Basil - Basilic or Herbe Royal. Basil in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

   

Basilic or the  Herbe Royal  - Basil, or Sweet Basil.
Basil is also called Saint-Joseph's-wort, (NOT St John's-wort).
    
Basil is found in recipes all around the Mediterranean. There are many varieties of Basil available, and sweet basil with its uniquely pleasant taste and its smell of cloves makes it the most popular basil family member in Europe. Basil grows freely in the wild; nevertheless, most French chefs will be using the farmed variety in the country though the gatherers of wild mushrooms, ramasseurs, also gather wild herbs for those who appreciate their stronger taste and smell, and it is available in farmer’s markets.    Basil is used fresh in uncooked dishes where its flavor and aroma of cloves is important; also when basil is used in cooked dishes it must be added just before serving as cooked it quickly loses its flavor.
    
A wild basil flower.
www.flickr.com/photos/aecole/7756003178/
  
  
How Basil came to French cuisine.
  
Catherine De Medici, of Florence, married the French Prince Henry, (later King Henry II) and her royal entourage brought fruits, vegetables, new vines for grapes and recipes including those using Basil and other herbs; from then on Basil would become part of French cuisine. Basil originated in India and the variety we call sweet basil had reached France, before Catherine, when the Romans came to France more than one thousand years before. Sweet basil was a very important herb in Roman cuisine, and when Julius Caeser made France part of the Roman Empire in 52 BCE, they brought with everything they loved from home, and that included Basil and other herbs.  The trees they brought included figs, plums,  apples, pears, almonds, peaches, apricots, and cherries, while the vegetables included peas, celery, carrots, and asparagus. To ensure the wine would meet their tastes they brought new varieties of grapevines. Finally, to make sure their diet was like home they also brought along their favorite foods including snail farms with artificial rain to make the snails grow quicker, and the method of force-feeding geese for foie gras, fattened goose liver.  Of course, they brought many other unnecessary things such as roads and aqueducts, baths, and amphitheaters, so you may well ask what did the Romans ever do for France.

Italian pesto and the French pistou.

From listening to French chefs and looking at many recipes, it was clear to me that the only real difference in the recipes is in the spelling and pronunciation of the name.  The original pesto and pistou sauce recipes are exactly the same: finely crushed, fresh, sweet basil leaves with added garlic, salt, pepper, and virgin olive oil.  When later, newer versions of pesto and pistou were created they added pine-nuts and Parmesan cheese, with Gruyere cheese being a French option; though most French recipes also use Parmesan.
      
From looking at www.dictionary.com, you can see that words pistou and pesto both come from the same Latin word, pestare, meaning to grind or crush.  The crushing of fresh sweet basil leaves is, according to all the recipes the critical part in the preparation of a well-made pistou or pesto sauce.
   
Pestou or Pistou sauce?
www.flickr.com/photos/galant/1698712495/
    
Despite the paragraphs above indicating pesto's Italian origins when you do visit southern France, you will see that pistou is, by the locals, still considered a Provençal and or  Niçoise creation;  even though Nice was for hundreds of years, an Italian city.  Nice only became part of France 150 years ago, and when you visit Nice, you will see how Italian cuisine still influences many Niçoise recipes including the internationally famous Salade Nicoise.
       
Basil on the French menu.
       
The most popular basil variety in France is basilic, sweet basil, whether used for pistou or other dishes: however, basilic pourpre, purple basil, will be used for color, and also when a chef prefers its slightly sweeter clove aroma along with this herb's somewhat spicy flavor.
     
Your French menu may offer:
   
Carpaccio de Bœuf Parfumé au Pistou et Fleur de Sel Beef Carpaccio flavored with sauce pistou and fleur de sel.  Fleur de sel is a condiment made from mineral-enriched salt crystals that are hand-picked from drying sea salt.
  
Beef Carpaccio served with its traditional
mayonnaise-based sauce, basil, and Parmesan cheese shavings.
www.flickr.com/photos/fstorr/2095113099/
    
Coquilles Saint-Jacques Marinées à l'Huile d'Olive et au Citron, Pistou et Copeaux de Parmesan – King Scallops marinated in olive oillemon, pistou, and shavings of Parmesan cheese. In dishes like this one, the taste of olive oil used is tremendously important.

           
Filet d’Agneau, Émulsion de Courgettes au Basilic. – A lamb fillet served with a thick sauce made with courgettes, the USA zucchini, and basil. N.B. The French prefer their lamb rose, pink, and unlike steaks will rarely ask a diner how they would like their lamb cooked; if you want your lamb cooked a little more than rare tell the waiter!
  
