Montmorency Cherries on French Menus. Montmorency, the Village Near Paris loved by Camille Pissarro and Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

     
Montmorency cherries.

www.flickr.com/photos/152376767@N03/35211992024/

The Cerise or Griotte de Montmorency
 
Montmorency in the 1800s was a small village near Paris, and the cherries from its orchards brought it fame in all French kitchens.  French and other menus around the world still have Montmorency cherries as part of many dishes. These small, slightly sour, but uniquely tasty cherries may be part of an hors-d'oeuvre, an entree, the French starter, or be in the sauce for the main course or dessert.  In many desserts and pastries, Montmorency is the cherry of choice. 
   

Montmorency Cherry Blossom.
 
The cherry orchards that were all around the village of Montmorency have long gone.  Montmorency today is a bedroom suburb of Paris with 20,000 inhabitants.  There are only a few cherry trees left in Montmorency, but their cuttings are now grown all over the world. Montmorency cherries are by far the most popular sour cherry in North America. French Kirsch, the cherry liquor, comes from many places and the cherry of choice is the Montmorency. (Other sour cherries may be on French menus as griottes).

Montmorency cherries on your French Menus:
 
Confiture de Cerises de Montmorency – Montmorency cherry jam.
 
Clafoutis aux Cerises de Montmorency  - Clafoutis is a cherry tart that originated in the region of Limousine that is now part of the new super region of Nouvelle Aquitaine. Clafoutis are made in a crepe-like batter and now made with other fruits and ingredients. (Clafoutis is pronounced clafouti).
 
Crème Brûlée Montmorency  -  Crème brulée flavored with Montmorency cherries.
   
Grenadin de Porc Montmorency -   A grenadin is a thick cut from the leg of pork or veal. This cut is usually barded, wrapped in strips of fat, usually bacon, while being cooked. Barding keeps the meat from drying out. Here the Montmorency cherries will flavor the pork and be served alongside.

Magret de Canard Montmorency - Duck breast fried with Montmorency cherries.
  
Gateau Forêt Noire aux Cerises de Montmorency –   A Black Forest Gateau is an incredibly rich cake of German origins, but very popular in France.  The cake is a layered chocolate cake made with few, but rich, ingredients:   Fresh Montmorency cherries, chocolate, butter, cream, kirsch, vanilla, and whipped cream. On the outside, the cake is covered with chocolate shavings and topped with more Montmorency cherries and cream.
  
Gâteau Foret Noire.

   

Guignolet Kirsch

The Village of Montmorency
and the two men who made it famous
 
The village was famous in France for its cherries, but what made the village internationally famous was the work of two people. The first was Jean-Jaques Rousseau (1712 – 1778), the writer and philosopher who lived and wrote most of his works in Montmorency.  The second, but no less important was Camille Pissarro (1830 – 1903) who lived in a village nearby.  Pissarro with other artists made the village of Montmorency famous with their paintings of its cherry and chestnut orchards.
   

Picnic at Montmorency
Camille Pissarro
  
The little village of L'Hermitage, near to Montmorency, was where Pissarro made his home for quite a number of years, but that village has also long gone.  The village was just below the town of Pontoise which looked out over the River Oise.  You may see Pissarro’s oil painting of The Village of L'Hermitage as it was in 1867 at the Guggenheim Museum, NY.

In Montmorency, there is a Musee de Jean-Jaques Rousseau. It is closed on Sundays and open on Mondays through Saturday from 14:00 (2.00pm) through 18:00 (6:00p). It has a French Language website. Google and Bing translate will help with checking the opening times.

   

Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Photograph courtesy of Renaud Camus

Officially, Montmorency is not part of Paris. Despite it being just 14 km (9 miles) as the crow flies from the center of Paris, a bus or car takes close to one hour, and there is no train.
     
The town of Pontoise had some 5,000 inhabitants when Pissarro lived nearby. Since then Pontoise has changed radically.  In the 1960's Pontoise, became the large planned new town of Cergy-Pontoise. Cergy-Pontoise today has only one thing left to remind us of Camille Pissarro, and that is its small Musée Camille Pissarro, the Camille Pissarro museum.

The Museum is open from Wednesdays through Sunday from 14:00 (2.00pm) through 18:00 (6.00pm).  However, as with all French museums, check the times. The museum has a page on the Pointoise town's French-language website as the Musée Camille Pissarro. Google and Bing translate apps make reading it straightforward.


The Pissarro museum has some drawings and other works by Pissarro, along with a number of works by Camille Pissarro's contemporaries. The museum has only one Pissarro oil.
  
Cergy-Pontoise is  20 km (13 miles)  from the center of Paris. On the RER C railroad, it is a 20-minute ride. The bedroom suburb of Montmorency and the town of Cergy-Pontoise are both in the department of Val-d'Oise in the region of Ile de France. N.B.: Cergy-Pontoise has little else for visitors. Its population of 200,000 people has high unemployment and a high crime rate.
   
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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright: 2010, 2012, 2015, 2017.

Clairette de Die AOP; A Sparkling Wine far Older than Champagne.

 

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

  
    
   
Clairette de Die AOP   The oldest sparkling wine in France.
  
Clairette de Die AOP is far older than Champagne.  It is a lightly-sparkling wine produced in the department of Drôme in the region of the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes in the Rhone Valley. The local's claims of its 2,000-year-old pedigree may be slightly exaggerated; nevertheless, this pétillant, a lightly sparkling wine, may have been produced here for over 1,000 years. Originally, this wine had, unlike Champagne, had only a single fermentation, however, in 1925 the Champagne style bottle was added, and so was a second fermentation. 

N.B. Competing with Clairette de Die for the title of the oldest sparkling wine is the Blanquette de Limoux. That wine comes from the former region of Languedoc in  Occitanie and will require a separate post.
   
A Clairette de Die Cuvée Impériale.
www.flickr.com/photos/jamesonfink/8459298012/
  
Clairette de Die AOP is a light and fruity wine best drunk when it is very young, mostly under two-years of age, and served very cold.  While the traditional Clairette de Die AOP is a demi-sec, sweet.  Brut, drier versions and doux, very very sweet versions are now available, and both are inexpensive.  In a wine shop in Saint Etienne, a town where an uncle of mine used to live, I saw these wines on sale with prices below ten Euros per 750cl bottle.  I also saw organic versions of the same wine for similar prices.  In local, unassuming, but good restaurants you can expect to pay up to eighteen or twenty Euros for a bottle.


 You will not find the Clairette de Die AOP in the airport duty-free. 
So stock up when you can.



Clairette de Die rosée


In honor of this wine's age and unique method of production, it is legally labeled as using the 'Méthode Dioise Ancestrale', the Diose Ancestral Method. The original production method is different from that used in other sparkling wines, including Champagnes and Cremants. The Clairette de Die AOP is unique, not only as a sparkling wine, with its claimed 1,000 or 2,000 years of history; it is part of France's wine heritage.
   
à votre santé – cheers !
www.flickr.com/photos/kathryn-wright/16103461621/
   
Look at the end of the posts on Cremants or Champagnes for more information on the degree of sweetness on sparkling wine labels; they are very different from those for still wines.


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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2014, 2015, 2019.
 
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