Comté AOP - The Premiere Cheese of France. Comté in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

     


Comté AOP cheese.
  
Comté or Gruyère de Comté is a firm, semi-hard 31.3% fat, yellow, rich, nutty-tasting, unpasteurized, cow’s milk cheese. The cheese comes from the high pastures in the Jura Massif mountain range, in the new super-region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté.

Comté has been produced for over 700 years, some claim 1,000 years, and it was the first cheese with a substantial and well-organized production to be awarded an AOC.  Furthermore, Comté is one of the few cheeses where each and every cheese is checked and graded before being permitted to carry the AOC/AOP label.
   


The AOP logo
  
The flora in the Jura Massif is extraordinarily diverse.  Depending on where the Montbeliarde or Simmental cows that provide the milk graze there will be grasses with different wild flowers and herbs.  These differences are reflected in the milk and, ultimately, in slightly varying flavors and colors of the cheese.  In their winter barns, the cows are fed the local grasses collected in the summer and a limited amount of grain. No silage can be fed to these cows at any time and French law forbids any use of coloring additives for all its cheeses and butter.  So in the summer, the Comté cheese will be a bright yellow from the milk as the cows graze in the high pastures; while cheeses produced by the same cows in the winter will be lighter in color.  The calves must be raised by their mothers, and antibiotics and growth hormones are forbidden at any time. The slightly different tastes in the cheeses produced at different times of the year and in from different herds will not be noted except by the experts who buy the cheese for distribution, and, of course, some real cheese mavens.

A leading member of the Montbeliarde Comté production team
www.flickr.com/photos/ylliabphoto/26290088954/
  
Comté cheese on French menus:

Cordon Bleu de Veau au Comté - veal escalope wrapped around a slice of boiled ham and cheese.  Traditionally that is a French Gruyere, and Comté’s other name is the Gruyère du Jura. After wrapping the escalope is breaded and fried. Cordon Bleu de Veau and the same dish made with chicken breast are recipes from the mid-20th century; however, the Cordon Bleu, the award of the blue ribbon, is much older. The Cordon Bleu was part of an award created by King Henry III of France, in 1578, for outstanding service to the French Crown.

Croque Monsieur au Comté - Croque Monsieur; a simple but tasty French fast food.  This is a toasted sandwich made with Pain de Mie, French sandwich bread, cooked ham, and cheese. The sandwich is soaked in beaten egg and then fried gently or toasted until the outside is golden brown and the cheese inside melts. Croque Madame is the same recipe with an added fried egg. In France Croque Monsieur is nearly always made with Comté or French Gruyere.

Fondue Savoyarde (2 Personnes Minimum), Comté, Beaufort et Emmental, Accompagnés De Salade  – A Savoy cheese fondue from (for a minimum of two persons) made with three cheeses, Comté, Beaufort and Emmental and accompanied by a small green salad. Recipes for dishes similar to this cheese fondue date back two or three-hundred years, but cheese fondues only became famous internationally with the growth of winter sports in the 1950’s. Today’s Fondue Savoyarde will usually include three Savoie cheeses. The first two will be Beaufort AOP and Comté AOP the third will be chosen from among the  Abondance, Emmental de Savoie or French Gruyère cheeses. The Fondue Savoyard calls for the cheeses to be melted in white wine with a light touch of garlic. Since the taste of the fondue changes with the percentages of the different cheeses used every restaurant’s fondue has its own unique taste. There are also cheese fondues made with additions of the Savoie’s much-appreciated kirsch cherry liquor.
    
Fondue Savoyarde
www.flickr.com/photos/pcerqueira/5402321948/
  
Risotto d'Épeautre au Comte – A risotto made with spelt and Comté cheese. Spelt or Dinkel wheat is a relatively coarse, but mild, and slightly nutty flavored ancient member of the wheat family; it is the forerunner of modern wheat. In France, spelt is grown commercially in Provence, and there it may be cooked like a rice dish, prepared as a risotto as in this recipe, served as a vegetable or used to give body to a soup or stew.
  
Soupe à l'Oignon Gratinée au Comté - Paris and Lyon claim the original recipes for French onion soup and both are outstanding. Here the menu listing fails to note the recipe's origins but the soup will have been made with toasted bread with Comté cheese on top and browned under the grill. 

