Aligot on a French Menu. What’s That?

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

  


Aligot being prepared for an outdoor party
Only when the potatoes and cheese can be drawn into long strands is the Aligot ready.
Photograph courtesy of E
www.flickr.com/photos/anduze-traveller/418718534/

Aligot is a beautiful, mashed potato and cheese dish that I'll always try and order when visiting a restaurant where it is a specialty. Versions of Aligot are made in the department of Cantal in the Auvergne - Rhône-Alpes where locally, they use a young Cantal AOP cheese or a local tomme. Over the border in the region of Occitanie in Aveyron's department, the cheese will be a young Laguiole AOP cheese. In contrast, in the department of Lozère, they use all the cheeses mentioned above as they are also made locally.

 Added to the cheese and mashed potatoes in an Aligot are garlic, crème fraîchemilk and butter. This combination is carefully stirred until long threads of cheese and potato may be drawn from the pot. From personal experience on a cold winter's evening, after forty minutes in the freezing cold, while looking for a taxi and no time for lunch, the smell alone can be mistaken for the ambrosia of the gods. The thought of the mashed potatoes and an excellent cheese with all the additions make my mouth water as I write this.   

Aligot will be served, in private homes, with sausages. Usually, local, small, salami type, grilled, pork sausages, though that is not written in stone. Restaurants that offer Aligot on their menus may also offer sausages, but they often upgrade their menus by offering duck, roast beef, or lamb.


Aligot in a restaurant.
Photograph courtesy of Omid Tavalla
www.flickr.com/photos/tavallai/5850019237/

The original recipe is fiercely claimed by the three departments noted above; success has many fathers and mothers. The locals will tell you that all the claims and counterclaims have been going on for five hundred years, although until the second half of the 17th century, most of France thought potatoes were toxic. At one time, there was even a French law that banned eating potatoes! Despite the arguments about Aligot's origins in the restaurants that I have visited, all the diners argue about is which cheese is best.

If you do care about where Aligot was first made, first look at a map of France; on the map, you will see that the three departments with the most persuasive claims to the original recipe are neighbors. Tasty recipes quickly travel, and so I give them all a tie for first place. Despite that, I may be refused entry to Cantal, Aveyron, and Lozère for saying so, but I have enjoyed excellent Aligots outside these areas as well.

Aligot on French menus:

  

Mercredis Aligot Soir  – This is restaurant menu shorthand advising regular customers that Aligot is offered every Wednesday evening. Aligot began as a festive dish, which locally it still is. Therefore, some local restaurants will have it on the menu once a week so revelers can book ahead.

     

Aligot d'Auvergne Saucisse et Salade de Printemps – Auvergne Aligot served with an Auvergne Sausage and a spring salad. The traditional Auvergne sausage is a small salami type sausage, about 100 grams (3.5 oz), made with pork, pork fat, and beef; it is usually grilled when served with Aligot. When this sausage is not served with Aligot, it may be eaten uncooked like any salami type sausage. The spring salad accompanying the Aligot and sausage on the menu will include young salad leaves, sprouts, young vegetable shoots, and often include mache, lamb’s lettuce, France’s favorite salad green.

 

Aligot in a restaurant.

Photograph courtesy of Christian MANGE

www.flickr.com/photos/23149310@N06/9831497313/

   

L'Aligot avec le Gigot d'Agneau de LozèreAligot served with roast leg of lamb from the department of Lozère. A roasted leg of lamb is enough for four, possibly more, so you will be offered slices. Lamb in France is preferred rosé, pink, and unlike a steak, you will rarely be asked how you would like your lamb served. While I prefer my lamb in the French manner that is rosé, if you want your lamb cooked differently, advise your waiter when you order. (Well done is bien cuit, pronounced bien kwee).

  

The lambs of Lozère are highly rated and are raised naturally by their mothers in the Cevennes National Park; these lambs will be on local menus from June through November.

 

A nice serving of Aligot.

Photograph courtesy of subberculture

https://www.flickr.com/photos/photojoy/247508360/sizes/m/

 

Filet de Bœuf, Purée d'Ail, Aligot au Bleu Vercors-Sassenage AOP – A cut from the tenderloin, the beef fillet, served with a garlic potato puree and Aligot made with the blue Vercors-Sassenage AOP cheese, a change from the traditional yellow cheeses used. Vercors-Sassenage is a 50% fat cow's milk cheese made with pasteurized milk. It is mild for a blue cheese with a sweet and slightly nutty taste. The cheese is aged for a minimum of 21 days before being sold. Bleu de Sassenage had nearly disappeared until a dairy in Grenoble in the region of the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes began producing it for cheese lovers and brought it back to the market some 50 years ago. 

