Anguille, Anguille d'Europe – the European Freshwater Eel in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


 
A freshwater eel.
www.flickr.com/photos/devcentre/39748389/
 
The European Freshwater Eel.  

Anguille, Anguille d'Europe, Angèle or Pibales  –  The European eel, the Common eel, or the River eel. Eels are a traditional and popular dish all over Europe and no less so in France. Eels will be on the menus of the best French restaurants served on or off the bone, sautéed, baked, grilled, and smoked. Eels are also part of many French freshwater fish stews or prepared as an eel stew where they star on their own. Only Japan has more eel recipes. In the UK and parts of North America eels are prepared with traditional recipes but rarely seen there in top-of-the-line restaurants. Eels will be grilled, braised, or smoked to remove most of their natural fat. The eel has a pleasant but different flavor to fish with slightly flaky meat.          

The European eel on French menus:

 

Matelote d'Anguille –  A freshwater eel stew; a very popular and traditional dish. Most eel stews are made with red wine and are best accompanied by red wine. Other matelotes may be on the menu; they will freshwater fish stews; they may include brochet, pike;  perche, freshwater perch; tanche, tench; sandre, zander or pike-perch; and freshwater eels. 

 

Matelote d'Anguille

Photograph courtesy of CuisineAZ

 

Anguilles du Marais sur le Grill  Grilled eels from the marshes. This offering was on a menu in a restaurant close to the city of Angoulême. Angoulême is in the department of Charente, just twenty minutes away from the town of Cognac. The locals consider the Angouleme marsh eels to be the best. Restaurants offering these marsh eels are sure to put their provenance on the menu. The French word marais means marsh and the large and historic area of Paris called Le Marais was once marshland. (Many UK visitors will remember the name Angouleme from their schooldays. Countess Isabella of Angoulême (1188 -1246) was the Queen Consort and the second wife of King John of England).

   

Friture d'Anguilles du Lac de Grand-Lieu en Persillade - A fry-up of eels. These eels are from the Grand Lieu Lake to the South- West of the city of Nantes. Deep-fried eel is very popular, here it will have been cut into small pieces. The persillade is a flavoring of  parsley and garlic.

   

Grilled eel on a bed of spinach

Photograph courtesy of Laurel F

www.flickr.com/photos/laurelfan/4170471707/

     

Anguille Fumée, Moutarde Verte, Chou-Fleur, Câpres,  Verjus Smoked eels, green mustardcauliflower, capers and verjus. (Green mustard is usually a Dijon-style mustard colored with the juice of a green vegetable or herb).

 


Smoked Eels with Yuzu Hollandaise.
Yuzu is a member of the citrus family that originated in China. The fruit is very popular in Japan and it has a taste somewhere between that of a grapefruit and an orange.
Many French chefs have adopted this fruit for its unique taste.
Photograph courtesy of Charles Haynes
www.flickr.com/photos/haynes/15411860356/

 
Smoked
 Eels

Smoked eels that have been cured, not cooked, by smoking. Foods have been smoked by humans throughout history. Originally this was done as a preservative, but in more recent times fish, and eels, were readily preserved by refrigeration and freezing and so the smoking is generally done for the unique taste and flavor imparted by the smoking process. Cold and hot smoking produce very different flavors and textures.

Smoked eels of French menus:


Duo de Saumons Marinés et Fumés, Anguille Fumée – A matched serving of marinated salmon,  smoked salmon and smoked eel. An excellent contrast in tastes and textures.

   

Anguille Croustillante, Sabayon de Vinaigre de Cidre et Carottes au Gingembre - Crisply prepared eel served with a French take on the Italian dish of zabaglione prepared with cider vinegar. The connection to the Italian dish of zabaglione may seem dubious, but the sauce will still be tasty. Adding to the color and flavors are carrots and ginger.

Photograph courtesy of Julien Menichini

   

Anguille aux Cèpes – Eel served with France’s Porcini mushrooms. This will usually be fried eel.

     

Pressé de foie gras aux cèpes et anguille fumée à la vinaigrette de noisette - Pieces of foie gras, fattened duck's liver,  pressed together with French porcini mushrooms, smoked eel, and a vinaigrette made with hazelnut oil.

Photograph courtesy of Trip Advisor

 

 

 Anguille Fumée, Escortée d'Asperges Vertes - Smoked eel served with green asparagus.

                                                                            

 Anguille à la Broche - Eels, grilled on skewers; traditionally, that would be grilled over charcoal.

 

Pibales en Friture – A simple and very popular Basque recipe for deep-fried elvers.  To the fried elvers are added the Basque Espelette peppers.

 

Elvers - baby eels.

