Maquereau – Mackerel. Mackerel in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com
 

  
The Atlantic mackerel.
Natural History of British Fishes (1802)
by Edward Donovan (1768-1837). Digitally enhanced.
    
The Maquereau, Mackerel. On French mainland menus, the mackerel will be the Atlantic Mackerel or the Atlantic Chubb Mackerel. Mackerel is both delicious and healthy with lots of omega 3, vitamin B12, vitamin D, niacin, and selenium; it is also one of the most popular fish on restaurant menus. mackerel is less popular in French homes as home cooks have their work cut out in the preparation so we may enjoy a mackerel's creamy meat;  in restaurants chefs have to remove a lot of the fat, and that takes marinating, grilling or hot or cold-smoking,
   
You can become a mackerel fisherman at age 5.
 
Lisette or Maquereau de Dieppe - See Lisette. A young or small mackerel from off Northern France's Atlantic coast.  These young mackerels are also called the Maquereau de Dieppe, the Dieppe mackerel. Dieppe is a large port and fishing port in the department of Seine-Maritime in the region of Normandie.  (As the crow flies Dieppe is closer to Brighton in the UK 139 km (86 miles) than it is to Paris by road 193 km (120 miles)).  As the young mackerel caught off the coast of Dieppe are considered to be tastier they have their own terroir of the sea and sell for more than young mackerel caught elsewhere. Lisettes will be prepared with their own unique Dieppoise recipes.
   
A school of lisettes.
Young mackerel from close to Dieppe, France.
www.flickr.com/photos/wbaiv/6164052318/

Maquereau, Maquereau CommunAtlantic Mackerel, the most popular mackerel on French menus; caught in the Atlantic and the Mediterranean.

Maquereau Espagnol Atlantique - Atlantic Chubb Mackerel.. This mackerel is a larger member of the family and is caught in the Atlantic and the Mediterranean. 


Mackerel on French Menus
 
Filet de Maquereau Mariné aux Agrumes et à l'Estragon – A mackerel filet marinated with grapefruit and flavored with tarragon.
 
Filet de Maquereau Fumé aux Câpres et Olives – Smoked mackerel served with capers and olives.
 
Filet de Maquereau Fumé et Grillé Sur Une Salade de Fenouil A mackerel filet smoked and then grilled and served on a salad of fennel` which has a light aniseed flavor. 

Filets de Maquereaux Grillés, Petit Risotto de Fruits de Mer  - Grilled mackerel filets served with a small seafood risotto.

 
Filet de Maquereau Poêlé, Aubergines Marinées aux Anchois, Vinaigrette au Vinaigre de Balsamique – Lightly fried mackerel served with aubergines (eggplants) marinated with anchovies and a balsamic vinegar vinaigrette.
 
Maquereau au Vin Blanc -  This is a classic mackerel marinade, it is made with white wine and wine vinegar, flavored with clovesthyme, bay leaves and black pepper

Maquereau Fumé - Smoked mackerel. 

Maquereaux Grillés – Grilled mackerel.

Filets de Maquereaux Grillés à La Plancha, Crème de Piquillos  - Mackerel filets grilled on the plancha and served with a cream of piquillos.  The Plancha or Planxa is a solid, thick, flat sheet metal used for used for cooking in the Pays Basque, the Basque country, and elsewhere in southern France. The metal sheet’s thickness allows for a very even distribution of heat, and with the use of very little oil it achieves a taste somewhere between grilling and frying; the Basques claim ownership of the idea as do the Spanish. The piquillo is a marinated sweet pepper, and here it will have been skinned and used to make a cream sauce whose taste will complement the grilled mackerel.

Grilled Atlantic mackerel.
www.flickr.com/photos/h4ck/2234006795/

Maquereaux Grillés Marmelade de Fenouil au Citron Vert, Ratatouille – Grilled mackerel served with a jam made of fennel and lime accompanied by a small serving of ratatouille.

Maquereau Mariné, Petits Légumes, Sauce Vierge – Marinated mackerel served with young, small vegetables and a Sauce Vierge.   A Sauce Vierge translates as a virgin sauce with the name coming from the use of virgin olive oil. None of the sauce’s ingredients are cooked, and apart from the virgin olive oil, it includes fresh tomatoes, garlic, lemon juice, basil, red wine vinegar, salt and black pepper. The sauce will be served slightly warm but not cooked as a virgin olive oil loses all of its flavor when cooked. The sauce will be poured on the fish just before it is served.
  
   
Maquereau au Vin Blanc
Mackerel filets marinated in white wine.

Maquereau Poêlé Fried mackerel.
 