  

Most of the farm-made versions of Vercors-Sassenage are now made within the Natural Regional Park of Vercors' boundaries. The park is set within the departments of Isère and Drôme in the region of Auvergne - Rhône-Alpes.

The park's website is in French only, but the Bing or Google or other translate apps are easily understood.

http://parc-du-vercors.fr/fr_FR/index.php

More about France's fears that potatoes were poisonous.

Many European countries initially considered potatoes toxic as the leaves of potatoes, and its flowers are, in fact, dangerous to your health when eaten. N.B. Old potatoes that have turned green are also toxic. In the early 15th century, how to differentiate between potatoes leaves, and the potato itself was not well understood. Then, in France, along came a pharmacist called Antoine-Augustin Parmentier (1737 – 1813). Through Parmentier's promotion of potatoes, he saved tens of thousands of peasants from dying from starvation during the French crop failures in 1780. Today, any dish on a French menu with Parmentier in its name is a potato dish, and there are quite a few. Without Parmentier, we would also have no Aligot and no French Fries.

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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010 2013, 2016, 2020 

For information on the unpublished book behind this blog, contact Bryan Newman.
at
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com
 

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Truite - Trout, the Fish. Trout in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Brown trout
www.flickr.com/photos/usfwsmtnprairie/40140050611/
  
Trout will be on many menus in France, not just that of specialist fish restaurants; even that small restaurant on the corner may have trout on the menu once a week. France's extensive river systems allow lake and riverside restaurants the opportunity to put wild brown trout on their menus regularly. Farmed rainbow trout, Truite Arc-en-Ciel, maybe on any local restaurant's menu every day. Do not allow the opportunity to enjoy the way France prepares trout to pass you by.
 
Trout are related to salmon, but despite that relationship, they are mostly a very different tasting fish. Certainly, all the smaller trout have tastes and textures that are decidedly different from salmon.

These smaller members of the trout family are often at their best when simply fried or grilled, though French chefs will delight in showing a wide variety of recipes. Large trout may be prepared with dishes created for salmon, and while most trout have ivory-colored flesh salmon trout and some farmed trout are pink.  The pink color of both wild and farmed trout is a result of their eating habits.


This post includes the trout that are most often seen on French menus. Other, rarer, wild trout may occasionally be offered, and then you may have a special treat.
     
Truite Arc-en-ciel
Rainbow trout or Steelhead trout
    
Wild rainbow trout
  
Rainbow or Steelhead trout are also called Kamloops trout, Salmon trout, Summer Salmon and Coast Angel Trout. (Caveat: This trout is sometimes often called the salmon trout in North America.  However, the fish called salmon trout in Europe is a completely different member of the trout family).
 

The tasty Rainbow Trout will be on menus around the world, and in France, probably 90% will have been farmed; most of the others will have been caught in rivers and lakes that have been stocked. Rainbow trout have a firm flesh with an excellent taste, and when the menu just says trout without any additional names, and then the trout on the menu is rainbow trout. The majority of these fish are sold when they weigh less than one kilo though rainbow trout may grow to over 20 kilos. Truitelles, on a French menu, are young trout, usually young farmed rainbow trout.

Rainbow trout on French menus:

La Truite Fumée en Genévrier avec Raifort à la Crème avec Airelle, Toast et Beurre –Smoked rainbow trout flavored with juniper berries and served with a cream of horseradish sauce along with European cranberries, and served with toast and butter. Most French chefs do their own hot smoking and trout will be lightly smoked over birch wood. Smoked trout is very very different to smoked salmon, which is cold smoked.

Hot smoking both smokes and cooks the trout at the same time. Depending on the size of the fish, most can be smoked in thirty minutes or less; cold smoking is carried out over a few days. Smoked trout, usually the hot-smoked variety, is a great entrée, the French first course, and is nearly always served cold with a horseradish sauce.
     
Truite aux Amandes - Rainbow trout cooked with almonds. This dish is usually lightly fried; however, it may be prepared grilled if requested.
   
Truite au Bleu avec Beurre Fondu et Pommes de Terre - For Truite au Bleu, prepared blue,  the fish must be killed just seconds before it is dropped into a boiling broth; that causes the skin to turn to a steel blue color, au bleu; the fish will be cooked and ready to serve within five or six minutes. On the menu listing above the trout is served with melted butter and potatoes.
     
Grilled rainbow trout
Photograph courtesy of Nathan Yergler
     
Terrine de Truites aux Asperges – A pate of rainbow trout, made with smoked trout and served cold as an entrée; here it is served with asparagus. With a dish like this, ask how the pate is made.
    
