Marans - the Eggs from the Marans Chickens. The French Chicken that Lays the Golden Eggs.Œufs de la Poule de Marans (L’).

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

      

Eggs from Marans chickens.
Photograph courtesy of George Wesley and; Bonita Dannells
   
Marans
     
Marans is an inland fishing port set along the River Sèvre Niortais in the department of Charente-Maritime.  The sea fishermen and women of Marans sail 24 km (15 miles) to reach the Atlantic at the port of La Rochelle on the Atlantic coast. Marans is also famous for its wonderful fish and seafood, its excellent tasting Marans chicken and its place as France’s center for the herb Angelica.
 
Above all Marans is famous for its amazing chicken’s eggs.
     
The Marans chickens lay eggs with shells that vary from a light and speckled brown to a solid golden dark red brown.  Crack a Marans egg or order a boiled or poached Marans egg and you will be welcomed by a bright orange yolk. These are eggs you have to see to believe.  The eggs’  outer color looks very different, but all tests have shown that the inside the yolk and white are those of a regular chicken egg. Nevertheless, the Marans eggs aficionados claim the eggs have a distinctive taste and are considered easily digestible. Wherever you are and hear that Marans eggs are available I recommend going out of your way to try one, preferably a boiled egg; otherwise, ask to see your egg  before it is poached or fried; then you may enjoy the egg and its amazing shell.  A uniquely colored Marans' egg will never be forgotten.
  
   

The American Marans poultry farmers color chart.
The USA Marans chicken growers have nine recognized colors in the Maran’s eggs standard colors.
  
James Bond had a Marans egg for breakfast very morning.
  
In the early James Bond Movie: From Russia with Love” Bond is filmed enjoying his breakfast with his favorite, a boiled Marans egg. Apparently, every morning Bond had a single Marans egg boiled for exactly three minutes and twenty seconds. That was Bond in the early days.

The secret behind the colors of the Marans brown eggs (called extra-red by the Marans farmers) is the chickens' genes, not special foods or additives. Additionally, Marans eggs are mostly larger than those laid by other hens.
   
 
A Maran rooster (a cockerel) strutting his stuff.
Photograph courtesy of elysianfields

The Marans Chicken was created some two hundred years ago by crossing local chickens with imported fighting game roosters (cockerels) from Indonesia and India. Today the Marans chickens are a favorite at poultry shows and the roosters do not fight, they just strut. The Marans is a dual purpose fowl known both for its extremely dark eggs and its excellent meat qualities.  Now there are Marans' poultry farmers in the USA and the UK. You may visit Google or Bing for local suppliers of Marans eggs.

Wherever there are Marans eggs these dishes may be on the menu:

Brouillade d'Œufs de Marans à la Truffe Noire du Périgord -  A Brouillade of Marans eggs served with the black truffle of Perigord.  A brouillade is a Provencal take on scrambled eggs.  To make a brouillade the egg whites and yolks are beaten separately; they are only mixed while cooking. The result is a very light and airy version of scrambled eggs.   Most brouillades will be served with an additional ingredient, and here it is the very special, and expensive, black truffles from Perigord.  When ordering a dish like this, you will be paying a high price for scrambled eggs if there is little truffle in the dish.  Ask if the truffle can be added when the dish is served and not in the kitchen.  Caveat Emptor, I am warning you as I have had this dish which was served, as an entree, the French first course,  with just a few black specks; no truffle that could be seen or tasted.  There was little I could do as the Maitre D’ refused to add more truffle or even show me the truffle they used. What I and a friend who had ordered the same dish did was to pay my bill, take the ¾ full bottle of wine, and walk out. Unfortunately, most diners are unwilling to make such a statement of dissatisfaction and will just write the restaurant off for a second visit.   If you are very unhappy with the food or service in a restaurant let the staff know. .At the very least they should remove an unsuccessful dish from your bill. There was a happy ending to the story, we discovered a restaurant with an interesting menu about 600 meters away and had a wonderful meal there, albeit without the Brouillade.
    
     
Pappardelle and shavings from Perigord truffles.
That is a how a large addition of Perigord truffle may be seen.
Photograph courtesy of Edsel Little
https://www.flickr.com/photos/edsel_/6613819145/
   
L'Œuf de Marans Poché, Crème d'Oignons, Poêlée de Trompettes de la Mort -   A poached Marans egg served with cream of onions and lightly fried black chanterelle mushrooms, also called the black trumpet or horn of plenty mushroom.
 
