Escargots - Snails. Snails in French Cuisine. How to Order Snails in France.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Snails
www.flickr.com/photos/jamingray/2714901432/

Enjoying the snail family.

Ordering snails in France should not be strange. If you like seafood that includes winkles, periwinkles, cockles, mussels, and conchs, etc.; they are all in the same family as snails, in fact, they are very close family members.

In France, and the French know a thing or two about good food, snails are considered to be among the tastiest members of their extended family.  The central and very obvious difference is that escargots grow on the land and not in the sea.


The Burgundy Snail                   The Blue Mussel
   Photograph courtesy of                              Photograph  courtesy of
        Mike Fleming                                                Bernt Rostad


What do snails taste like?

The meat of all the members of the snail and their seafood family members family is similar; however, when asked, I do not say they taste like chicken! The texture of snail meat is like that of their family members, think of mussels. The sauce and cooking method, exactly like many chicken dishes, may change the taste.
  
If you like mussels and or cockles, you will love snails, and if you have been to the Caribbean and enjoyed conchs you will love France's snails even more,

What did the Romans ever do for us?
Well, the Romans brought us edible snails.
         
The two snails on French menus have been natives of France, Germany, Spain, and the UK since the Roman’s brought their favorite Italian snacks with them 2,000 years ago. The Romans taught the French how to manage snail farms and also invented a method of creating artificial rain to make the snails and the snails’ favorite foods grow faster.

These same snails became natives of California during the gold rush days when immigrants from France, Italy, Germany and Spain imported them and raised them as food. Now, in the USA, these snails are farmed and sold to restaurants; however, in the wild, the descendants of the original snail immigrants are considered pests.

Snails in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan -caragols de terra ),  (Dutch -slakken), (German - schnecke), (Italian – lumache or conchiglia), (Spanish – caracoles).
    
Escargots à la Bourguignonne.
Snails in the manner of Burgundy.


Trying snails for the first time.

If you are reticent about trying snails, do not order a whole portion, snails are sold in dozens, and you may order just half-a-dozen in most restaurants. Ask.  Consider dipping your little toe in first, just to test the water, and for that, you do not even have to eat a snail.  Just like when you first ordered mussels order a small portion. In France when you order your first half portion of snails, order a demi-douzaine d'escargot, the smallest portion sold, of Escargots à la Bourguignonne, snails prepared in the manner of Burgundy.  Your order will bring you half a dozen snails cooked in the manner of Burgundy; France’s most famous recipe snail recipe.  The sauce in which the snails are prepared, and served, in this dish is half the enjoyment.  The snails are always cooked outside the shell so if you do not like the shell I am sure they will do the necessary, many bistros, in any case, serve snails without the shell.
  
Escargots
Served without their shells
A half dozen snails prepared in a garlic accented sauce.
www.flickr.com/photos/zombie/977463258/
   
For that first test take some of that excellent French bread on your table and dip it into the sauce that comes with the snails; just try the bread and the sauce alone, without the snails.  If you liked the bread and the sauce then, for your next test, try half a snail with the bread and the sauce. The combination of that excellent sauce with a tasty snail should be enough to have you hooked and already ordering another half-dozen snails to make up a whole portion.
  
While France has a number of edible land snails, only two are seen in the market, and on restaurant menus; they are farm-raised snails; you may also see organically certified snails on some menus. Snails may be served with a broad range of recipes, and all traditional restaurants or bistros will have at least one snail recipe on the menu.
 
Snails on French menus:

Cassolette de Scampis et Escargots à la Crème d'Ail - A very different dish to the traditional meat and poultry cassoulets from the south; in fact, there is no connection other than the name, none whatsoever.   Here the scampi, in French langoustine, the Dublin Bay Prawn will have been shelled and served with petit-gris snails cooked in a cream of garlic sauce.
  
