When a French Menu is Not an English Menu!

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


    
Menu
   
The word menu in French indicates a fixed-price meal.
The word menu in English indicates a list of all the dishes that are available
with separate prices for each item.

The full French wording is: "Menu à Prix-Fixe" and is customarily abbreviated to the single word "Menu" or the word "Formule." A menu typically includes two or three courses. water (tap water) is free. Unless very clearly stated a glass of wine, a soft drink or coffee will be charged for. A full English style menu with each item price separately is called an à la carte menu.
 
Menus and the French laws
Displaying menus and à la carte menus outside restaurants.
 
Restaurants must display, by law, their menus with prices outside their entrance. That means their full “à la carte” menu as well as any fixed-price menus they offer. However, limited space outside the restaurant often means you really need to enter the restaurant to see everything.  Prices must include all taxes and service charges.

Daily specials in bistros, brasseries, and similar restaurants are often written on a blackboard or whiteboard, in French called an ”ardoise,” a slate. The ardoise may be inside on a wall or outside the restaurant in the street. In large restaurants, the specials may be on a card attached to the printed menu. Smaller restaurants may not offer any printed menus at all: what is written on their ardoise is their complete menu.
       
An “ardoise: with a single menu outside a restaurant


Fixed price menus were created for the French, not the visitors.
 
Fixed-price menus were conceived with the local citizenry in mind. They began as light lunchtime menus in business districts.  A fixed-price menu of two or three courses allowed a good restaurant to offer a full meal at a competitive price and serve it in less than one hour. These “menus” are usually good options compared to the cost of the same dishes offered on a full à la carte menu. Today fixed-price lunchtime menus are often available in restaurants with Michelin stars; sadly, that does not include any discounts on their wines!    Fixed-price menus have become so popular that many restaurants now offer fixed-price menus in the evening; that is beside their full à la carte menu. (The word formule may be used interchangeably with the word menu).       

"Formule" on an ardoise.
Ardoise Formules Gourmet 3 plats - Picture of Le XII - Douze de Luynes, Luynes
   
Requesting changes in a fixed-price menu
  
It is acceptable to ask for a change in a fixed-price menu.  In restaurants with two or three fixed-price menus, most can accept a change of the entrée, the French starter, or the dessert. The main course may prove more difficult.  Most will make the changes with a smile and changes taken from a more expensive menu will come with a surcharge.  NB: Small restaurants that offer a single fixed-price menu may be unable to change anything.

Your table awaits you.
www.flickr.com/photos/gazeronly/14183798916/
  
All fixed-price menus include all taxes and service charges.

There are many types of fixed-price menus in France, and it is worthwhile noting some of the differences.  However, all French restaurant menus must include all taxes and service charges. For more about tipping in French restaurants and cafes, see the post: Tipping in French Restaurants and Asking for French Sales Tax to be Returned.
   
Three key words to look out for on fixed price menus:

Choix
Choix - Choice. Pronounced shwa.

Hormis
Hormis – Apart from, except or excluding. Pronounced or-mi.
Hormis is the word that indicates items that are not included in a particular menu.   Hormis may also indicate the times when hotels or restaurants do not offer special rates, or the restaurant/hotel is closed.
  
Sauf
Sauf -  Except. Pronounced as it reads, sauf.
 
Three examples of fixed-price menus:

Menu 1

Menu Avec une Entrée, un Plat, un Dessert pour Euro € 20.00 -  An "entrée," the French starter, a "plat," the main course, and a dessert for 20 Euros.

Menu 2

Menu à 30 Euros:  1 Entrée, 1 Plat au Choix dans La Carte, 1 Dessert. 1 Boisson au Choix -  The entrée, the starter, and the dessert are noted without any qualifications; that indicates that no choices are offered for these courses. The plat, the main course may be chosen from their full  " à la carte menu"  their full menu.  1 Boisson au Choix indicates you may choose your beverage, a soft drink, or coffee; the wine would be extra.
   