French onion soup glistening with the cheese on top.
www.flickr.com/photos/hdv-gallery/6992212974/
.
Comté Vieux de la Fruitière et sa Confiture de Cerises  - Avieux”  matured Comté direct from the fruitière, the dairy, and served with a cherry preserve, a cherry jam. Since all Comté cheeses are matured for at least four months this menu listing will be for a cheese that has been matured for at least one year.
   
The Comté production

With Comté’s huge popularity it is not a simple matter to control the production.  The regulations require the milk to be made into cheese within 24 hours and the cows are milked twice a day.  The farmers keep the dairies working round the clock and so it will be extremely rare for milk to wait even 12 hours before the cheese making process begins.
   
To keep to that tough schedule, the farmers use co-operative dairies called fruitieres.  Each fruitiere serves fifteen to twenty farmers, and none will be more than 25 km (16 miles), from each farmer’s herd.  The cows do not go on holiday so every fruitiere must work 365 days a year.

Aging Comté cheese

Nevertheless, the dairy, the fruitiere, that makes the cheese does not do the aging. The fruitiere does, however, choose the aging cellar; the maison d’affinage. To add to the decision-making process, each maison d’affinage has different qualities, and each group of cheeses may differ.  The changes occur all the time, and each aging cellar is chosen for the heat and humidity level that it offers.  Comté cheeses are aged for a minimum of 4 months with the best cheeses being aged for one to two, or even more years.  The registers showing where last week’s cheese and the cheese from two years ago is aging, and that can create transport scheduling headaches. Comté like other firm yellow cheeses, including Salers AOP,  English Cheddar, and others are best when well-aged.  On a restaurant’s list of cheeses or in a fromagerie, a cheese shop, look for a Comté Vieux, an old Comté  or a Comté Affinée an aged Comté  Good cheese shops will offer you a sliver of two different Comtés to compare before buying and you can't do that in a supermarket.

Comté Vieux – Aging Comté Cheese.
www.flickr.com/photos/barneymoss/9520659622/
    
The testing of every single cheese labeled Comté AOP.
    
Every single Comté cheese is tested, and that includes organoleptic tests. Organoleptic tests cover taste and smell. While the taste makes for some 50% of the grading the external appearance of the cheese and defects such as external cracks and holes also affect the final grade.  Cheeses with over 15 points, out of a maximum of twenty, earn the right to use a green label and to be called Comté Extra. Cheeses with grades of 12 to 15 points are labeled with brown labels and marked Comté AOP.  Cheeses with less than 12 points may not be sold as Comté and will be sold to commercial cheese producers for cheese spreads and other cheese flavorings.
  
Green labeled Comté cheese
Green is not necessarily better than brown.
  
Comté and Comté Extra
 
Many French men and women also automatically assign a better taste to the green label and the words Comté Extra.  Despite that, the taste of the brown labeled Comté cheese is rarely very different to the green.  Do not pay more, without tasting, for that green label.  Within the grading system, the shape and appearance of the outside of the cheese can add one or more points, and a poor looking cheese can have a fine taste but lose a point or two because of a poor exterior surface. A cheese marked Comté Extra, and a less valued Comté AOP may have the same taste.  N.B. Within all Comté cheeses, there are usually small holes; this is a natural part of the cheese-making process and seen in all French Gruyère type cheeses and does not affect the taste in any way.

Where does Comté come from

The Comté’s appellation covers parts of five French departments: Ain, Doubs, Jura, Saône-et-Loire, and Haute-Savoie.   Other great French cheeses come from here, and they include Bleu de Gex AOPMont d’Or AOP, and Morbier AOPCharolais AOP, Maconnais AOP, Chevrotin AOP, Tomme des Bauges AOP, Reblochon AOPAbondance AOPBeaufort AOP, Tomme de Savoie IGP and French Gruyere. They may all be tasted and enjoyed when traveling in the area

Lunchtime for the production crew
www.flickr.com/photos/ylliabphoto/17473436186/


The Comté cheese roads.
  
If you are traveling to the Jura you arrive, or even before you leave home, call the French Government Tourism Office; ask for a copy of their Les Routes du Comté, the Comté cheese roads. 

The official Comte website that gives information on the cheese roads is only in French. Nevertheless using the Bing and or Google translate apps make the website clearly readable.


The cheese roads offer access from all parts of the cheese making areas. The roads take you past farms, dairies and maturing cellars, as well as vineyards, wineries, local cheese museums, and of no less importance, a variety of restaurants.  Combine this map with the well-designed Jura wine road; called La Route Touristique des Vins.  A lot of thought went into planning this wine route; it includes, apart from vineyards and vintners, cheese producers and other places of agricultural, gastronomic and historical interest along with nature walks and much more.  See how these maps interconnect and then take the combined route.