Escargot a l’Alsacienne Snails in the manner of the Alsace. The snails will be cooked in the Alsatian white Riesling wine and served with snail butter. This dish will usually be prepared with the smaller petit-gris snail. The Alsace is an old region in the north-east of France that since 1-1-2016 together with the regions of Lorraine and the Champagne-Ardennes are part of the new super region of the Grand Est.
      
Escargot a l’Alsacienne
Snails in the manner of the Alsace.
 
Escargot à la Provencal – Snails served in the manner of Provence.  These will be the smaller petit-gris snails served in a fresh tomato sauce, flavored with garlicpepper, and parsley.
     
Escargots à la Bourguignonne – Snails in the manner of Burgundy. This is the most famous of all snail recipes. Snails prepared with herbs, especially parsley, cream and beurre d’escargots, snail butter. Snail butter is butter, garlicshallots and parsley with an occasional additional herb, in which the snails are cooked.  This sauce is a garlic flavored but is certainly not an overtly garlicky sauce; it is made with cold and crushed, but previously boiled garlic cloves, that significantly reduces garlic’s strength. Snail butter, by the way, does not and never did contain any snails; this special butter sauce will be used in many other dishes without snails.  In escargots à la Bourguignonne the snails are taken out of their shells, prepared, cooked, and then, optionally, replaced in their shells and lightly baked in the oven. This dish is about as close as you can get to snail heaven.
   
Escargots à la Bourguignonne.
www.flickr.com/photos/dionhinchcliffe/5460106962/
                           
Soupe d'Escargots – Snail soup; usually made with the petit-gris snail with a light garlic flavor.
         
Cassoulet d’Escargots –  There are many recipes for Cassoulet d”Escargot with most including butter, garlic, shallots, parsley, and crème fraiche. Some will include mushrooms and others different herbs. None of the recipes have any connection to the cassoulets made with pork, goose, and sausages.
   
Une Cassolette d'Escargots
A snail cassoulet.
www.flickr.com/photos/rc_fotos/6964737301/
                             
Salade d'Escargots de Vendée Bio et Andouille de Guéméné. - A salad of organically raised snails from the department of Vendée served with France's popular Andouille tripe sausages. The andouilles served here are reconsidered the top of the line Guémené Andouilles from Guémené-sur-Scorff in Brittany.  Andouille sausages are an acquired taste but one of France's favorites. The department of Vendée is in the region of the Pays-de-la-Loire and on France's Atlantic coast. Vendée is internationally famous for its bi-annual single-handed around the Vendée Globe world yacht race with upwards of 400 participants.

The snails on your menu will be one of the following:
                       
Escargot de Bourgogne, also called the Gros Blanc, Lunar or La Vignaiola - The Burgundy snail; also sometimes called the great white. These are the most expensive of the two snails that may be in contention. Burgundy snails have a striped yellow-brown meat and they may grow to about 4.5 cms; some may grow a little larger, but these snails are considered at their best when around 20 grams each.

The Burgundy snail in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan -  caragol de Borgonya ), (Dutch -  wijngaardslak  ), German - burgunder schnecke, gros bourgogne, gros blanc),   (Italian - vignaiola bianca , lumaca della Borgogna,  ), (Spanish - caracol romano), (Latin - helix pomatia ).
                      
Petit-gris, Luma,  Lumas, Chagriné, Carsaulada, Escargot Chagrine, La Zigrinata, and Cargouille  - The small gray snail or the common snail.  In France, petit-gris is the most popular snail as it is the least expensive. This snail also has many more local names than the few I have noted above; every area of France has snail farms and the names locally used for the petit-gris are traditional.  If the menu just says escargot, then the odds are that you are being offered the petit-gris. The petit-gris has brown-gray meat, and they are ready for the pot when they reach around 10 grams each.

The Petit-Gris snail in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan - caragol bover or caragol moro ), (Dutch - segrijnslak),(German - kleinen grauen ),  (Italian - la ligure, chiocciola zigrinata,  la piccola lumaca grigia,), (Spanish – caracol europeo marron, burgajo), (Latin - helix aspersa).
 