Truite au Gewurztraminer - Rainbow trout cooked in a Gewurztraminer wine sauce. The Alsace is home to many trout farms, and the Alsace also has with many rivers and lakes where brook and other trout may be caught. The Alsace is also home to some of France’s finest white wines. The AOP wines of the Alsace are also unique in that these wines are among the very few that France permits to be sold under the name of the grape used. Gewurztraminer is a wonderfully scented semi-dry white wine and perfect for accompanying trout or being used for cooking it with.
  
Truite Farcie aux Fine Herbes - Rainbow trout stuffed with the herbs from the most respected French herb group les fine herbes; these herbs will provide a fresh a distinctive yet very mild flavor. The fine herb group is France’s oldest, and still the most popular, herb group, and includes Cerfeuil – chervilPersil – parsleyCiboulette – chives; Thym– thyme and Estragon – tarragon.
       
Truite bio AB de Nant, Marinée, Pousses d'Épinard et Vinaigrette à l'Huile d'Amande  - Organically raised, marinated, farmed, rainbow trout served in an almond oil vinaigrette flavored with spinach shoots. Nant is a town in the département of Aveyron in the Midi-Pyrénées, next to the River Dourbie and less than 30 km (19 miles) from the five glorious lakes of Levezou which have both wild and stocked trout and are also a popular water-sports center. France leads the world with the number of with organically farmed-trout; however,  if you look for organic trout in France the wording organic is not enough; you need the government-approved green initials AB or the Blue Pan European badge if you want to be sure.

                        

    
 The French organic AB logo left.                  The Pan European        organic logo, right.
    






There is careful control over organic agriculture, including aqua-culture, in France.  With organic fish-farming in freshwater, and at sea not only the type of food is controlled along with the banning of antibiotics and growth hormones but also the amount and type of space per fish is controlled.
    
   
Rainbow trout - (Dutch - regenbooforel), (German – forelle), (Italian-  trota, trota iridea), (Spanish – trucha, trucho arco-iris), (Latin - oncorhynchus mykiss).


Saumon de Fontaine, Omble de Fontaine, Truite Mouchetée
Brook Trout.

Brook Trout
   
Brook trout are also called Brook Char, Eastern Brook Trout, Speckled Trout, Speckled Char, and Salter. This trout was brought to France from the USA in the 1930s, and has established itself well and is now a truly wild French trout. The English names for brook trout, brook char, and speckled char cause confusion with Freshwater Char, Omble Chevalier in French, which are related but very different fish. 

   
Many fish are a part of the greater salmon family and the brook trout is also related to the broad whitefish. The broad whitefish is a very popular lake and river fish and in French called the the Féra, Fera or Palée du Léman;  one or more of these tasty trout family relatives may be on the same menu as the brook trout. 
         
Brook trout on French menus
    

Saumon de Fontaine des Eaux du Morvan à l' Unilatéral  Brook trout from the waters of the beautiful Regional Natural Park in Morvan, Burgundy. Here, the fish is cooked à l' Unilatéral, that indicates the fish will be cooked through from the skin side only. Cooking a filet through the side with skin on is considered a far better way to maintain a fried fish's flavor; the taste of the fish is much less affected by the butter or oil in which the fish is fried. If this dish is on the menu when you are in Burgundy, then visit the Regional Natural Park in Morvan, the Parc Naturel Régional du Morvan, where this fish was caught. The park is a lovely place to drive through, and there is a great deal to stop and explore with lakes, waterfalls, rivers, and charming villages.
   

Le Saumon de Fontaine Roti – Roasted brook trout.
Omble de Fontaine à la Tomate et Fenouil, Pommes Persillées – Brook trout prepared with tomatoes and dill and served with potatoes fried with parsley.  Dill, the herb, has a light aniseed flavor and is a very important in French cuisine.

One memorable meal where I enjoyed this magnificent fish was in is a restaurant next to a lake; the fish was delicious as if it had been landed five minutes before; it was served just lightly fried in butter, with a slice of lemon and boiled potatoes on the side. The wine that accompanied the meal was a Tokay Pinot Gris from the Alsace, and that was a perfect match: heaven. Caveat Emptor: I went back to the same restaurant a two years later; the taste was still so fresh, in my mind that I could hardly wait for the fish to arrive.  However, this time I was served, a recently unfrozen trout fillet! The disappointment was unbelievable, never will I return; bell, book, and candle for that restaurant!