L'Œuf de Marans, Burrata, Citron, Café et Champignons de Paris  - A Maran egg served with Burrata cheese flavored with lemon and coffee and served with button mushrooms. Burrata is a fresh Italian cheese made from mozzarella and cream; when the Burrata is sliced open, a spurt of thickened cream flows out. Here I imagine the cheese is being offered when mixed with coffee and lemon flavorings. Barratta on its own has a rich, buttery flavor.  The Barratta offered here is must be made in France as this is a fresh cheese that is best when eaten within 24 hours.
    

You can buy Marans' eggs in the USA
Photograph courtesy of George Wesley and Bonita Dannells
  
Mousse d'Asperges aux Œufs de Poule de Marans et d'Escargot An asparagus moose made with Marans eggs served with snails.
 
Œuf  Mollet de Poule de Marans et Son Crémeux d'Asperges Vertes -   A soft boiled Marans egg served with creamy green asparagus.

Œuf Pôché de Poule "Marans" aux Pleurotes  - A poached Marans eggs served with oyster mushrooms.
 
In addition to Marans’ famous eggs there is much more:
Consider the fresh fish and seafood restaurants and the herb angelica.

Marans is famous among the lovers of fresh fish and seafood.  They come from the coast and towns up to 50 km (32 miles) away to enjoy themselves in the town's many excellent fish and seafood restaurants.  These restaurants offer the widest choices that are straight off the boats.
   

A really good seafood restaurant’s offerings.
This photograph is not from Marans, but in Marans, there is at least one similar display.
Photograph courtesy of Jay Galvin
https://www.flickr.com/photos/jaygalvin/8314614128/
       
Marans and Angelica
     
To add to the fish, seafood, chickens and eggs the area around the town of Marans is the center for the herb Angelique, Angelica.  (Angelica is also called the Herbe des Anges, the Herb of the Angels).
       

A selection of Angelica products
Photograph courtesy of Niort Marais Poitevin Tourist Information Office
    
Angelica was brought to France by the Vikings and originally cultivated in their first large French settlement called Normandie, Normandy, (Normandie in old Norman French means “North Man’s Land” ). In French cuisine, the fresh leaves of Angelica may be added to salads, soups, fish dishes, vegetables dishes and fruit salads. Angelica will also be prepared candied, made into a confit, a jam (jelly), used in cakes and desserts and made into a liqueur. Angelica is also sold in French homeopathic pharmacies where they will suggest the herb for heartburn, intestinal gas, loss of appetite, arthritis, circulation problems and more. An Angelica tisane, a fusion or herbal tea may be offered in restaurants. N.B. The Vikings also imported their cows which developed into the Norman Cows so famous for their milk, butters, creme fraiche and cheeses that come from Normandy.
  
On a menu in Marans you may be offered an Angelica flavored dessert:

Croustillant de Fraises Gariguette à l'Angélique Confite Maison - Crisply cooked – Gariguette strawberries prepared with a home-made Angelique jam. Gariguette strawberries are a very tasty French strawberry that you will see fresh in the markets between April and May.
After the meal, for your digestif you may be offered The Angélique Eau-de-Vie which is a 40% alcohol liquor, made by macerating, steeping, the plant in Cognac. The best of these liquors is considered to be the Liqueur d'Angélique de Niort, from the town of Niort just 45 km (28 miles) away from Marans.
  
 
Fishing boats in Marans
Photograph courtesy of mariesophie Bock Digne
 
Where is Marans
  
Marans is in the department of Charente-Maritime, one of the four departments that until 31-12-2015 were part of the region of Poitou-Charentes and are the home of many excellent food products. These include most of France’s goat’s milk and many private branded goat’s cheeses as well as the Chabichou AOP goat’s milk cheese, superb melons and every bottle of Cognac sold anywhere in the world. To the agriculture, add some of France’s top rated oysters and excellent fish and seafood.  Poitou-Charentes, Limousin  and Aquitaine are included in the new super region of Nouvelle Aquitaine. Apart from wonderful foods, wines, Cognacs and cheeses there are hundreds of miles of open sandy beaches in Nouvelle Aquitaine. There are also managed beaches;where for a small or sometimes large contribution to the local economy, you may spend the day with private cabins, lounge chairs, umbrellas and hot and cold running food and drink merchants.
  
Marans and its canal.
   
As a fishing port, the Marans' fishing boats reach the Atlantic via the River Sèvre Niortais. In the 18th century, the port was also reached by the Canal de Marans à la Rochelle.  (That canal is no longer navigable but with its wonderful flora and fauna it is a great place for walking and picnicking). The canal was started in 1806, but only opened in 1875; that was just in time for the trains to arrive as well!   With the establishment of a local train service, the canal could not compete with the freight and passenger prices of the trains and quickly fell into disuse; the canal was closed after the Second World War.  
     