Only farmed snails will be on the menu.
                          
These ancient Roman comfort foods are today found in the wild all over Europe and North America, and I am sure that others are in the wild on other continents. Despite the obvious draw of tasty free food chefs do not cook wild snails; all the snails served in France are farmed.  Farming snails ensures that the food they are fed does not include any agricultural pesticides, and those may be found in wild snails. If you cook snails at home, then buy them canned or from a local snail farm that you can trust.

France does not farm enough snails for export.
They have to import to meet local demand.

Most North America’s snails come from local snail farms. Despite that, North American snail production it is still a growing industry and does not produce enough to meet the local demand.  East European and Chinses farmed snails are available canned.
           
Apart from many menus in West and Eastern Europe; snails are also part of the diet in most Central and South American countries.  The recipes for snails in Central and South America may have been influenced by the Conquistadors, but their consumption had begun much earlier, with local snail varieties.

Canned, large, tasty and chopped African snails
are on sale in French supermarkets.
      
In Africa, snails are also part of the local diet, and some very large snails are raised commercially. These large African snails may be seen when canned, precooked, and sold as chopped snails.  If the label doesn’t say Petit gris or Bourgogne, then the odds are that they will be one of those big, farmed, African snails. I have been told that these cheaper canned snails are used by some small restaurants in snail soups and by taste alone cannot be detected. 

Snail recipes

In the south of France, snails will often be barbecued at family get-togethers, especially in areas with Catalan influences.  In the north of France, snails may be on the menu as snail profiteroles, that is snails cooked, each in its own pastry casing, and served with sauce. When you begin to enjoy snails, which you will, a whole new world will open up. To see the most popular snail recipes just enter the words “recettes escargot” on Google or Bing and you will have hundreds to choose from.
 
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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2014, 2019
  

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Cabillaud - Cod, the Fish. Cabillaud is Fresh Cod, Morue is Rehydrated Cod. Cod on French Menus. Cod is the Most Popular Fish in France.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Atlantic Cod.
Photograph courtesy of the Norwegian Ministry of Fisheries and Coastal Affairs

  
Cabillaud - Fresh Cod.  
Also on French menus as Morue de l'Atlantique, Morue Fraîche, and Morue Franche. 

 
Morue - France’s very popular reconstituted, dried and salted cod. 
Also on French menus as Stockfish. 

        
Without any question, cod is France’s favorite fish.

      
French chefs do wonders with fresh cod's flavorful, white, flaky, meat which is at its best when lightly cooked.  Fresh cod will usually be simply served with a butter sauce, though sometimes a crème fraîche and white wine sauce may accompany fresh cod.
           


Cod in cider with Swiss chard and fried mussels.
Photograph courtesy of Arnold Gatilao
www.flickr.com/photos/arndog/5890401861
  

Fresh cod on French menus:     

     
Cabillaud aux Herbes –- Fresh cod cooked with herbs; usually cod cooked in this manner will be accompanied by a butter and wine sauce. Ask.
   
Cabillaud a la Provençal  Fresh cod in the manner of Provence. This will be fresh cod lightly fried in olive oil with tomatoes, garlic, onions, courgettes, zucchinis in the USA, aubergines, eggplants in the USA.
   


Fish and Chips
Deep-fried cod in a beer batter from a UK chippy.
Photograph courtesy of velkr0.
www.flickr.com/photos/velkr0/3605869754/

La Morue Fraîche Saisie à la Plancha  aux Herbes et Sucs de Jeunes Légumes –- Fresh cod very lightly fried/grilled on a hot, thick, iron sheet called a plancha. Here, the fresh cod is prepared with herbs and flavored with the juices pressed from young vegetables. Cooking with a plancha uses a tiny amount of oil and is popular all over Southern France; it is also claimed as their own by the Basque who call their plancha a planxa.
              
