Clafoutis and Flagnardes, Flaugnardes or Flognardes on French Menus.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

  
Cherry Clafoutis
www.flickr.com/photos/ipalatin/7326966018/

Clafoutis began as tarts made with a thick crêpe-like batter cooked together with sour cherries. They became so popular outside the old region of Limousin where they originated that when cherries were not in season chefs added other fresh fruits.  Following on that success, the Clafoutis expanded their territory.  Now we have breakfast Clafoutis with button mushrooms and tomatoes, light lunch Clafoutis with salmon or cheese and the main course at lunch or dinner may include a vegetable Clafoutis offered as a garnish.  Oh, and you can still have a Clafoutis with cherries or other fruits as a dessert. (The old region of Limousin included the departments of Corrèz, Creuse, and Haute-Vienne).

On 1-1-2016 the administrative region of Limousin was joined together with the regions of Aquitaine, and Poitou-Charentes in the new super-region of Nouvelle Aquitaine. The old regions' names will remain linked to the foods and wines that are named after them, but their borders will disappear from most maps. 
     
N.B. The word Clafoutis is pronounced kla-fou-tee, the “s” is silent, and it’s the same word whether you order one or ten Clafoutis.
  
  
Depending on the ingredients Clafoutis may be served hot, warm, or cold.  For a single diner, a Clafoutis will usually be made in a single serving dish with a large Clafoutis also being seen when a whole table or a number of patrons make the same order.  Some travel guides refer to a Clafoutis as a flan or pie. However, since the French own the product; and they call Clafoutis a tarte, they are a tart in English.
    
A Cherry Clafoutis
www.flickr.com/photos/70253321@N00/2560568707/
   
Clafoutis on French menus:
  
Clafoutis au Reblochon de Savoie et aux Quetsches - A Clafoutis prepared with quetsche plums and France’s Reblochon AOP cow’s milk cheese from the Savoie. The quetsche plum is a mauve to almost black plum that has a fragrant and sweet yellow flesh; it is oval shaped with nearly pointed ends. The quetsche’s nearest UK relation is the damson plum which is not as sweet.

Clafoutis aux Abricots   A Clafoutis with apricots;    

Clafoutis aux Griottes–  A Clafoutis with France’s griottes, sour cherries; the original recipe.  
        
A black raspberry clafoutis with ice-cream.
(Black raspberries are a North American rasberry family member)
www.flickr.com/photos/stuart_spivack/14591610822
      
Clafoutis aux Tomates et aux Fromages de Chèvre – A Clafoutis with tomatoes and goat’s cheese.

Clafoutis aux Pommes, Servi Tiède et Glace au Calvados –  A Clafoutis made with apples and served warm with ice cream flavored with Calvados.  Calvados and there are three distinct types, is Normandy’s famous Calvados AOC Apple brandy.     

Clafoutis de Saumon Salade Mêlée - A Clafoutis made with salmon and served with a mixed salad.  Salmon in France is the Atlantic salmon.
  

A Clafoutis with plums and almonds
www.flickr.com/photos/12699042@N00/7984229072/
      
Clafoutis de Chèvre et Olives et sa Frisée aux Petits Lardons – A Clafoutis served with a warmed goat’s cheese and olives accompanied by a small salad made with the crispy curly endive flavored with small bacon pieces.  The Frisée or Chicorée or Endive Frisée is the curly endive.  It looks like a lettuce with outer green leaves that curl and in a salad, it adds a slight crunch with a pleasant but slightly bitter taste.  The lighter-colored inner leaves are milder and are considered the best for salads.

Now that Clafoutis are on menus for breakfast, lunch, and dinner that creates problems with Limousine’s other famous tart, the flangnarde also called the flognarde or flaugnarde.  (The name used depends on tradition, and are pronounced with the letter g silent, so flaugnarde is pronounced flo-nyard). 

In the Occitan language, the word Flaugnards is said to come from the word fleunhe meaning soft, and that will describe the texture of a Flaugnard and a Clafouti.  (Occitan is the language that lost out to French when the country looked for a single unifying language).

Flaugnardes and Flognardes on French menus:

Flaugnarde Pomme-Poire à la Fève Tonka – A Flaugnard with apples and pears flavored with the Tonka bean.  The Tonka bean is a plant of South American origins with a strong aroma and used as a spice. I have never had the opportunity to smell or taste the Tonka bean on its own but the aroma is said to resemble vanilla with a touch of almonds and cinnamon and it is mostly used in aniseed-flavored drinks like pastis.
   