N.B. France reorganized its mainland administrative regions, which are somewhat similar to States in the USA and or Counties in the UK.  They hope, by so doing, to reduce excessive bureaucracy and administrative costs. Mainland France, which had 22 departments, now has 13. The change will not affect the foods in the regions, but for the visitor to France it may cause some confusion with local addresses in the short term.

Connected Posts:
 
 
    


 


  
   

  

 
 
 


   

 

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2016.

Saint Nectaire AOP - Saint Nectaire Cheese. Saint Nectaire is an AOP Cow's Milk Cheese from the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes.

                                                                

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

   

Sainte-Nectaire Cheese
https://www.flickr.com/photos/claveirole/6652778023/

      
The town of Saint Nectaire .

The small town of Saint Nectaire is in the department Puy-de-Dôme in the region of the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes.  The town was known as a spa in Roman times and today offers modern spa facilities, the ancient roman spa may be visited.  The cheese called Saint Nectaire is, obviously, named after the town, and has been produced since the 17th century. Some of the cheese is also produced over the departmental border in the department of Cantal.    

Saint Nectaire Cheese
 
The cheese is a 22.5% fat, cows’ milk cheese aged for at least 28 days for the original cheese and 21 days for the newer and smaller Petit-Saint-Nectaire.  Despite those ages being the legal minimums it takes four to five weeks to really age a Petit-Saint-Nectaire and six weeks to age a farm-made full-size cheese. Some cheeses will be aged for two to three months. The aging is of great importance since the matured Saint Nectaire is soft cheese  with little-ragged holes throughout; the cheese should be spreadable at room temperature   Better to buy a farm aged cheese in a Fromagerie, a cheese shop, than a dairy produced cheese that may have been placed too early on a supermarket shelf. A properly aged cheese has a soft, spreadable paste, of a creamy color with a hint of hazelnut and mushrooms and a memorable smell. The farm made cheeses are all made with unpasteurized milk; the dairies produce the cheese with pasteurized cheese and unpasteurized cheese for export. The pasteurized cheese may be taken into the USA. For information on buying cheese in France and taking it home, with all the French you will need, click here.
 
The cheese is made in two round-shaped sizes, the regular Saint-Nectaire weighs some 1800 gms (4 lbs) and the  “Petit-Saint-Nectaire”  weighs about 600 grams  (23 ounces).

The cheeses are washed regularly in salt water on rye straw mats on which the cheese ages. Depending on how old the cheese is, the rind can be white, brown or gray, and with orange, yellow, or red patches. If the cheese's rind has a uniform color, it may not be sold as a Saint-Nectaire cheese.

The Fermier,  farm produced cheeses are marked with a small oval label in a green frame and  a white square label marks the dairy, Laitier, cheeses. In 1996, an AOP, a Protected Designation of Origin (PDO)  rating was given to "Saint-Nectaire and later to the Petit-Saint-
Nectaire.
   
A Fermier Saint Nectaire

Photograph courtesy of  the Fromagerie "Les Alpages" Saint Nectaire


In Saint Nectaire there is a museum, which shows the history and the methods of production of Saint-Nectaire. It is called La Maison du Saint-Nectaire”, the House of Saint-Nectaire. Their website is in French but is easily translated and understood using the Bing or Google translation apps. The Museum is located in the village of Saint-Nectaire, on the main road to Murol
 
Saint Nectaire on French Menus
     
Fondue au St Nectaire, Jambon d'Auvergne et Saucisson, Salade Mêlée A  Saint-Nectaire cheese fondue accompanied by Auvergne cured ham, an  Auvergne sausage, and a mixed salad.  A traditional Auvergne sausage is a small salami type sausage, about 100 grams (3.5 oz), made with pork, pork fat and beef. When served in a dish like this the sausage is often grilled though it may be eaten cold.
   

The winter road to Saint Nectaire
Visiting is best done in the summer.
    
Les Poires au Saint Nectaire  - Pears served with Saint Nectaire.  This may be on a restaurant instead of a cheese plate which will include three or four different cheeses.

Tarte Chaude aux Pommes et Saint Nectaire  - Hot apple pie served with Saint-Nectaire.