Aioli de Morue Fraîche, Legumes Croquants  - Fresh cod flavored with Provence’s famous garlic flavored mayonnaise accompanied by crispy and crunchy, but very lightly fried, vegetables.
      

  
Steamed black cod in salsa verde
Photograph courtesy of Gnawme

    
Dos de Cabillaud à la Crème d' Ail – A thick cut of cod served with a garlic flavored cream sauce.
   
Morue and or Stockfish
The recipes and history of dried and salted cod in France:
     
On menus, the French names Morue, without any additional name, or Stockfish indicates that the dish will be using the popular and traditional desalted and rehydrated dried salted cod.
   
In pre-refrigeration times dried and salted cod was a massive industry; it existed for hundreds of years, and in a smaller form still exists today. In many countries. other than France, the words used are baccala, bacalao or baclhau, while some countries the same or similar words are used for fresh cod; the confusion should not be too surprising considering the age of the industry.  In Italy, reconstituted cod is called stoccafisso; it is the key ingredient in that traditional, and much-loved dish, bacala' alla Vicentina, cod in the Venetian manner.
   
Until thirty or forty years ago the French really didn't bother with fresh cod; reconstituted and desalted cod was considered superior. Stockfish is one of the old Scandinavian names for this dried fish, and it was the Scandinavians who supplied France as they still do today. Dried salted cod was essential, and not just for long sea voyages; it was the only way to transport and conserve sea-fish in areas far from the sea.
   


Salted cod drying on racks in Iceland;
very similar to those of over 1,000 years ago.
Photograph courtesy of Thom Quine.
www.flickr.com/photos/quinet/3297973917/

  
To prepare dried salted cod for cooking requires experience and patience; it takes three or four days of soaking and changing the water to have the cod reconstituted.  Most French homes are pleased to let the fishmongers do this part of the work.

On your menu rehydrated and desalted cod may be in one of these dishes:
    
Piquillos Farcis à la Morue - Rehydrated cod stuffed with the famous, peeled and pickled red peppers from the Pay de Basque, the Basque country in South Western France. Piquillos peppers are sweet and tasty not spicy.
    

    
Piquillio peppers stuffed with goat's cheese.
Photograph courtesy of felicia.day
       

Accras de Morue - Reconstituted salt cod made into fritters and deep fried. This dish was brought to France from its Caribbean départements of Guadeloupe and Martinique; there it began as a recipe created by slaves. Until two hundred years ago these islands were France's primary suppliers of sugar and all the work was done by slaves the French settlers had imported from Africa. The slave’s most significant source of carbohydrates was imported salted and dried cod, and many of the same dishes are now 

Salade Tiède de Morue et Pommes de Terre –  A salad made with warm pieces of rehydrated and desalted cod and served with warm boiled potatoes.
  
Brandade de Morue –  One of the most popular traditional dishes made with re-hydrated and desalted salt.  There are many brandade-like recipes, under different names that will be on a French menu. In most of the recipes, the cod is prepared with garlic and olive oil and some recipes will add cream or milk; my personal favorite is a wonderful version made with mashed potatoes.
        


Deep fried Brandade de Morue.
Photograph courtesy of Arnold Gatilao
www.flickr.com/photos/arndog/4143118478/

      
For those who, like me, enjoy visiting food markets, Nîmes has an active and diverting food and fish market despite its relatively small size; unsurprisingly it is called Les Halles. The market serves both retail and wholesale customers, and it is right in the center of the town. From my own experience, the vendors are knowledgeable and most are helpful; but you need to get there before 12:00, then the begin to close for the day.     
   
Brandade de Merluche – Another favorite and traditional cod-family fish recipe created from re-hydrated, de-salted fish, and it is very similar to the brandade de morue. Here, another member of the cod family, merluche, also called lieu noir is on the menu; that is saithe or pollock in English.
    