  
Flaugnarde de Nèfles aux Pommes –  A Flaugnarde with loquats and apples. When cooked apples are on the menu it is nearly always Granny Smith’s.

Flognarde Pomme et Cannelle – An apple Flognarde flavored with cinnamon.
  
   
Flognarde aux Pommes, Glace Vanille -  A Flognarde with apples and vanilla ice cream.
  
Flognarde aux Mirabelles – A Flognarde made with the Mirabelle plum; a small, yellow to reddish plum that is France’s favorite plum for confitures, jams, and conserves.  The Mirabelle developed locally in the old region of the Lorraine in Northern France most probably from trees that were imported by the Romans, who imported cherries, apricots, and peaches, or it may have been other traders.  The origins of the plum are to the north-east of modern Turkey and the adjacent Caucasus,
    

Still, the world center for the modern Mirabelle is the Lorraine and while not everyone has heard of the Mirabelle plum or even the Lorraine everyone has heard of the Quiche Lorraine.  Since 1-1-2016 the region of Lorraine together with the regions of Alsace, famous for its cuisine and wines, and the Champagne-Ardenne, famous for Champagne, have become parts of the new French super-region of the Grande Est, the Great East. 


Limousin will, however, remain on the culinary map of France. As you drive around the Limousin breed of cattle is recognizable by their chestnut red coloring.  Their name may not be on many menus, but nearly every restaurant offering steaks, roasts or daubs without an AOC/AOP, a Label Rouge or a named source will be offering Limousin beef.
  
Limousin bull.
www.flickr.com/photos/simmysphotos/7436357324/

Restaurant cheese trays on Limousin will include French AOP cheeses as well as first-rate Limousin cheeses that only rarely make it to fromageries, cheese shops, outside the area.  The best local cheeses include the Geuille du Limousin, the Leconet and Saint Pierre goat’s milk cheeses and the Gouzon and Millevaches cow’s milk cheeses.

All around the old region of Limousin are places where the weather, soil are high altitude are said to be especially good for apples.  Here grown France’s only AOP apple the Pomme du Limousin AOC, the Golden Delicious apple of Limousin.  Like other regions with particular routes for wines or cheeses the Limousin has a Route de Pommes, an apple road, You can take that and enjoy apples and cider along with cheeses and stop off for lunch or dinner at restaurants offering Limousin Beef.  All local Tourist Information Offices offer directions.

For something other than culinary enjoyment in Limousin visit the City of Limoges, This is capital the capital of the department of  Haute-Vienne and the home of Limoges porcelain The Museum Adrien Dubouché with its unique porcelain collection has an English language website:


Limoge town hall.
www.flickr.com/photos/boklm/34708725122/
  
Then visit the small town of Aubusson in the department of Creuze so famous for the Aubusson tapestry.  The Departmental Museum of Tapestry has an astonishing collection but their website is in French only but easily understood using the Google or Bing Translate apps:

A place to sit down and rest in the Tapestry Museum Aubusson


--------------------------------

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
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Bénédictine D.O.M., the Liqueur, and its Amazing Factory Benedictine in Fecamp, Normandy.

Bénédictine D.O.M 
from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

A bottle of Bénédictine D.O.M.
Photograph courtesy of Bacardi- Martini

Bénédictine D.O.M. is a sweet, orange and honey flavored, 40% proof, liqueur. It is named after the Bénédictine monks who purportedly created it. This liqueur is only made in the pretty Atlantic coastal town of Fecamp, in Normandy, France.  There, in Fecamp, is the Bénédictine D.O.M. factory, called Le Palais Bénédictine, the Benedictine Palace.  That palace looks more like a freaked-out French version of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry than a palace.  Nevertheless, here, Bénédictine D.O.M  is made. (The initials D.OM, at the end of the word Bénédictine are the abbreviated Latin phrase: Deo Optima Maxima, meaning God, Infinitely good, Infinitely great).

  
Le Palais Benedictine
Photograph courtesy of isamiga76

Bénédictine D.O.M on French menus

Bénédictine D.O.M, on its own, when well chilled or with ice, is a singularly pleasant apéritif; when served at room temperature, it is a smooth and sweet digestif; despite its being a 40% proof liqueur.  Bénédictine D.O.M. is creamy and mild, and, perhaps for that reason, it is the essential ingredient in quite a number of cocktails as well as sauces, pastries, and other dishes.  It is the flavor of Bénédictine D.O.M that adds that certain je ne sais quoi to a recipe.  Without any doubt, the most popular liquid combination using Bénédictine D.O.M is the drink called B and B., and that was certainly not created by the Bénédictine monks but became popular in the 1930s in New York, USA.