Cœur de Ris de Veau Braisé Pomme Fondante au Saint Nectaire A center cut of braised veal sweetbreads  served with roast potatoes covered in Saint-Nectaire. (Your French-Engish travel dictionary may translate "fondante" as melted, but in French cuisine "fondante" also indicates roasted when mentioned with potatoes).
   

https://www.flickr.com/photos/jlastras/3240152124/
 
Pavé de Rumsteck au Saint Nectaire – A Rump steak prepared with Saint Nectaire. For ordering a steak cooked the way you prefer click here.
    

The small town and  the Church of Saint Nectaire.

The La Maison du Saint-Nectaire,  cheese is a neighbor.
 
The town of  Riom-ès-Montagnes, the home of the Auvergne’s Bleu d”Auvergne AOP cow’s milk strongly flavored blue cheese and the center for growing gentian plants in France is just 60 km (38 miles) from Saint Nectaire   The other AOP cheeses of the Auvergne are the Cantal AOP and Salers AOP,  both hard, yellow, cow’s milk cheeses and  the  Fourme d’Ambert  AOP, a blue veined, mild, cow’s milk cheese.  Apart from these five AOP rated cheeses, there are many other excellent cheeses in the Auvergne.  Among these other cheeses are some that are very tasty with unique methods of manufacture; however, alone that  is not enough for an AOP. These other cheeses either do not have a large enough production or enough years of inspection to apply for an AOP. While you are in the area I extol the pleasures that are found in many other local cheeses, AOP or no. The local Fromagerie may make recommendations and allow you to taste a sliver before buying.  For information on buying cheese in France and taking it home, with all the French you will need, click here.

Murol and Chambon-Sur-Lac are neighbors.

Just 5km away from Saint Nectaire are the towns that  are famous for the Murol or Murol du Grand Bérioux cheese.  The Murol or Murol du Grand Bérioux is a mild, creamy, 45% fat yellow cow’s milk cheese made from pasteurized cow’s milk; the cheese is matured for a minimum of five weeks before being sold. This is a relatively new cheese created in the 1930’s by a local cheese maker, Jules Bérioux; his name is still on many of the labels.  The cheese is produced in the area around the villages of Murol and Chambon sur Lac next to the beautiful Lake Chambon. As a new cheese, Murol du Grand Bérioux is less than 100 years old and probably to young to apply for an AOC!

Local English language websites:




Lac Chambon by Marc Chagall.
http://www.allposters.com/-st/Exclusive-Products-Posters_c99704_.html

Saint Nectaire,  Mural, and Chambon-sur-Lac are all close to the heart of the Regional Natural Volcano park of the Auvergne.  Close by is the highest dormant volcano in France: the Puy de Sancy 1,886 meters ( 1,17 miles) in height.  This is a huge park comprised of outstanding landscapes, fauna, and flora and some 80 extinct Volcanoes.
 
The park’s English language website is:



  

Inside the Volcano Park.
   
Dining in the Auvergne  will show a broad range of enjoyable and unique dishes for all tastes. Among the special dishes of the Auvergne is the Coq au Vin de Chanturgue – The original Coq au Vin. Most chefs accept that the original coq au vin was prepared with the Chanturgue AOC/AOP red wine of the Auvergne.  For more about ordering a traditional Coq au Vin see the post: Coq au Vin, the Traditional Version is Much More Than Just a Chicken Stewed in Wine.

Connected Posts:
   
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
                                                      
   

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2016.

Cigale de Mer – The Slipper Lobster. The Slipper Lobster on French Menus.

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

 
The slipper lobster
        
The Cigale de Mer,  Macietta or Chambri.
The slipper lobster.
  
In the area of Marseilles  the slipper lobsters are called chambri and there their tails will end up in a true Marseilles Bouillabaisse; in the area of Nice they are called macietta, and there their tails will probably be in a soup or served in a manner similar to one of the dishes noted below. 

Slipper lobsters are a whole family of short-clawed lobsters with a very distant relationship to the two-clawed lobster. The cigale de mer that are on many menus in the South of France are all caught in the Mediterranean; though most will not be caught by French fishers.  Most cigales are about 20cm (8”) in length or less and all the meat is in the tail, the “queue.”  The tail is the last third of the overall length, that’s about 7cm (3”). If a single small tail is served as the plat principal, the main course, you may be hungry.  Ask the waiter how the dish is served.

Cigale in your French-English travel dictionary.