Estoficado, Stoficado and or Stockfish à la Niçoise, (Estoco-fi à la Niçardo in Provençal).  One of the most famous cod dishes of Nice, the Mediterranean city so famous for its impact on Provencal and French cuisine. The olive oil used in this stew of rehydrated cod, tomatoes, potatoes, garlic, and Nice's olives will be Nice’s famous AOP olive oil.  
  
Estofinado – Another version of Estoficado, this one from the Midi-Pyrénées and the Auvergne made using walnut oil rather than olive oil.
 
The Scandinavians, or at the least the early inhabitants of Greenland, claim the discovery of North America from long before Columbus discovered Central and South America.  We know that they did discover North America because their fishermen and women left traces of temporary settlements on the North American coast close to their cod fishing grounds. These settlements were where the Greenlanders stayed for the winter when it was too cold and stormy for the long sea voyage home. On the sites of these temporary farms were also found traces of their traditional wood racks for drying cod; the same type of racks are still used today.
        
Apart from being a tasty fish cod, is and was a political fish; it is a fish that France and other countries have been to war over. Long before the oil producers and their excise of economic power, seafaring nations fought all over the world for the control of spices, and after spices came wars over fishing rights with conflicts over cod fishing rights leading the battle.
     

Part of the cod fishing fleet at Howth
Howth is a fishing village and an outer suburb of Dublin, Ireland.
Photograph courtesy of William Murphy
www.flickr.com/photos/infomatique/3872533045/


 
For an excellent read as well as insight into the effects of cod fishing on the world's economies, the problems of overfishing, and much more read “Cod ” a book by Mark Kurlansky. It is a unique insight into the history of this valuable fish. Penguin published the paperback edition I read.
   
The mystery of skrei in the Alsace.

Skrei is the Norwegian name for dehydrated and de-salted Atlantic cod, and I saw skrei as an entrée on a menu in a restaurant in Alsace, France. At that time, I had no idea what skrei was, and the chef-owner did not know any other name; he just said that this was a large dried and salted sea fish similar to morue, dried, and salted cod.

We had eaten in this restaurant before and enjoyed everything, so we tried the skrei, which also was excellent; it had been prepared in individual pastry casings and was and served with a sauce.   
    
At the table, the nearest fish that I could associate with the taste and texture was cod and I already knew that this was a cod family member. Through the internet and FishBase, I would find out that skrei was the Norwegian name for salted and dried cod, morue in French. Since then I have spent some fruitless moments considering how this Norwegian name arrived in Alsace when elsewhere in France the Scandinavian name stockfish was used. Why a Norwegian name? None of my musings come close to a logical answer. Does anyone have an idea of  how the name skrei came to the Alsace? 
 
Fresh cod in the languages of Frances neighbors:
   
(Catalan -  bacallà), (Dutch - kabeljauw), (German –- kabeljau, dorsch), (Italian -merluzzo bianco ),(Spanish  - bacalao, bacalao del Atlántico, bacallà).
    
Fresh cod in other languages:

(Chinese (Mandarin) - 大西洋鱈), (Danish - Almindelig torsk (Greek   - gados  ) (Dutch - kabeljauw), (Hebrew  –  shibut, shibbut zefoni, cod , bakala - בקלה), (Japanese – madara, tara), (Korean –대구- daegu),  (Norwegian – skrei), (Polish – dorsz), (Portuguese -  bacalhau), (Rumanian – cod). (Russian -  треска -  treska),  (Swedish - torsk),  (Tagalog - bakalaw), (Latin, Atlantic cod - gadus morhua).

Most of the translations for fresh cod in other languages have come from: FishBase Froese, R. and D. Pauly. Editors. 2013. FishBase and a few have come from Google Translate ©.
   
Huiles d'Olive Française - French Olive oils. Enjoying France's Best Olive Oils.

   

  
Why is the AOC becoming an AOP on French Foods, Wines and More?

  
Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
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Just add the word, words, or phrase that you are searching for to the words "Behind the French Menu" 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 400 articles that include over 3,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations. 
    

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010,2013, 2018.   

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