Bénédictine D.O.M, in the USA.
                                      
B and B is a combination of  50% Bénédictine D.O.M . and 50% brandy, a drier version of Bénédictine D.O.M. that is enjoyed both chilled and at room temperature.  From its beginnings in New York City, B and B, Bénédictine D.O.M and Brandy, was on its way.  The factory in France soon began bottling B and B but with Bénédictine D.O.M. and Cognac.  Today in the USA B and B still bottled in France outsells the liqueur on its own.


Bottle of B and B
Photograph courtesy of Bacardi-Martini


Bénédictine D.O.M in the UK.
 
During World War I, part of the Bénédictine factory was turned into an army hospital, and the patients, including quite a number from the UK, were served a drink they called a Bene’n’hot.  A Bene’n’hot ( Beni and Hot) is a shot of Bénédictine, a slice of lemon, and hot water.  Among those who returned to England were ex-coal miners from the town of Burnley, a market town in Lancashire,  The Burnley Miners' Social Club, whose members returned home with the Bene’n’hot. The club is now a private business, but it is still the largest single consumer of Bénédictine in the UK.

In France, when in a restaurant, and ordering B and B you will be offered the bottled version that uses cognac instead of brandy, and is made at Bénédictine D.O.M.'s French wizard’s school/factory/palace. If you are making your own version of B and B and want a decent result, you must use a decent cognac. A rougher brandy was OK during prohibition in the USA, but times have changed.

The secret formula of Bénédictine D.O.M.

Bénédictine D.O.M. keeps the formula of their liqueur secret, just like Coca-Cola.  But they do not deny that their formula includes 27 fruits and herbs, including hyssop, lemon balm, angelica, coriander, cloves, nutmeg, black tea, myrrh, juniper berries, Ceylon cinnamon, thyme, vanilla from Madagascar, lemon zest, mace, orange zest, red berries, and more.

Barrels of Bénédictine D.O.M. 
In the cellars of the Palais Bénédictine
www.flickr.com/photos/33852840@N06/8124819152/

During the production process, parts of the liqueur are stored separately in oak barrels for at least 8 months. Only then are they prepared for mixing. Following that, the completed liqueur is stored for another number of months, again in oak barrels. Then it is finally tested, filtered, and bottled. After two or more years from the beginning of the initial production, Benedictine D.O.M. is ready for sale.

The history of the Bénédictine monastery in Fecamp

The story behind the Bénédictine monks in Fecamp, Normandy, is the history of the production of the Bénédictine D.O.M liqueur. The monks’ history is a story of religious zeal, royal intrigue, the Norman-French conquest of England under William the Conqueror, and the monastery’s destruction under the French Revolution. The first  Bénédictine monastery in Fecamp, Normandy, was probably established in the late 6th century with its influence and importance dating from the building or rebuilding in the 11th century.  Despite some questions about the recipe, the monks almost certainly probably did make a liqueur in that monastery, from the 16th century onwards.  The honor for the creation of that liqueur is given to an Italian monk named Dom Bernardo Vincelli. 

  
  Bénédictine monks today.
Photograph courtesy of prayitno
www.flickr.com/photos/prayitnophotography/4378752364/
         
With the French Revolution came an anti-religious fervor, and in 1789, the monastery was destroyed, and the monks dispersed. Despite the revolution, the Bénédictine Abbey church, the Abbaye de la Trinité de Fécamp, the Benedictine Abbey of the Trinity in Fécamp, unlike the monastery, was not destroyed and may be visited. How close the original liqueur made by the monks was to the present day Bénédictine D.O.M. is lost in the storm clouds of the French Revolution; the discovered documents that are said to relate to the original formula for Bénédictine D.O.M. are considered industrial secrets and have never been displayed.

     
The coat of arms of the Bénédictine monastery  of Fecamp
Photograph courtesy of Barcadi-Martini

How Alexandre Le Grand created Bénédictine D.O.M,

Nature abhors vacuums, and even more, the French abhor the loss of a fabled liqueur.  The vacuum created by the destruction of the Bénédictine monastery in Fecamp and the consequent loss of the liqueur produced there was filled with a new tradition in 1863. Then, in 1863, a Fecamp wine merchant and businessman Alexandre Le Grand, Alexander the Great in English, claimed to have discovered in his family’s library a 16th-century Bénédictine manuscript. It held the recipe for the liqueur made in the original Bénédictine monastery. The liqueur recreated from those documents was called Bénédictine D.O.M by Le Grand, and the rest is history.  

