch -  blauwe leng), (German - blauleng), (Italian - molva), ( Spanish - arbitán)
(Latin - molva dypterygia)
Thanks for help with the names of Ling in other languages go to  Froese, R., and D. Pauly. Editors. 2015. FishBase. World Wide Web electronic publication. www.fishbase.org, version (08/2015).
 
--------------------------------
 
Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
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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.  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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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Copyright 2010, 2015, 2018, 2021
 
 
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Kirsch – The Cherry Brandy. Kirsch in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Kirsch from the Fougerolles.
Photograph courtesy Grandes Distilleries Peureux
  
Kirsch or Kirschwasser

Kirsch is a cherry eau-de-vie (brandy), and from the north to the south of France will be part of many sauces, desserts, cakes, or cheese fondues. On its own, as an aperitif, Kirsch will be served very cold or offered as a digestive, at room temperature


A Kirsch label from the Alsace
Photograph courtesy of Patricia M.
www.flickr.com/photos/taffeta/4617971457/  

The history of Kirsch

Kirsch is a traditional, colorless, cherry brandy with 40% to 45% alcohol, though a few manufacturers allow cherry juice to color their product. The creation of Kirsch is claimed by both France and Germany.  However, the honor for the earliest version of Kirsch goes, as you may have guessed, to the usual suspects, the Romans. When the Romans colonized France around 100 BCE, they brought cherry trees to continue enjoying wines flavored with cherry juice. (The Romans had colonized Spain about 100 years before France and knew from their early settlers that to enjoy all the comforts of home they needed to import vines, tree seedlings, as well as many of the other fruits and vegetables). 

The Romans brought plum treesapricot treesalmond trees, and many others, along with cherry trees. The Romans left nothing to chance, and they also brought the art of snail farming and fattening geese for foie gras, fattened goose liver. 

N.B. Distilling fruit juice and creating a high alcohol level liqueur was only invented in the 12th century, long after the Romans had disappeared from France. All the Europeans quickly adopted the science of distillation, and within 100 to 300 years, many fruit liquors, including Kirsch were born.


Morello cherries, the source of the original Kirsch.
Photograph courtesy of Rod Waddington
www.flickr.com/photos/rod_waddington/11530343543/

What does Kirsch taste and smell like?

Most of the taste comes from the fruit, but some crushed cherry pits (stones) are included in the recipe. Kirsch retains a smooth cherry aftertaste and cherry bouquet with a slightly bitter almond taste from the fruits and the pits. Kirsch is distilled twice, and that produces a smooth brandy. 

The origin of the word brandy

When the Dutch turned wines into liquor, the result was called “brandewijn,” which meant burnt wine. Brandewijn was the word that would become brandy. So Kirsch is a fruit eau-de-vie or fruit brandy. For the story behind the Dutch and Cognac, click here.

Kirsch is produced in many French regions.

There are many respected French producers of Kirsch, and so French Kirsch probably needs a small book. However, that is too much for this post, especially since I have not tasted enough of the most well-known products and their variations to adequately compare.  

Many of the most well-known French distilleries are in the commune of Fougerolles-Saint-Valbert in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region or in the Alsace in the Grand Est.


Kirsch from the Alsace
Photograph courtesy of Maison Willm

The cherries that flavored their wine were called guignes by the Romans. Still today, you will see that many distilleries around Fougerolles and elsewhere produce both Kirsch brandy and the Guignolet (Guignolet-Kirsch) liqueur.  


Guignolet or Guignolet-Kirsch
A sweet, red, French, cherry liqueur with 16-18% alcohol.
(Cherry Heering is a Danish, sweet, 24% alcohol liqueur).
Photograph courtesy of Drinks and Co   

Kirsch on French menus:

Clafoutis aux Cerises et au Kirsch –cherry clafoutis flavored with Kirsch. The original clafoutis were made with cherries; here you have Kirsch added to the clafoutis recipe.


A heart-shaped cherry clafoutis.
Photograph courtesy of Noelle Gillies
www.flickr.com/photos/noellegillies/19584503876/

Confiture de Bleuets au Kirsch – A bilberry jam flavored with Kirsch.

Fondue au Fromage: Emmental, Comté, Beaufort, Champignons Forestiers, Lardons Fumés, Vin Blanc, Kirsch  A fondue made with three of France’s most famous cheeses, French Emmental, Comte, and Beaufort; made with added wild mushroomsbits of smoked bacon, white wine and Kirsch. The bacon pieces may be flavoring the fondue, but the mushrooms will be for dipping alongside the bread.