      
Brook Trout, Saumon de Fontaine, in the languages of France’s neighbors:
  
(Catalan - truita de rierol, truita de font), (Dutch - bronforel), (German – bachsaibling,),  (Italian -salmerino di fontana, salmerino di fonte), (Spanish- salvelino), (Latin - salvelinus fontinalis).
   


                     Omble d'Amerique
Lake Trout 
  An American import  


   Imported American Lake Trout.
    
In France, this fish has been unofficially imported to a few northern French lakes to the detriment of local species. It is one of the two trout most often served with recipes originally created for salmon, the other is the sea trout. N.B.The fish called a salmon trout in North American is called the rainbow or steelhead trout in Europe and elsewhere. 

Lake Trout on your French Menu:     
        
Filet de Truite de Lac Crémeux de Basilic  - Filet of lake trout served with a cream sauce flavored with basil.
   
Grilled lake trout and matsutake mushroom.

www.flickr.com/photos/152084659@N04/37135449594/ 

Tartare de Truite du Lac Céleri Rémoulade et Condiments – A trout tartare served with a  sauce and a celery rémoulade that comes with a mayonnaise, and mustard sauce and served with condiments. The condiments may just be salt and pepper but is probably a more special condiment. Ask.


I have seen a great recipe with a very different take on trout tartare:  

   
Truite de Lac et Choucroute, en Croûte de Pomme de Terre Cuite au Cumin - Lake trout prepared with choucroute, the Alsatian take on German sauerkraut, all cooked inside a potato casing flavored with cumin.
  
The lake trout lives in fast-flowing rivers and in some lakes. One of its names the truite saumonée, the salmon trout, comes from its pink flesh; the color results from its favorite foods which are crustaceans. Aqua-farmers who farm the rainbow trout also feed them special foods to produce rainbow trout with pink flesh; however, pink rainbow trout taste exactly like the white-fleshed rainbow trout.


Omble d'Amerique, Lake Trout in the languages of France’s neighbors:
    
(German- Amerikanische seeforelle). (Italian- trota di lago americana- (German- Amerikanische Sseeforelle). ( Spanish - trucha lacustre), (Latin -salvelinus namaycush).


Truite Brune de Mer, Truite de mer
Sea Trout, Brown Trout, Blacktail
  
 
Unsere SuÌ,6Ã8wasserfische, Leipzig :Quelle & Meyer,1913.
 
The Sea Trout, in France's lakes, are landlocked fish restocked under the control of the French government. The taste and texture of brown trout depend on the river or lake along with the type of food that it finds. If you are choosing this fish in a lakeside restaurant where local fishers bring their catch every day, then you genuinely do not need an excellent chef or a special sauce.  The brown trout is, I believe the tastiest of all trout and is best when simply grilled or pan-fried in butter. Accompany that wild  trout with a crisp white wine, and you will not be disappointed.

Sea Trout on French Menus:

Darne de Truite de Mer à la Persillade, Millefeuille de Légumes et Pommes de Terre Poêlées - A thick cut of sea trout cooked with persillade, a sauce of parsley, garlic, oil and vinegar. Served interleaved by vegetables and accompanied by pan-fried potatoes.

Truite de Mer Mer Bio  AB Marinée au Combawa - Sea trout marinated in  the juice of the kafir lime. The sea trout here comes from organic sea-fish farms and in France, so far sea trout is only farmed off the coast of Brittany.


Trout fishing,Lac de Esparron-de-Verdon,
Alpes de Haute Provence

Filet de Truite de Mer au Beurre Blanc Tomaté – Filet of Brown trout served with a white butter sauce flavored with tomato.

One memorable meal where I enjoyed  this magnificent fish was in is a restaurant next to a lake; the fish was delicious as if it had been landed five minutes before; it was served just lightly fried in butter, with a slice of lemon and boiled potatoes on the side. The wine that accompanied the meal was a Tokay Pinot Gris from the Alsace, and that was a perfect match: heaven. Caveat Emptor: I went back to the same restaurant a two years later; the taste was still so fresh, in my mind that I could hardly wait for the fish to arrive.  However, this time I was served, a recently unfrozen trout fillet! The disappointment was unbelievable, never will I return; bell, book and candle for that restaurant!
   
Trout farms have also begun to raise brown trout, and if successful that should make this tasty fish more widely available.

Sea Trout in the languages of France’s neigbors:

(Catalan - truita de mar), (Dutch - zeefore), (German - meerforelle), (Italian - trota fario
(Spanish - trucha común), ( Latin – salmo trutta)
   
------------------------------------------

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2013, 2019

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


Just add the word, words, or phrase that you are searching for to the words "Behind the French Menu" (best when including the inverted commas), and search with Google, Bing, or another search engine.   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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