Maquereaux Poêlés Croustillants, Betteraves Acidulées, Tomme Blanche Légère Et Framboises -  Crisply fried mackerel served with pickled beet-root, and a white fresh farm cheese with raspberries.
   
Fried filets of mackerel with baby leeks.
www.flickr.com/photos/mufoo/2189637300/
 

Salades - Salads.

 
Salade de Pâtes Riso au Maquereau – A salad of rice-shaped, and rice sized, pasta with mackerel. 
  
Salade de Pommes de Terre à l'Aneth et Filets de Maquereau Fumé – A potato salad flavored with dill and served with smoked mackerel.

 Escabèche – Escabèche
 
Escabèche is a marinated fish and shellfish dish of South American, probably Peruvian origin; it is served cold. Most versions are made with marinated raw fish or shellfish; however, some versions use smoked fish or shellfish, and I have also seen a marinated vegetarian offering.
 
Maquereau à l'Escabéche, Pickles et Agrumes – Marinated mackerel served with pickles, cornichons, olives, lightly pickled pearl onions and citrus fruits.
 
Maquereaux a l’Escabèche, Compotée D’oignons Caramelisés au Gingembre  - Marinated mackerel accompanied by an onion jam caramelized with ginger.
   

Escabèche de Sardines
https://www.flickr.com/photos/paulk/4508601027/

 
Rillettes – Pates or terrines.
 
Rillettes may be made with fish, poultry or pork, cooked until it is spreadable like a smooth pate or terrine. Fish and seafood rillettes are available in Charcuterie-Traiteurs, France’s super delis. When I visited a friend for an evening apéro, drinks and snacks (not dinner), he and his wife served a fabulous mackerel rillette along with cornichons, olives and pearl onions, a fresh baguette and an excellent dry white wine.  With the sun setting behind the trees it was a little dose of mackerel heaven.
 
Rillettes de Maquereaux, Pain Grille – Mackerel rillettes and toast.  On a French menu, Pain Grille means toast and toast also means toast.  When William the Conqueror invaded England in 1066, he and his barons brought the French connection to the English kitchen. One of the words they brought was toster, a word used for certain grilled dishes, then a few hundred years later the French took the Anglicized word toast back to France and use it with its modern English meaning. Today, in France, the word toast is used just as often as the original French name for toasted bread, pain grille.

Rillettes de Maquereau Vinaigrette au Pistou Mackerel rillets with a pistou vinaigrette sauce.  Pestou is the French take on the Italian pesto sauce and it was here the French began to use finely crushed basil, the herb.  For French Pestou or Italian Pesto to the crushed sweet basil leaves are added garlic, salt, pepper, an excellent virgin olive oil, pine nuts, and Parmesan cheese as an optional extra.
   

Duck Rillette
https://www.flickr.com/photos/stuart_spivack/3425260429/


Maquereau au Four and  Maquereau Poché
 
Maquereau au Four, Baked mackerel, and Maquereau Poché, Poached mackerel, are traditional mackerel dishes and will be on some French restaurant menus though they are not as popular as the menu listings above.  

Mackerel and taste.
 
Some people say they do not like mackerel claiming that it has a fishy taste. The popular cooking methods remove most of the oil and leave a fresh mackerel taste, and that is as it should be; that's why people like mackerel. Mackerel shouldn't need a sauce so that it tastes like something. Many fish are caught far too young when their taste has not yet developed or are fish-farmed for speedy growth and not taste. Today there are beef and lamb dishes that when covered with sauce cannot be identified in a blind tasting one from the other, even the differences in texture have melted away. Some restaurants have become famous for their spicy sauces, but pouring too spicy a sauce over food obscures all the separate levels of flavor. If the sauce is spicy enough, a diner’s taste buds then also cannot identify whatever follows; and there is no point in ordering a particular beer or a vintage wine. The beauty of modern French cuisine including most fusion dishes is that each component can be tasted, while their texture and often their color may be enjoyed as well. Then the wines, beers or ciders that accompany the dish may also be appreciated. And so back to mackerel, enjoy its fresh fishy taste.

The sizes, weights, and colors of fresh mackerel.
   
When you see fresh mackerel in a fishmonger or a supermarket their distinctly patterned sides immediately identify them. They will be anywhere from 25 - 35cm (10 -14”)  inches long and most are under 500 grams (1.1lbs) in weight though they can be much larger,. They travel in schools that contain many thousands of fish, but still, these easy catches are becoming more difficult as overfishing takes its toll. 

Jack mackerel and horse mackerel.
Two other types of mackerel may be on French menus:
 
Chinchard dos vert - Jack mackerel. This or another close family member is the mackerel in most of the imported canned mackerel tins on French supermarket shelves; it is not seen in the Atlantic or in the Mediterranean.