Like the cheese road, the website for the wine road is only in French, but Google, Bing and others translate the website very well.


The wines that will be recommended to accompany Comté and other local cheeses are the two most famous sweet wines of the Jura:  the Vin Jaune, their yellow wine, and their Vin de Paille, their straw wine.  To accompany your meals try their Arbois AOC, reds, roses and whites along with their sparkling Cremant de Jura their Vins de Franche-Comté IGP and for your digestif cherry liquor the Kirsch de Fougerolles AOC or the Macvin AOC.
     
The Macvin AOC comes with an ancient tradition, and from my investigations, it is so ancient that no one seems to be very clear about it when it all began!    The Macvin AOC is produced in a similar manner to the Pineau de Charente from the Cognac region and Pommeau from the Calvados apple brandy.

The Jura in summer.
Photograph courtesy of deepakhere.mypixels
www.flickr.com/photos/7164796@N04/7890070334/

To add to your enjoyment of the breathtaking scenery in the center of the French Jura are beautiful lakes and this is one of the less traveled parts of France.  Even the Prefecture of Jura, the provincial capital, Lons-le-Saunier, has only 20,000 inhabitants. The Jura Massif includes most of the region of Franche-Comté and part of the departments of  Saone-et-Loire in Burgundy and Ain and  Haute Savoie in the Rhone-Alpes. Visit the regional Jura park, the Parc Naturel Regional du Haut-Jura.


The Jura in Winter.
Photograph courtesy of kbxxus
www.flickr.com/photos/kbxxus/16284772250/
  
If you arrive in winter you may still enjoy the cheese, but the mountains and valleys of the Massif  will be covered with snow; so take your skis. The Jura  provides some of the best skiing in France  
        
Taking Comté AOP cheese and other French cheeses home.
            
 f you wish to take a whole Comté AOP cheese home, you may have some difficulty with one of these cheeses in your hand luggage.  The average Comté AOP cheese weighs between 30 to 48 kilos (66 – 105 lbs)!  In a fromagerie, a cheese shop, anywhere in France, order a one-kilo wedge, or more if you wish, and have the shop vacuum pack the cheese. Failing the availability of vacuum packing use plenty of tightly wrapped plastic wrap.
  
At home, the Comté AOP cheese will keep well when refrigerated like other hard yellow cheeses but never freeze it; it will lose its taste. See the post: Buying Cheese in France. Bringing French Cheese Home.

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2012, 2013, 2017, 2019

For information on the unpublished book behind this blog write to Bryan Newman
at
 
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Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
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Wine bars in France - Bar à Vins, Bistrot à Vins, Cave à Manger, Winestub.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Winestub is the name for a wine bar in the régions of Alsace and Lorraine.
  
A wine shop is a Magasine de Vins or a Cave du Vin

 A Bar a Vins.
Winestub is the name for a wine bar in the régions of Alsace and Lorraine.
A wine shop is a Magasine de Vins or a Cave du Vin
    
   French wine bars have different formats for offering the wines they sell, and they work hard to earn and keep, their reputations.  Hotels’ concierges and guide books may point out wine bars that specialize in offering wines from specific areas as well as those which are, in reality, small restaurants.  Certain wine bars offer weekly or monthly targeted changes in their offered wine along with local favorites.  Among the many wine bars, you will find those that are well known for the food they serve, even when the menu is limited, and of course, there a some who in all respects are full-service restaurants. Wine bars accept bookings, and for the most popular, you may need a reservation a day or two ahead. 
          
Wine bar offerings.
www.flickr.com/photos/83096974@N00/455476706/
   
   Over the last few years, more and more wine bars are emphasizing their food offerings, and they are close to or are restaurants calling themselves a cave à manger.  Whatever they call themselves, even when the menu is limited, the food served in wine bars is generally excellent. The price you will pay for food in a wine bar is often a significant discount on similar dishes at a restaurant. Certain wine bars developed from a Cave du Vin, wine shops, and their choice of wines can be very broad.
 