Menu 3

 La Formule à 31 € - 2 Plats au Choix dans la Carte. (Formule valable uniquement le midi, hormis les dimanches et jours fériés) -  Two dishes are included in this formule/menu.  You may choose a starter, and the main course or if you prefer, the main course and a dessert. All choices are from their full à la carte menu. The price is 31 Euros. In brackets, the restaurant advises that this formule/menu is for lunchtime only "hormis," apart, from Sunday's and Holiday's when it is not available.

When planning a trip to France, do take the French National Holidays into account. Not all attractions are open every day of the year and many are closed on national holidays.

Once the words choix,  hormis, and sauf, are part of your personal French-English dictionary, you will have few problems ordering from French fixed-price menus.
       
Menu de la journée Sarah Bernhardt, le 9 décembre 1896
www.flickr.com/photos/double-m2/5563640808/
   
Requesting fixed-price menus and or an à la carte menu:

To request a restaurant's fixed price menu/s say:  La menu/s a prix-fixe s'il vous plaît. Pronounced:  la menu/s a pree fix sil voo play. ("S'il vous plait" means, please).

To request an full à la carte menu say: La carte s’il vous plaît. Pronounced: la kart sil voo play.

N.B. In a busy restaurant, at lunchtime, do not be surprised if their â la carte menu is not available.
      
La carte and la formule.
www.flickr.com/photos/26948815@N03/7986034957/
  
Want to practice your pronunciation?
Use these excellent free programs, I do.
https://forvo.com/languages/fr/ (Best for single words)
https://www.howtopronounce.com/French/ (Best for phrases).
  
Different types of fixed-price menus:
 
Menu "Buffet" le Dimanche – A Sunday buffet menu. The French version of a Sunday brunch; not the same but close.  A French Sunday buffet is an enjoyable and a relatively inexpensive way of dining with the whole family.
 
Menu d'Affaires – A fixed price business lunch.
 
Menu Dégustation - A tasting menu; this may be anywhere from four to seven, or even more, small servings.
 
A menu dégustation is intended to show off the abilities of the chef. Menus of this type will only be offered in the evening. Traditionally, in France, a menu dégustation has to be chosen by a minimum number of diners and in many restaurants by everyone at the same table.  The reason for having all the diners choose the same meal is to allow for timed service, with all the diners being served each course simultaneously.
 
French diners accept the rule that timing is an integral part of a great meal. Diners do not wish to be rushed or left for half an hour waiting for the next course, For the staff, timing is just as important, having different guests, at the same table, eating different courses can drive even a saintly Maitre D' to distraction.

 Tasting menus often include seven or more small courses.  Some extraordinary Menus de Dégustation offering paired wines that will be changed with every course; tasting menus are rarely inexpensive.  Tasting menus are usually only offered when chosen by all the diners at a particular table.  There are two reasons for this; the first, and the one that is always stated is to allow a French chef to concentrate on his or her unique dishes and their correctly timed preparation; there will be no dishes held back under a heat lamp or on a warming-pan while other dishes are still being prepared.  The second reason, equally valid, but undisclosed, is so the meal may be served in an orderly manner.  The way a meal is served is fundamental in French cuisine.  Having one diner waiting for his or her dessert while other diners are still only halfway through their meal would drive even the most saintly of Maitre D's mad.

Menu de Midi – A fixed price lunch menu.

A 21 Euro Menu
www.flickr.com/photos/etherworks/541563643/
 
Menu du Terroir – A fixed price menu with an emphasis on local products and recipes.
 
Menu du Jour - The fixed price menu of the day. This menu is often a hand-written list on an ardoise, the blackboard on the wall, or a separate card inside the printed menu.
 
Menu en Anglais  An English language menu is available.
   
Menu Gastronomique – A  Menu Gastronomique, will offer unique and different recipes, dishes that are not seen, tasted, or served every day. When the restaurant offers a bona fide menu gastronomic, you may have a chance to try unique dishes.  Unfortunately, on occasion, a menu gastronomic may sometime be just a name the chef has allocated to a group of the restaurant's most expensive options on its à la carte menu combined into six or seven or more small courses.  In that case, look for other options.
     
Menu pour Enfants or Menu Pinocchio or Menu des Bambins – A child's menu. Many children's menus have cute names, even though their intended diners may not be able to read!  These menus, with low prices, may include chicken or turkey schnitzel, hamburgers, hot dog type sausages, and French fries, chips.  Today, many restaurants will offer children tomato ketchup.
 