Statue of Alexandre Le Grand at the Palais Bénédictine

Alexandre Le Grand’s first large factory was built and opened in 1888; then in a case of arson, it was burned down in 1892.   Le Grand had called his first factory the Le Palais Bénédictine, the Benedictine Palace. Despite the destruction of his factory, his product was already successful, and he rebuilt his palace in an even grander style. That is what is seen today.  The architect was Camille Albert. I am told that the architecture is a unique and wondrous combination of Gothic and Renaissance design; however, it has to be seen to be believed.

The Bénédictine monks have no relationship to
today's Bénédictine D.O.M. liqueur.

The Bénédictine order and its monks have never had any relationship to Bénédictine D.O.M. Neither were they involved in the design of the factory that produces the liqueur. The owners of the Bénédictine D.O.M liqueur have been part of the Bacardi-Martini group since 1992, who make and market many of our favorite alcoholic drinks. The family of Alexandre Le Grand had sold their interest much earlier.
     
Preparing the brew
Photograph courtesy of Le Havre Tourisme
 
There is no other factory like Le Palais Bénédictine in the world, and probably will never be unless they start bottling something in Hogwarts!  Today’s factory opened in 1900, two years after Alexandre had died; his family continued production of Bénédictine D.O.M  with enormous success for over sixty years. For visitors, the factory is open all year round except from January 1 through 15 February. You may visit for a small contribution to the factory’s maintenance and the cost of your testing their merchandise.
       
        
 A stained glass window in the Palais Bénédictine
  
When visiting the factory, you may see some of the production processes and explore their rooms and their museum.  Apart from offering a taste of Bénédictine D.O.M. the company also displays attempts that have been made at faking the product.  Along with the story of the fakes, the museum has a unique mixed personal collection of paintings along with many ivory carvings and some sculptures.  More importantly, from time to time, the museum puts on engaging and distinct exhibitions of modern art.  Finally, on the way out, you may purchase some of the palace’s products,
     
Key collection in the Palais Bénédictine
Photograph courtesy of John Hedtke
www.flickr.com/photos/johnhedtke/15198895648/.
       
Whether the recipe was the original monk’s formula or a 19th-century creation is not terribly relevant, as the liqueur is excellent. Alexandre Le Grand stuck with Bénédictine D.O.M through thick and thin, and he, and later his family, made it a worldwide success.  Check the Bénédictine D.O.M website, www.Benedictinedom.com, for opening hours. Like many places in France, they close for lunch! 
  
Poster for Bénédictine D.O.M.
  
Alexandre did obtain the official consent of the Bénédictine order in Rome to use the name, as well as a permit to use the original coat of arms from the Bénédictine monastery in Fécamp. Alexander Le Grand also included the motto of the Bénédictine order D.O.M on his liqueur’s name. D.O.M.  stands for Deo Optimo Maximo, in Latin, and means To God, the Good and the Great.

  The Benedictine Abbey of the Trinity in Fécamp;

When in the area, you may also visit the Abbaye de la Trinité de Fécamp, the Benedictine Abbey of the Trinity in Fécamp. Unlike the monastery, it was not destroyed during the French Revolution.  Its history and the monastery’s history are interrelated with Guillaume of Normandy, who later became William the Conqueror and King of England.  William the Conqueror's great, great … grand- descendant is Charles III, the King of England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales.
     
The town of Fécamp and the area around it has many excellent restaurants dedicated to Norman cuisine.  I can also confirm the existence of the town's many excellent seafood restaurants. The larger restaurants’ menus include desserts with Bénédictine D.O.M. in the recipe. The town itself is a beautiful small coastal town, nearly in the center of Normandy’s Atlantic coast. It has a casino, a place to park your yacht, and fetes of one form or another almost every month. Fécamp began as a fishing village and remains one with locally caught fish on many menus. You may also buy fresh fish right off the fishing boats in the old port.



Fecamp Harbor
Photograph courtesy of dynamosquito

If you visit in November, join in the celebrations at Fecamp’s Foire aux Harengs, their Herring Fair.

--------------------------------

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman 
Copyright 2010, 2013, 2019, 2024
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com
  

--------------------------------

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