Wine Bar in Paris.
www.flickr.com/photos/22882167@N07/3676424469/
   
   Wine bars offer the opportunity to experience a selection of wines, but, they are not usually the cheapest places to buy a whole bottle. Despite that caveat, wine bars are definitely the place to try a wine or wines before buying.  When visiting a wine bar, try a glass of two or three of that bar’s recommended wines; note the year and other relevant details, and you may discover a fascinating new wine to take home. That tasting in a wine bar may also save you from buying a whole bottle or possibly a case of a wine you do not like.
   
A Bar à Cidre or Bar à Sidre
A bar specializing  in cider.


 
Sidre  or Cider - Cider
www.flickr.com/photos/haahr/5353923707/


In Normandie, cider bars will offer a variety of different apple ciders, pear ciders, and Pommeaus, apple-based aperitifs,  along with their Calvados AOC apple brandies. In Bretagne, Brittany,  cider bars offer their local ciders as well as their own Pommeau de Bretagne AOC and their apple brandy called Lambig.   Elsewhere cider bars offer local ciders and apple brandies. In the Basque country, cider bars are called siderias. For more on the superb French ciders, see my post: Cidre - Cider in France. France's Fabulous Ciders, Sparkling Ciders and Basque Cider.

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2012, 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 or Bing,  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.

Frites or Pommes Frites - French Fries in the USA and Chips in the UK. French Fries on French Menus.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

     
French fries, chips.
          
The perfect Pommes Frits, French Fries or Chips can be a culinary feast on their own. The ideal French fry has no fixed size though most French schools of the culinary arts teach their would-be chefs to cut them 5mm x 5 mm thick and 5 or 6 cm long. An excellent French fry is crispy and slightly crunchy on the outside; it will be colored a golden brown, and on the inside, it will be cooked and tender.  
  
The French take on properly made French fries requires them when freshly cut to be soaked in cold water before frying them twice. I was told that the soaking reduces much of the starch on the outside, and that aids in producing crispy fries, but its frying them twice that provides that perfect crispy fry. To order a steak to go with the fries see the post: Ordering a steak in France, cooked the way you like it.
   

The taste of the fries in France.
   
French fries in France have a distinctly different taste to those made using North American and UK recipes; visitors return home praising the French version but usually do not know the reason for that difference.
                                
The majority of French diners and most French chefs agree that the best French fries are made, in accordance with French culinary tradition, using graisse de bœuf, beef suet, (beef fat with a low melting point). Beef fat is behind the fundamental taste difference as nearly all North American and UK fries are made using vegetable oils.  There are parts of France, like the south-west where graisse de canard, duck fat is used instead of beef fat. Vegetable oil for French fries is not part of the French tradition though that is slowly changing.  If you are a vegetarian, you should check with your server before ordering French fries and if you are not a vegetarian but worried about your cholesterol then, like the French, enjoy French fries cooked in beef fat but in small portions.

Names and sizes for French fries that may be on your menu:

Allumettes see Pommes Allumettes.

Bâtonnets de Pommes de Terre - Usually, these are regular French fries that have been breaded and flavored. However, on one occasion, when a friend ordered them, the Bâtonnets de Pommes de Terre arrived as tasty, deep-fried sticks of mashed potatoes, flavored with herbs and cheese. 

Frites or Pommes Frites - French fries. French fries or chips can be a culinary feast on their own. The ideal French fry has no fixed size, though most French schools of the culinary arts teach their would-be chefs to cut them 5mm x 5 mm thick and 5 or 6 cm long. An excellent French fry is crispy and slightly crunchy on the outside; it will be colored a golden brown, and on the inside, it will be cooked and tender.  


Pommes Frites
Photograph courtesy of cyclonebill
https://www.flickr.com/photos/cyclonebill/2222767350/


Gaufrettes – Potato crisps or potato chips; fried to a crisp with a latticed decoration.
  
Mignonnette Large French fries cut approximately 5mm x 5mm x 5 cm long. 

  
Steak frites  served with Sauce Beurre Maître d’hôtel
Sauce Beurre Maître d'hôtel is a thick parsley butter, a compound butter, made with added fresh lemon juice.  Hard, flavored butters like these are placed on a steak or slices from a roast just before serving;  they flavor as they melt.

     Pommes Allumettesalso called Pommes Pailles – Straw fries. They are cut approximately 2-3 mm x 2-3 mm x 7 cm long 

Pommes Allumettesalso called Pommes Pailles  Straw-fries. They are cut approximately 2-3 mm x 2-3 mm x 7 cm long 

Pommes Pont-Neuf, Pommes de Terre Pont-Neuf, on many menus just as Pont-Neuf  Large French fries also called Frites Parisienne. From my experience, the name doesn't come with a fixed size, just large fries; just poetry on the menu for large fries. The owner of the name is the Ponte Neuf Bridge; the oldest existing bridge in Paris. When they began to sell large-size fries from pushcarts in the 1830s and continued for over 100 years ago the bridge’s name became part of the fries’ name. Some menus listings use the name for cuts of deep-fried vegetables. 