Menu Servi Tous Les Jours Midi et Soir Sauf Samedi Soir et Jours Féries   A fixed-price set menu that will be offered for lunch and dinner every day sauf, except, Saturday evenings and Holidays.

Menu Suivant La Saison -  A menu that changes with the season.  The title implies that the menu offers seasonal specialties.  I always ask what these are.  Certain wild mushrooms or berries may only be in season for two or three weeks in a year and I don’t want to miss out.
 
Menu Touristique – A tourist menu.  For years, the French Ministry of Tourism has encouraged restaurants to offer fixed-price menus especially for tourists.  Caveat Emptor: Before entering a restaurant that provides a Menu Touristique look inside. If the restaurant is busy, with diners enjoying themselves, then enter. If the restaurant is serving greasy hamburgers to a nearly empty hall, go elsewhere.
 
Menu Végétarien – A vegetarian menu.

The wine list is La carte des Vins.
--------------------------------

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2012, 2014, 2020

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

Are you searching for 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.

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Crottin de Chavignol AOP. One of France’s outstanding goats’ milk cheeses.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Different ages of Crottin de Chavignol AOP
and stage in its production.
(N.B. Crottin de Chavignol is pronounced krotan de chavinol)
Photograph courtesy of Sunny Ripert
https://www.flickr.com/photos/sunfox/4613789795/

The Crottin de Chavignol.

The Crottin de Chavignol is an excellent, creamy, when young, 32% fat, goats’ milk cheese made with unpasteurized milk.  The minimum permitted aging is ten days, and from then on, the cheese is sold with varying degrees of maturity, some as long as three months or more.  The youngest cheeses are mild and may be served warm in salads.  The young cheese has a white rind, and as the cheese matures, the rind takes on a bluish tinge that cheese lovers look for.  When aged for three or more months, the cheese will be crumbly and will have developed its distinctive taste with a kick.  The smallest of these cheeses weighs just 60 grams (2.10 ounces) and is about 5cm (2”) wide by 2.5 cm high (1”)     


The goats of Chavignol.
Photograph courtesy of JPC24M
https://www.flickr.com/photos/cjp24/16666609732/

The village of Chavignol is set in a very active neighborhood; to begin with, it is just 3.7 km (2.25 miles) away from the town of Sancerre, so famous for its excellent wines. All around are villages that are active in cheese making, running snail farms, wine-making, and other artisan food industries. Administratively Chavignol has been recognized as part of Sancerre, so I expect that over the years, Chavignol, with its less than 300 inhabitants, will have become a Sancerre suburb.

The ages of Chavignol

When the rind begins to turn blue, it will be about three months old. That is when a Crottin de Chavignol should be on a restaurant's cheese trolley or purchased to take home. If you have bought one to take home, then eat it within one or two weeks. Outside of the area, not every fromagerie will stock Crottin de Chavignol. With France's 46 AOP kinds of cheeses and at least another 1,200 registered cheeses fighting for shelf space, not even the largest cheese shop can carry everything. For a restaurant, keeping even 20 cheeses properly aged is a very expensive process. Fromageries will stock many more cheeses and, apart from the most popular cheeses and their own preferred choices, they will hold monthly specials. I spent some time with a Maître Fromager, a cheese master, in the city of Bourges. This well-educated cheese maven was also the owner of an excellent cheese store selling Crottin de Chavignol. He offers his customers and, on my visit, slivers of this cheese at two or three stages of maturity. He points out the different ages of each and allows the buyer to choose among the different tastes.


Three ages in the life of a Crottin de Chavignol.
The cream-colored cheese on the left is fresh and soft.
The cheese in the center is called “bluish” and ready to eat but mild.
The cheese on the right marked is aged and the choice of the cheese mavens who appreciate the bite.
Photograph courtesy of the Chavignol cheese producers.

When buying a Chavignol to take home, remember that cheeses with unpasteurized milk brought to the USA need to be clearly marked that they have aged over sixty days. The UK accepts the European Union inspected unpasteurized cheeses without any restrictions.