Salade de Caprice.
The French take on the Italian Ensalata Caprese.
Tomatoes, Mozzarella cheese, baisl and olive oil.
Photograph courtesy of Alex Miranda 
www.flickr.com/photos/prunderground/7902422750/
    
Jambon de Parma et Tomates Cerises à l'Huile d'Olive Aromatisée au Basilic -  Cured Parma ham, prosciutto crudo, served with cherry tomatoes and flavored with olive oil and basil.
  
La soupe au Pistou.
www.flickr.com/photos/cuisinedemereenfille/2814599586/
    
Soupe au Pistou  - Pistou soup. A vegetable and noodle soup made with beans, onions, potatoes, tomatoes and vermicelli, angel hair pasta, to which pistou sauce will be added shortly before serving. Some versions of this soup are made with added smoked ham or lardons, salted or smoked bacon bits.
            
Despite the many Italian influences, there are also many uniquely French recipes that use basil, and basil is often on Provençal menus under its Occitan name Fabrego. Occitan is the language that lost out in the competition for a single language that would unite France; however, Occitan is still used or, at least well understood, alongside modern French, by many millions of French citizens.
   
The origin of the name Herbe Royale - The Royal Herb.
    
The second most popular French name for sweet basil is Herbe Royale, the royal herb; the origin of that name comes with many different traditions. The first tradition I heard relates to the Greek word basileus which means lord or the people’s leader. The most up to date tradition I have heard of connects basil to the mythical Basilisk, a serpent who could kill with a glance or a breath; shades of Harry Potter.
 
 Basilic Pourpre, Basilic Violet - Purple Basil
   
Purple basil
         
Sweet basil is grown in hothouses in the winter, and so it is available the year round. There are tens of different strains (cultivars) of Basil, and after Sweet Green Basil comes Purple Basil with its own group of cultivars.  Basilic Pourpre, Purple Basil is available fresh in France from March through May, and market gardeners also grow it in hothouses. Dried basil from both herbs are available in French supermarkets, but no chef would use dried basil as it has no flavor!
 
While Purple Basil adds a pleasant, slightly spicy flavor, along with its Basil signature aroma of cloves its primary use is decoration as together with green basil it adds color to a salad or other dish.
  
Wild fennel leaves with wild purslane, wild basil, and tomatoes.
www.flickr.com/photos/overthetuscanstove/14865715438/
 
Basil in French homeopathic medicine.    
Sweet basil is recommended as an anti-oxidant, a source of phosphorus and as an aid for indigestion.

Basilic or the  Herbe Royale - Basil, Common Basil or Sweet Basil in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan - alfàbrega), (Dutch - basilicum), (German - basilikum, basilienkraut), (Italian – basilico), (Spanish – albahaca), (Latin - ocimum basilicum).

Basilic Pourpre, Basilic Violet Purple Basil in the languages of France’s neighbors:
 
(Catalan - purpura alfàbrega), (Dutch - paarse basilicum). (German - dunkelrotes basilikum), (Italian- basilico viola), (Spanish – purpura albahaca), (Latin -  ocimum basilicum v. purpurascens)
    
Sacred Basil
    
When I have a question about herbs or spices one of the people I turn to is Gernot Katzer whose spice pages are a store of authoritative information with links to connected subjects.  The following paragraph relates to the original Basil called Sacred Basil or Tulsi.

Sacred Basil or Tulsi (ocimum tenuiflorum), is characterized by an intense sweet-camphoraceous fragrance.  In India, it is rarely used as a culinary herb, but it has a strong religious meaning, being sacred to Vishnu.  It is planted inside of Shiva temples, and many Hindus have a plant at the entry to their home, because of the herb’s auspicious connection with Lakshmi, the goddess of riches and good luck.
--------------------------------

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2013, 2014, 2019
 
--------------------------------

Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
French menus?
 
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Bordeaux and Bordelaise on the Menu, and Bordeaux AOC Wines on the Wine-List.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

    
Entrecôte Bordelaise à la Moelle
A rib-eye steak with Bordelaise sauce 
flavored with the addition of moelle, bone marrow.
  
Bordeaux is France’s 9th largest city and the largest port on France’s southern Atlantic coast. Bordeaux is also a beautiful city with some 50% of the old city center a UNESCO world heritage site.
         
The city is the center for much of South-Western France’s finest cuisine.  Bordeaux is home to the most important collection of famous wines in the world.  The term.…à la Bordelaise indicates dishes made in the style of the people of Bordeaux, that means with local ingredients but not necessarily wine.  BTW the locals are also called Bordelaise. 