The origin of the potato.

Columbus did not bring the potato back in 1492 when he discovered Central America. They arrived forty years later when Francisco Pizarro conquered the Inca Empire in South America in 1532 and brought home the ingredients for French fries; that empire is now the modern state of Peru.  
  
Potatoes
www.flickr.com/photos/gabbysol/22939014776/
 
The French received their first potatoes two years after Spain, but initially, like many others, they considered potatoes toxic; it took another two hundred years until Antoine-Augustin Parmentier (1737 – 1813) overcame that nonsense and made the potato part of the French diet.  (The idea that potatoes were poisonous was possibly due to French citizens going to a nasty chip shop I knew in England. Their chips were really “to die for!)”
  

After Parmentier had convinced the French to eat potatoes came the recipe for French fries, chips.  The French were undoubtedly frying potatoes by the time Benjamin Franklin attended a banquet hosted by Parmentier in 1783.  That banquet served every dish from the hors d’œuvre to the dessert made with potatoes.
           
The French Fry arrives in the USA.
 
According to an accepted tradition, the recipe for French fries arrived in the USA from France with Thomas Jefferson.  Jefferson genuinely appreciated French cuisine, and while he served as the United States second Ambassador to France from 1785-1789 he had one of his slaves trained by a French chef. 
  
In the USA Jefferson chaired the committee that wrote the US constitution, and long before he became Ambassador to France, he had already spent many years in France serving the USA before its independence. Those years included working with Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and Thomas Paine; all of whom all took part in writing the USA Constitution. These four famous Americans also contributed to and gave to the French writers of their Constitution some of their own ideas. Apart from ideas for the USA constitution Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson also took home many recipes from French Haute Cuisine. Thomas Jefferson is also credited with bringing home enough wine to fill his cellar in Monticello.
         
Thomas Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C.
The memorial is in honor of the man and his work on the US Constitution, and not for bringing home the recipe for French fries!
www.flickr.com/photos/76074333@N00/2390637950/
    
Frites Belge - Belgian fries.
Most French chefs do accept that the two-step recipe for French fries began with the Belgians with whom the French have many cultural similarities and national rivalries. Then, to remind everyone in France about Belgian Fries there are many Belgian chain restaurants selling the always popular, and inexpensive, moules frites, mussels, and French fries.  These Belgian chain restaurants will often note Frites Belge, Belgian Fries, however, today, there will be no difference between well-made French Fries and well-made Belgian Fries.  Good recipes are for sharing.
     
Moules Frites - Mussels and French Fries.
         
In Belgium fries are not limited to restaurants or homes, they are also a street food; eaten out of a paper cone while walking down the street with a side helping of fresh mayonnaise.  You will also find this tasty fast food habit in Holland competing with their own excellent fresh herring sandwiches.
    
Selling the favorite Belgian fast food.
www.flickr.com/photos/isriya/2284330202/
           

     
Pommes de Terre Bintje - The Bintje potato;
                    The most popular potato in France and probably the rest of Europe. 

The Bintje potato is the one that most restaurants in France will use to make your French fries. The Bintje is a starchy potato, and that makes an ideal fry.
  
As its name would suggest, the Bintje potato’s origins are Dutch, (it is pronounced Ben-Jee). This potato was a cross achieved in 1906 by a schoolteacher who was also a botanist; that teacher, Kornelis Friesland, used potatoes to demonstrate genetics to his pupils. The Bintje potato he named after one of his star pupils, a young Dutch lady called Bintje Jansma.
        
Frites mayonnaise.
www.flickr.com/photos/geekygirlaustin/6838075604/
      
The Bintje was a good tasting potato, and by 1910, the Bintje potato reached the number one spot in Holland; within a few more years the Bintje became the most popular potato in Europe. The Bintje is also well-liked in North America; but, overall, North Americans prefer; the Yukon potato, it is a larger and whiter potato, the Yukon, like the Bintje,  is the result of a cross.
  
-----------------


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" 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 450 articles that include over 4,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations.


-----------------
   

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019
  

--------------------
   
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