 


You’ll know when you arrive in Chavignol.
Photograph courtesy of Sunny Ripert
https://www.flickr.com/photos/sunfox/4613837935/

The village of Chavignol gave the cheese its name and remains a small and beautiful village in the department of Cher in the region of Centre-Val de Loire. The department of Cher is part of the ancient province of Berry in the Loire Valley and home to many famous wines and cheeses.  Berry has five excellent goat’s  cheeses including the Crottin de Chavignol AOP;  the Valençay AOP; the Pouligny Saint Pierre AOP;  the Selles sur Cher, AOP, and the  Sainte-Maure-de-Touraine AOP

Crottin de Chavignol  on French menus:

Salade de Crottin de Chavignol, (Salade Verte, Crottin Chaud, Tomate, Magret Fumé)  A green salad made with a young Crottin de Chavignol served warm, along with tomato and smoked duck breast.

La Tarte au Crottin de Chavignol – A cheese tart made with the Crottin de Chavignol.

Le Burger au Crottin de Chavignol – A cheeseburger made with the Crottin de Chavignol.

Crottin de Chavignol Chaud sur  Pain Poilâne Toasté - Crottin de Chavignol served on toasted Polar bread also called Swedish bread or Nordic bread. This bread is a traditional rye flour flat bread with dimples.

Crottin de Chavignol sur  Toast au Miel d'Acacia et Pignons de Pin - Crottin de Chavignol cheese served on toast with Acacia honey and pine nuts.


Acacia Honey.
Photograph courtesy of Daioh
https://www.flickr.com/photos/parparlotie/3738445557

Crottin de Chavignol Rôti et Poires Grillée - Crottin de Chavignol roasted and served with grilled pears.

Celebrating the Crottin de Chavignol

With such a famous cheese, there is an annual fete to celebrate it: the Fete du Crottin de Chavignol, the Chavignol cheese fair; it is held on the first Saturday and Sunday in May. Chavignol uses its position very well, and the festival is set in between the village of Chavignol and the town of Sancerre in the Caves de la Mignonne. Even if you missed the Fete du Crottin de Chavignol, the village of Sancerre and the villages roundabout have about twelve fêtes over weekends between April and August, celebrating local wines, cheeses, snails, and other products offering tastes and places to purchase. One fete that should not be missed celebrates Sancerre wines and oysters. 

The Tourist Information Office of Sancerre has an English-language website that covers the whole area of Sancerrois, including all the villages and places of interest around the town of Sancerre and Chavignol. Whatever you do not see clearly on their website, write to them, and within three or four days you will have a reply. Their English language website is:

https://www.tourisme-sancerre.com/

Most of the Chavignol cheese is produced near the village. However, for historical reasons, some of the cheese is made just over the border in the neighboring departments of Loiret and Nièvre in Bourgogne-Franche-Comté. 

 


The Château de Sancerre
Photograph courtesy of JPC24M
https://www.flickr.com/photos/cjp24/5544936637/

Getting to Chavignol and Sancerre

Bourges, the capital of the ancient province of Berry and now the capital of the department of Cher is in the region of Centre-Val de Loire. Bourges is a beautiful and fascinating city, and from there to Chavignol or Sancerre is just 46 km (29 miles), and that is less than one hour by car or bus from Bourges. Caveat emptor, avoid the train it will take you three hours.

The meaning of the word crottin.

The word crottin is part of the name of many small goats’ cheeses. The rather unfortunate translation of this word into English is a little piece of animal dung! Nevertheless, do not worry; the small goats’ cheeses with crottin as part of their name are mostly excellent. A few hundred years ago, when the local farmers were handing out the names for tiny cheeses, they did not have a public relations expert at hand. They looked at the size of the cheese and playfully associated the shapes with names that they knew. Who expected these cheeses to be sold around the world and become part of the cheese course in three-star Michelin restaurants?


Wines from Sancerre.
Photograph courtesy of dpotera 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/e_calamar/7073195509/
 

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

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

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.  Behind the French Menu’s links, include hundreds of words, names, and phrases that are seen on French menus. There are nearly 500 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, 2012, 2017, 2022
 
--------------------

Connected Posts:
   
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