Your French-English dictionary might translate cigale as a cicada, grasshopper or locust. However, worry not; the cigale de mer is nothing like a cicada, grasshopper or locust, neither in its looks nor in its feeding habits. French culinary tradition is full of names given to dishes and or their ingredients that have no connection at all to the real looks or  the formal name.  Slipper lobsters are fairly close to the rock lobster and spiny lobster family called the langouste in French. The rock and spiny lobsters are the owners of the tasty lobster tail.  The European two-clawed lobster, homard in French, is a far more distant family member.
   
Cigale de Mer – The small slipper lobster.
   
The slipper lobster tail and the rock lobster tail.
   
Slipper lobster tails are often prepared with recipes created for rock lobster tails. The meat of the Mediterranean slipper lobster’s tail is tasty, but they are smaller than rock lobster tails, often much smaller. They are also a little tougher than most rock lobster’s tails.

 Marseilles Bouillabaisse and the slipper lobster.
 
The most famous dish that includes the slipper lobster is the Marseilles Bouillabaisse.  This very special saffron and garlic fish stew dish is based on the rascasse, the scorpion fish, along with other fish cooked in a special fish stock and served along with a spicy, garlicky, thick, rouille sauce added by the diner to his or her taste. To preserve this traditional dish and expose many inaccurate additions a group of chefs and restaurateurs set out the Charter of the Bouillabaisse Marseillaise.
   
Bouillabaisse
https://www.flickr.com/photos/birdies-perch/407676260/  
       
In the Charter, the only authorized crustacean is the cigale de mer, the slipper lobster. Nevertheless, despite the charter, many restaurants that prepare Bouillabaisse today still add to the dish other crustaceans, fish, and seafood. Despite these restaurant's disrespect for tradition, you will not suffer if the additions are well prepared.
  
The slipper lobster on French menus:

Cigales de Mer aux Pâtes Fraiches – The meat from a slipper lobster tail served with fresh pasta.
 
Queues de Cigale de Mer Grillées – Grilled slipper lobster tails.
   
Queue de Cigale de Mer Rôtie au Beurre de Persil dans une Marinière de Coquillages aux Légumes  - A slipper lobster tail roasted in parsley butter and served with mussels  and vegetables prepared in the manner of a mariner.  In French culinary tradition, a dish prepared for a mariner will usually come with a white wine sauce. Other shellfish may also be included in this menu listing.  Ask.
    
Queues de Cigales de Mer Grillées, Sauce Tamarin et Lime -  Grilled slipper lobster  tails served with a sauce made from the tamarind, the fruit,  and lime juice.  (The tamarind fruit seen on French menus comes mostly from France’s Indian Ocean region of La Réunion). From the outside the tamarind is rather unattractive, to say the least. Nevertheless, inside, apart from the seeds the pulp is appreciated as a fruit juice and is also dried and used in tisanes, fruit teas, while for the commercial food industry the tamarind is a very important. The tamarind is used in the food industry for flavor with many other food products and is one of the ingredients of Worcestershire Sauce. 
   
The tamarind fruit.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/mmmavocado/4254551148/
      
Queue de Cigale Rôtie, Risotto  Safran et Croustillant de Kadaïf - Roasted slipper lobster tail, served with a saffron risotto and crispy Kadaïf. 
(Kadaïf is a pasta like vermicelli, those very thin pasta strands also called angels’ hair, made from wheat flour, corn starch, salt, and water. It is also called knafeh, konofa, and kadaïfia among many similar names. Kadaïf is seen all over North Africa and the Middle East as well as in Turkey and Greece and Albania.  Many different kadaïf pastries, both savory and sweet, are traditional.  The sweet pastries come with added sugar syrup and honey).
    
Shrimps, when cooked, have meat that will be white, pinkish or bluish-white and firm when cooked.  If it you are served a shrimp that is soft or pasty then it is not fresh; do not eat it. Send it back. Do not eat pasty shrimps unless they are being sold as fish paste! 
   
Queues de Cigales de Mer Sautées aux Cornes d’Abondance et Cresson  - Slipper lobster tails lightly fried with wild black trumpet mushrooms and watercress.
    
There are over ninety members of the slipper lobster found in warm waters all around the world.  The Cigale de Mer has been over-fished and has been protected in French waters since 1999.
   
Two Cigales de Mer, slipper lobsters.
 
    
The Cigale de Mer, the Mediterranean slipper lobster in the languages of France’s neighbors:
(Catalan - escil·làrids), (Dutch - scyllaridae),  (German –bärenkrebs), (Italian – cicala di mar or magnosella), (Spanish – esciláridos, santiaguiños).
     
Connected Posts:

 
  
  
  
  
  
   
     

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
Copyright 2010, 2016, 2024.

  

 

Responsive ad