Dipping the bread in a cheese fondue.
Photograph courtesy of Pedro Cerqueira
www.flickr.com/photos/pcerqueira/5402321948/
 
How a cheese fondue is made and served.

Cheese fondues have the cheese and wine melted together. Other additions may include Kirsch liquor, lemon juice, and a clove or two of garlic. This is a dish where French bread comes into its own.  Small pieces of bread are dipped into the mixture at the end of special long forks and then eaten. Cheese fondues are made with a variety of cheeses, primarily regional preferences from thEmmental, Gruyère and Comté families. As with meat fondues, beware of hot fondue forks; move the cheese from the fork you dipped with to your plate and then transferred it to another fork to eat. Burnt tongues are a common work accident when enjoying fondues! The special bowl in which the cheese is melted is called a caquelon.

Magret de Canard, Sauce aux Cerises et au Kirsch – Duck breast  prepared with a cherry and Kirsch sauce.


Sliced duck breast in a cherry-based sauce.
Photograph courtesy of Pierre L
www.flickr.com/photos/titounet/18201612889/

Mousse Glacée aux Cerises Macérées au Kirsch d'Alsace – An iced mousse, flavored with cherries macerated in Kirsch produced in the Alsace in the Grand Est. N.B. Macerated fruits are made by steeping them in sweetened alcoholic liquor; when the fruit has absorbed enough alcohol, it may be served or bottled for future use.


Cherries macerated in Kirsch on sale.
Photograph courtesy of Mark
www.flickr.com/photos/coffeegeek/3129354809

Tarte Flambée aux Griottes et au Kirsch –Tarte flambe, also called Flammekueche, is a famous dish from the Alsace, here made with griottes and Kirsch. Griottes are the slightly sour Morello cherries. The original Kirsch was made with Morello cherries.

Tartelette aux Châtaignes et Chocolat avec Mousse au Kirsch – A small tart made with chestnuts and a chocolate mousse flavored with Kirsch. 


Cherry blossom
From the Luberon in France
Photograph courtesy of Fulvio Spada
www.flickr.com/photos/lfphotos/458899407/

Tartare de St-Jacques en Rosace de Melon et sa Vinaigrette au Guignolet – tartar of the meat from the King Scallop served with melon cut into petals and served with a fan or floral shape. The tartar is flavored with a vinaigrette sauce made with the sweet Gignolet cherry liqueur.

The cherry museum in Fougerolles

 If you are visiting the town of Fougerolles, make sure you leave enough time to visit their Écomusée du Pays de la Cerise, their museum of cherries. The museum takes you through the process of growing cherries until their final appearance as brandy inside a bottle. If you do not like Kirsch, the town is also well known for its modern, legalized Absinthe. 

 For visitors, the town of Fougerolles has an English language websi

http://www.otsi-fougerolles.net/index.php?lang=en


The Fougerolles museum of cherries.
The website is in French but easily underside with the Google Translate app.
Inside the Écomusée du Pays de la Cerise,

 


The Fougerolles’  Fête des Cerises.
Photograph courtesy of Le Progrès
The Fougerolle cherry fete is held on the first Saturday and Sunday in July.
(Always check dates with the French Tourist Information Office).

The Fougerolles cherry fete has been held annually for 50 years and is organized by many interested parties from the town. At the fete, you may taste enough different kirsch products to make you aware of the different tastes from different producers. Involved in promoting the Fougerolles’ Kirsch is La Confrérie des Gousteurs de Kirsch de Fougerolles, the brother and sisterhood of the lovers of the taste of the Kirsch from Fougerolles. This brother and sisterhood work all year to promote and taste varieties of their true love; then, they provide kirsch tastings and donuts at the fete—woe to those who do not dip their donuts deeply enough in the local brew.


Some members of the Kirsch brother and sisterhood
In their would-be ancient costumes.
Confrérie des Gousteurs de Kirsch de Fougerolles

Fougerolles may be famous for its Kirsch, but the title of the sweet cherry capital of France is claimed by Céret in the South of France, nearly in Spain, and that is part of a separate post mostly on sweet cherries.

Morello and similar sour cherries in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan - guinder) (Dutch - zure kers), (German - sauerkirsche or weichsel ), (Italian - amareno), (Spanish - guindo, cerezo de Morello), (Latin - prunus cerasus and its cultivars

Sweet Cherries in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan – cirerer or guinda,),(Dutch - kers or kriek), (German - kirsch),(Italian – ciliegia), (Spanish – cereza).(Latin - prunus avium and its cultivars).

With thanks to Wikipedia for assistance with the translations above. 

------------------ 

Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
a French menu?

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.  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.

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


Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2015, 2021
 
 
--------------------

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