Bio or Biologique. Aliments Biologiques, Produits Biologiques AB - Organic Food and Wine in France.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Agriculture Biologique – Organic Agriculture.
When in France and looking for organic produce watch for the AB label.
 
Organic wines, meats, vegetables, milk, cheeses and more are all available in France, and there are many organic restaurants. The initials AB identify Agriculture Biologique, and it is France’s most respected green organic label.
   


Colombard Vin Bio, Côtes de Gascogne
RÉSERVE NATURELLE 2016.
 
All produce and products bearing the label AB will have been controlled at many stages, and they will have met a host of stringent requirements.  All produce bearing the logo AB will have been grown and or produced without synthetic pesticides, insecticides or genetically modified seeds. Animals will only have eaten or been fed organic feed, and none will have been injected with antibiotics or growth hormones, etc. Organic vineyards are found in some of France's most famous wine producing regions and the sales of organic wines are increasing by over 10% per year. 

Many restaurants offer individual organic dishes or dishes made with organic eggs, but there are hundreds of entirely organic restaurants in France.  Just Google “Restaurants bio France” and you will find tens of guides including:
 
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Whole grain organic rye bread
              
The AB label, introduced by the French government in 1985 is well regulated and supervised; it is trusted, and it will be the initials for the organically produced foods that one sees most often.  (N.B. In France, as in other in other countries, organic farming regulations do not seriously attempt to regulate for better living conditions for farm animals).
  


Organic eggs.
          
In the USA processed foods may be labeled 100% organic if 95% of the contents are organic, the 5% left comes from a shrinking list of items that are not yet available organically. In France, unlike in the USA, no synthetic products at all are permitted in that 5%.  There is no control for saltwater fish and or seafood caught in the wild, as no one can control what your oyster or fish fillet had for lunch, but organic freshwater trout and sea farmed fish are on restaurant menus and in the supermarkets.
   

Organic shrimps
                    
The French organic farming industry may lag somewhat behind some other countries in Europe, but it is growing. Over 4% of all farmland is now used for organic products; the organically raised beef cattle industry show numbers rising by 15- 20% a year and the number of organic fish farms are also growing.

The taxpayer’s Euros are involved as the government subsidizes farms that switch to organically raised crops and animals; the government also supports farms that use organic solutions to groundwater pollution problems.
                

Miel De France Lavander Bio Honey.

Local associations such as AgroBio Périgord in the Dordogne and the Association de l'Agriculture Biologique de Picardie are two of the many local associations and organizations that work together with the government-managed Agriculture Biologique.


The Common Market organic foodstuffs label.
This green leaf label with 12 stars covers organic products from among its 28 members
  


Other labels mark vegetarian, vegan, lactose-free and gluten-free products.

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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2016, 2018
.

The Abundance of Sauces in French Cuisine. Sauces I.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

 

                            
L’Angleterre a deux sauces et trois cents religions; la France au contraire, a deux religions, mais plus de trois cents sauces.
                

The English have two sauces and three hundred religions, while on the other hand France has two religions and more than three hundred sauces.


              

        Talleyrand:  Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord, Prince Benevento (1754- 1838). 

 


        Talleyrand:  the consummate French politician

                   

    Talleyrand was  France’s first internationally famous politician.  As a Minister Talleyrand served Louis XVI, but quietly supported the revolution even while he continued to serve the king; he also took part in writing the French Declaration of the Rights of Man. Talleyrand was the politician who served all masters, and after the revolution Talleyrand served Napoleon I as Foreign Minister and then, with the return of the monarchy, would serve King Louis XVIII and King Louis-Philippe (Philippe Égalité). 


 

    Among those he hired to control his kitchen was Antonin, Marie-Antoine Carême, the French chef who would later write done for posterity the laws for the preparation of France's Haute Cuisine. Talleyrand was one of the first politicians to use a finely prepared dinner table with unique dishes and fine wines for political maneuvering.

 

 

The Place of Sauces in French Cuisine.

 

    This short post introduces the place of sauces in French cuisine, and that includes their place in the French culinary psyche.  The French consider a wide variety of sauces, though, today, far less than three hundred, an integral part of its cuisine. The sauces of France, for the French diner are an essential part of good dining.   Future posts will include the sauces that are that integral part of modern French cuisine, even if some of those sauces are two-hundred or more years old.

 

Connected Posts:

Sauce Béchamel and the Marquis de Béchamel.




 

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2013, 2014


 

 

  

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