  
 Chaban Delmas Bridge over the Garonne River in Bordeaux.
Delmas was mayor of Bordeaux from 1947 to 1995 and Prime Minister 1969 to 1972.
www.flickr.com/photos/xavier33300/8852056012/

One or more of Bordeaux’s favorite and or traditional dishes will be on all local menus as well as the menus of most French restaurants around the world. The first vineyards were planted in Bordeaux when the Romans colonized France beginning in 50 B.C.E.  The vines and their reputation grew, and so did Bordeaux.  Then, in 1152 Eléonore of Aquitaine (the ex-Queen of France) married Prince Henry Plantagenet and in 1154 the two became King and Queen of England and nearly half of France.  From then on for three-hundred years Bordeaux’s importance grew and grew, mostly because of the wine trade with England, with the English consuming far more wine than the French.  However, the beautiful old city of Bordeaux that you will see today came with the immense changes of the 18th century.     
  
The inside of the Cathédrale Saint-André, Bordeaux.
www.flickr.com/photos/jrthibault/8221174461/
 
Your menu in Bordeaux may offer:

Cèpes à la Bordelaise – Cèpes, porcini mushrooms, from Bordeaux’s pine forests fried in butter with shallots, garlic, and parsley.
   
Cèpes – French Porcini mushrooms.
www.flickr.com/photos/pocarles/5114864204/
  
Entrecôte Bordelaise – Entrecote in the manner of Bordeaux.  One of the most fabulous steak dishes in France and for that matter anywhere.  A grilled rib-eye steak will be served with a Sauce Bordelaise.  Sauce Bordelaise is made with veal stock, a Bordeaux red wine, butter, shallots, and herbs.  
   
   

A Bordeaux Wine Chateau.
The Château Pichon Longueville Baron, home to a Pauillac red wine.
 
Lamproie à la Bordelaise –  Lamprey in the manner of Bordeaux.  A stew of lamprey, which is a rather odd a fresh-water and seawater creature that is, in fact, neither fish nor eel.  The stew includes red Bordeaux wine, leeksonions, butterolive oil and depending on the chef either bacon or ham.  This is a dish that, unfortunately, is seen less and less; the lamprey must be carefully skinned, and many chefs do not have the trained staff for this traditional dish.  Look for Lamproie à la Bordelaise from February through April when the lampreys are caught as they swim along the rivers Dordogne and Garonne to the Atlantic on their annual migration.
   
Pavé de Filet de Bœuf  Bazas – A thick fillet, filet mignon, tenderloin, steak from the Bœuf de Bazas IGP,  also called the Bœuf Bazadaise Label Rouge, from the Bordeaux region and one of the best beef cattle in France.
       

Rouget de Méditerranée Sauté Bordelaise – Red Mullet from the Mediterranean Sea prepared in the manner of Bordeaux.  Here, the red mullet will be lightly fried with a white Bordeaux wine.

Cannelé de Bordeaux or Cannelé Bordelais - A traditional single-serving sponge cake from Bordeaux.  The Cannelé (or Canelé) began a few hundred years ago as a street snack and since then has graduated to a dessert served in fine restaurants.  Of importance is its corrugated shape and cinnamon accent.  In some Bordeaux restaurants, it will be served flambé though that seems to have been created for the tourists.
  
A Cannelé de Bordeaux
www.flickr.com/photos/edsel_/24698888113

Carré d'Agneau de Pauillac – A rack of lamb from the label rouge, red label, rated lambs raised along the Bordeaux meadows close to the coast of the wine-growing region of Pauillac. If you are in the area on the last Sunday in May consider joining in the Fête de l'Agneau de Pauillac; the Fete of Pauillac lambs, held on the Sunday before Whit Monday.  The dates for this holiday are linked to the March equinox, which falls on the 19th, 20th, or 21st of March, and so like many historical Christian holidays, the dates move around every year. Whit Monday is, today, a secularized national holiday and the French Government Tourist office will give you this year's exact dates. At the fete, apart from enjoying many dishes in local restaurants dedicated to their uniquely tasty lamb, you may watch sheepdog trials and taste the famous wines of Pauillac. Apart from their taste to earn their red label, the lambs are raised by their mothers until weaned, and they grow free of antibiotics and growth hormones. 
  
A quay in Bordeaux Harbour
Quai Louis XVIII,
Originally built for shipping barrels of wine to the Bercy wine market in Paris.
www.flickr.com/photos/jacme31/4133973889/

Bordeaux Wines

Bordeaux has a long and respected history; it was an important trading center and port long before the Romans came, with their vines, to establish the Bordeaux vineyards 2,000 years ago.  