Alevins, Alevins d'Anguille, Gulas, Civelle or Pibale - Baby eels; elvers in English and pibale in Basque. A large elver is 5- 6 cm (2”) long. In season, in France, and elsewhere in Europe, elvers used to be very popular deep-fried fast food. Visitors could join the locals and walk down the street holding paper cones, snacking on deep-fried baby eels. However, elvers have been over-fished, and prices have sky-rocketed. With high prices, any baby eels on the menu will mostly be in upscale restaurants.

The French elver season begins when the baby eels begin to enter the rivers from the sea from the end of November-December or December-January. Elvers may be on the menu at other times, but after those dates that usually means they are frozen.

Elvers are caught at the mouth of rivers when trying to reach the river from where their parents came. Eels mate and are spawn in the Sargasso Sea and why and what happens when they get there and meet the American eels with whom they do not inter-breed remains a mystery.  The Sargasso Sea, located entirely within the Atlantic Ocean, is the only sea without a land boundary.

The reason for a possible international eel conspiracy taking place in the Sargasso Sea may be discussed at length over a hearty eel stew. Eel stew, with adult eels, is at its best when accompanied by a bottle of red wine.


European Elvers
Photograph courtesy of Sustainable Eel Group, (Photo credit ©Peter Walker)       

 
Jellied Eels

Cold jellied eels, are a traditional English dish that began in London’s East end about two-hundred years ago. There still remain, in London, a few specialist restaurants, that continue to serve eel pie and jellied eels made with the original recipes.

Eels in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan -anguila), (Dutch - aal ), (German – all, Europäischer aal), (Italian- anguilla, anghilla), (Spanish- änguila), (Latin - anguilla anguilla).

-----------

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 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, 2015, 2017, 2021
--------------------
 
Connected posts:
 
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Aïoli – Aioli. France's Much Loved Garlicky Mayonnaise Version was the Original Aïoli. Aioli on French Menus. Enjoying Le Grand Aioli in France.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

  
Aïoli – Aioli
Photograph courtesy of Tim Pierce
www.flickr.com/photos/qwrrty/3090907319


Aioli  - France's Garlic Mayonnaise

Aioli was the name originally given to France’s garlicky mayonnaise and is often associated with Provence. For such a famous sauce, aioli’s recipe is simple: egg yolks, crushed garlic, oil, and lemon juice. The chef may add mustard or other flavors. Le Grand Aioli which is connected to aioli but is sometimes confused with aioli itself is a traditional Provencal family meal. More about Le Grand Aioli in the latter part of this post.

The British and the North Americans discover Aïoli in France.

Aioli was discovered by the first English tourists who arrived on France’s Mediterranean coast in the latter part of the 19th century. In the early 20th century, North Americans would reach France on ocean liners like the Mauretania with a capacity of 2,300 passengers in 1907. Awaiting them was Provencal cuisine, including aioli, and the city of Nice. As a reminder of the first welcomed English invasion, the promenade built along the city of Nice’s sand-covered beaches is still called the La Promenade des Anglais, the English promenade.


A view of Nice from the Promenade Anglais.
Photograph courtesy of Richard Whitaker.
www.flickr.com/photos/richardwhitaker/18794583782/
 
Garlic in the French kitchen

With Provencal cuisine, the tourists were exposed to seasonings, aromas, and flavors mostly unknown at home. While Provencal cuisine uses garlic in less than half of its most famous dishes the use of garlic, sometimes in robust quantities was a surprise. Garlic was rarely used, at that time, in British or North American kitchens. When garlic is added to a dish with intensity and passion it can remain on the diner’s breath for a day or two. Aioli became famous as apart from accenting Provencal cuisine it promised to keep vampires away

Aioli’s fame has spread.

Aioli is now an internationally famous sauce and on menus with tens of different accents from Japan to Thailand to Australia, North America, and all of Europe. It is usually prepared and offered in a side dish like mayonnaise. The amount of garlic in the recipe depends on the chef. In Northern France, a single clove of garlic may be added for every diner; along the Mediterranean coast, that number can rise to four cloves per diner


Crab cakes and mustard aioli.
Photograph courtesy of stu_spivack.
www.flickr.com/photos/stuart_spivack/2250085312/

   Aioli on French menus:

  

Les Escargots de Mer et Sauce Aïoli – Escargot de Mer means sea snails and so this dish will star France’s much-loved Bulots, also called Bourgets or Buccins, whelks in English. Here the whelks are served with aioli. When you order whelks in a small seaside restaurant, it will serve them with mayonnaise or aioli accompanies Frites, French fries, chips, on the side. If the French fries are not included, then order them separately. Whelks, aioli, and French fries is one of the tastiest ways to eat whelks. As the Belgians have mussels and French fries so France has whelks and aioli. In France another popular, but much smaller, sea snail is the bigorneau, the periwinkle or winkle in English. The periwinkle may be part of the dish.     