Now Bordeaux is the most famous wine-growing region in the world with the wines labeled Bordeaux AOC/AOPrepresenting 25% of all of France’s AOC wines. According to the experts, the enormous diversity in the region’s soil and its many local micro-climates allowed for the creation of exceptional and distinctly different wines within relatively small areas.  The wines of Bordeaux have always been copied by the world’s vintners; even the shape of the Bordeaux wine bottles are used in every wine-growing region, in the world.
   
There are over 6,000 different Châteaux in Bordeaux and some may be visited, the local Tourist Information Office will provide the details. Additionally, you do need an up-to-date wine book or a real expert to tell you what each year from each Chateau is good value; an attractive label is not enough.  Be aware that if you see a four-year-old or an even older Bordeaux wine in a French supermarket or wine shop at a low price, leave it. Just as there are no free lunches, so there are no cheap and good, old Bordeaux wines.  The professionals and those with up-to-date books will have snapped up all the bargains long before you or I arrive.

The Bordeaux vineyards have, I believe, 57 different AOC appellations. That means 57 different types of wine, slightly less than Heinz actually has products. Thankfully, restaurant wine-lists are not divided into 57 different sections for Bordeaux wines. Instead, wine-lists will show Bordeaux wines in groups. The groups are based on the wine-growing regions, the types of wines and, of course, what the restaurant has in stock.
   
Baron Philippe de Rothschild Bordeaux Blanc AC
The high-shouldered bottle used for red and white Bordeaux wines is copied around the world.
For the wine and Champagne bottle shapes of France click here.
www.flickr.com/photos/farehamwine/16430259326/
     
The most well-known of the many Bordeaux wines:  

Graves: reds and white with dry and semi-dry white wines as well as some dessert wines.
Margaux: red wines.
Médoc and Haute Médoc: red wines.
Pauillac:  red wines.     
Pomerol: red wines.
St. Emilion: red wines.
Sauternes and Barsa: sweet white wines.
St. Julien: red wines.
St. Estephe: reds wines. 
Crémant-de-Bordeaux: The sparkling white and rosé Crémants-de-Bordeaux AOC wines come from vintners in the Gironde part of Bordeaux. 
   
Château Mouton Rothschild, a Pauillac wine.
For the meanings behind France’s new wine labels click here.
www.flickr.com/photos/chriscruises/13454921714/
   
Visit the area, see the towns and villages, visit a Bordeaux chateau, meet the people and enjoy their wines, local cuisine and, of course, the countryside.  Look out for the villages of St-Emilion, Pomerol, Médoc, Haut-Médoc, Graves, Sauterne and others who gave their names to some of the world’s greatest wines.  

The market square in the village of St.Emilion, Bordeaux.
www.flickr.com/photos/sangre-la/2286722800
   
The French Government Tourist Information Offices are dotted all over the Bordeaux wine region.   They provide maps with different Routes de Vin, wine trails. Bordeaux Châteaux that are open and offer wine tastings, and, of course, the addresses of local restaurants. Caveat emptor the wine tastings require a contribution to the local economy.

If you are in Bordeaux and do not know which wine to choose, consider the generally good, and relatively inexpensive,  IGP Atlantique wines.  These were previously called the Vin de Pays de l’Atlantique, and there are reds, rosés, and whites. These are wines from the Bordeaux area that many smaller restaurants choose as their house wines; they are often a better choice than an expensive bottle of something unknown. Order a glass of the house wine before buying a whole carafe or bottle.

A beach in Bordeaux.


When you need a break from wines and wineries consider a day at the nearby sandy beaches of Pyla-sur-Mer. They are just 35 km (22 miles) and a little over half an hour by car or train from Bordeaux. Pyla-sur-Mer has excellent hotels, B and B’s, restaurants, and tens of kilometers of sandy beaches; this is where the French go in the summer.
     
Pylas-sur-Mer
www.flickr.com/photos/caccamo/3861530244/
     
If you wish to explore beaches and oyster farms as well then look for hotels in the Bassin d'Arcachon, the Bay of Arcachon. The Bay of Arcachon is famous for its oyster farms which you may visit and sample the local production.  It is a 45-minute drive from Bordeaux outside the rush hour. For the background to the oyster world click here and for how to order oysters by weight click here.
    
A plate of oysters from Arcachon
www.flickr.com/photos/einalem/4962414573/
          
--------------------------------

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2013, 2018, 2019
 
--------------------------------

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

you are searching for to the words "Behind the French Menu" (best when including the inverted commas), and search with Google, Bing, or another browser.  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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