 

Swordfish Carpaccio, Poached Ocean Trout with Aioli

Photograph courtesy of Alpha

www.flickr.com/photos/avlxyz/2865423734/

 

Assiette de Crevettes, Aïoli Maison – A plate of shrimps accompanied by the restaurant’s take on aioli. 

     

Petite Friture Aioli

A tasty entrée of deep-fried little fish served here with aioli.

Photograph courtesy of Mike Czyzewski

www.flickr.com/photos/21687588@N07/3712937213/

 

Tartare de Boeuf, Poivre Vert, Lardons, Aïoli au Parmesan et Citron A Beef Tartar prepared with green pepper, bacon pieces, aioli, Parmesan and lemon. The traditional beef tartar is flavored with mayonnaise and Worcester sauce and topped with copeaux, shavings, of Parmesan cheese. For this Beef Tatar, the mayonnaise is replaced with aioli. The other additions to the original version are green peppercorns bacon pieces and a piece of lemon on the side.

    

 

Ronin Burger - Angus beef, caramelized onions,

Japanese cole slaw, miso goma dressing, fried egg, Katsu BBQ, Yuzu citrus aioli

Photograph courtesy of City Foodsters

www.flickr.com/photos/cityfoodsters/10065094283/

   

Blancs d'Encornet Grillés, Persillade et Aïoli -  Encornets are a favorite small squid in France, a calamari; here it will be opened and flattened on the grill. The persillade is a seasoning of parsley, garlicvinegar and oil and it will have flavored the calamari while it was grilling;  the aioli will be served on the side to add as you choose.

Aioli and mayonnaise.

Aioli developed from mayonnaise. According to the accepted tradition mayonnaise, was a sauce created in 1756 by the chef of the Duc de Richelieu. The Duke had ordered a banquet to celebrate the French capture of the Mediterranean Balearic island of Menorca from the English. The chef’s unique creation for the evening was the Sauce Mayonnaise.  

I imagine that as soon as the French sailors came home, they brought the new creation called mayonnaise. Then the addition of garlic, crushed till it became oil, would have been a very short step.

The name aioli.

In Provence, many people still speak or understand the Provencal dialect of Occitan alongside modern French. Until one hundred and fifty years ago Occitan and Catalan were the main languages spoken in Mediterranean France.  In Occitan, garlic is “alh”  and “oli” is oil. Together those two words are “alholi”; and  that became aioli. Aioli is just as important in the cuisine of Languedoc-Roussillon where Catalan is still spoken alongside modern French. Just as the city of Nice is a center for Provencal cuisine so the large fishing port of Sète is a center for Languedoc-Roussillon cuisine. If you are traveling in the region will find many Sète seafood restaurants with aioli on the menu or in the recipe of the dishes you order.

In Sete your menu may offer:

  

Moules Farcies à la Sétoise – Mussels, from the Étang de Thau, the Thau Basin, stuffed in the manner of Sète. The mussels are stuffed with sausage meat and cooked in white wine and tomato puree.  The mussels will be served with aioli on the side or on top.

  

The main canal in Sète.

Photograph courtesy of Mike McBey

www.flickr.com/photos/158652122@N02/42295334951/

    

Bourride de Lotte à la Sètois -  Bourride de Lotte is a traditional Provencal monkfish stew, and monkfish are one of the tastiest sea fish with a very firm texture. Sète’s version of Bourride is a creamy stew of monkfish and vegetables all flavored with white wine and aioli. The stew will be served with more aioli on the side.

Le Grand Aioli may have begun in Provence.
Now, it is a family favorite all along France’s Mediterranean coast

In both Provence and Languedoc-Roussillon, aioli will be the dish prepared for family get-togethers. Le Grand Aïoli will be held for most large celebrations and is a delight for the eyes


Le Grand Aioli.
Photograph courtesy of The Wednesday Chef, Luisa Weiss.

Le Grand Aioli and its ingredients change with the season. However, the centerpiece will always be the traditional desalted cod. Then come the vegetables in season; crunchy fresh vegetables like carrots, radishes, and fresh cauliflower are important as they may be dipped in the aioli.  The layout of the vegetables with attractive colors is also important and so fresh tomatoes and cucumbers will be included. To this will be added hard-boiled eggs and cooked vegetables that may include France’s favorite fresh green beans, haricot vert, boiled potatoes, courgettes, zucchini, and asparagus in season. Depending on the home or restaurant seafood where Le Grand Aioli is served seafood and or snails may also be part of the mouthwatering display.

-------------------------------- 

  

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 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, 2015, 2021
 
--------------------
   
Connected posts:
 
Ail - Garlic. Garlic in French Cuisine.
    
Asparagus; Green and White Asparagus. Ordering Asparagus. The French and Town of Argenteuil, its Famous Asparagus, and its even more Famous Painters
 
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