Saurel or Chinchard - This is the Mediterranean horse mackerel that mostly is bought by restaurants to add flavor to fish soups and does not appear on their menus. Nevertheless, this fish does have its admirers and it will be on the menu in many of France's excellent French - Japanese restaurants, including those with Michelin stars. There horse mackerel will be on the menu as Aji or Maaji sushi or sashimi.

Maquereau, Maquereau Commun – Atlantic Mackerel, the most popular mackerel on French menus; caught in the Atlantic and the Mediterranean.

 The atlantic Mackerel in the languages of France's neighbors:
(Catalan - lacertu), (Dutch - makreel), (German – makrele, Atlantische makrele), (Italian - maccarello), (Spanish – caballa, verdel), (Latin - scomber scombrus).

    Maquereau Esgnol Atlantique - Atlantic Chubb Mackerel. This mackerel is a large member of the family and found in the Atlantic and the Mediterranean.

The Atlantic Chubb Mackerel in the languages of France's neighbors: 
    (Catalan - bis, bísol, cavalla, gallim), (Dutch - makreel), (German - mittelmeermakrele), (Italian - sgombro), (Spanish – caballa, verdel), (Latin - scomber colias).

    Thazard Blanc - Atlantic Spanish Mackerel, there’s confusion in the name but this family member will not be on French mainland menus nor found off the Spanish coast.  It’s found in the Western Atlantic and the Caribbean:

The Atlantic Spanish Mackerel  in the languages of France's neigbors: 
(German - gefleckte königsmakrele), (Italian - sgombro macchiato), (Spanish - carite Atlántico), (Latin -  scomberomorus maculatus).


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Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
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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 400 articles that include over 3,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations.
 

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behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com
Copyright 2010, 2018, 2022, 2023.

 


Dining in the Department of Charente-Maritime on France's Atlantic Coast.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com
  

Entrance to the port at La Rochelle.
www.flickr.com/photos/ollografik/2581012577/

Charente-Maritime has over 450 km (280 miles) of coastline; the longest coastline of any French department. It is 200 km (124 miles) “as the crow flies” from the Loire River to the department's border close to the City of Bordeaux. All along the coast are hundreds of sandy beaches, seaside towns, fishing ports and offshore islands with innumerable fish and seafood restaurants offering locally caught fish and seafood along with farm-raised mussels and oysters. Restaurant menus will offer Label Rouge,  red label (IGP) lamb, beef, rabbit, oysters, mussels, melons and AOP Goat’s Cheese, AOP Butter, and Cognac AOC.
  
Beaches away from the crowds in Charente-Maritime.
www.flickr.com/photos/marsupilami92/15102008949/
  
Until 1-1-2016 the department of Charente-Maritime was linked together with the departments of Charente, Deux Sevres, and Vienne in the administrative region called Poitou-Charentes.  That bond and that of many other French regions were dissolved to reduce bureaucracy, and now Charente-Maritime and the other three departments are now part of the new super-region of Nouvelle Aquitaine.  Nevertheless, most of the foods seen on the menus of Charente-Maritime still come from the old region of Poitou-Charentes. 

On the menu in Charente-Maritime:

Pineau des Charentes – The Aperitif. Wherever you are dining in Charente- Maritime one aperitif that will always be offered is Pineau des Charentes. This aperitif is the only one developed from Cognac, and its fame is not limited to this region or even France. It really is special and worth taking home or buying it there.
   
A 10-year-old Pineau des Charentes
Only real connoisseurs worry about the age for this aperitif,
It's so good that most just quaff it.
www.flickr.com/photos/farehamwine/12204681145/
 
Carré d’Agneau du Poitou-Charentes Rôti aux Gousses d’Ail Jus d’Agneau à la Marjolaine – A rack of the red label Poitou-Charentes lamb roasted with garlic cloves and served with a sauce made from the lamb's natural cooking juices flavored with marjoram.
  
Dos de Cabillaud Roti Risotto aux Petits Pois, Lentins au Café, au Beurre d’Échiré – A thick cut of roasted fresh cod served with a risotto of shiitake mushrooms flavored with coffee and the AOP butter of Échiré. The AOP butter from Poitou-Charentes if one of only three AOP butters in the whole of France.
    
Faux Filet Grillé, Pommes de Terre Nouvelles de l'Île de  aux Herbes et Tomates Confites. A grilled UK sirloin steak, a USA strip steak. (The USA and UK sirloins are not the same cut).  Here the steak is served with the Île de Ré, Island of Re, AOP new potatoes, and tomatoes confit, a tomato jam.  From May through mid-June check your menus for Pomme de Terres Nouvelles AOC de l'Île de Ré.  These are the earliest of France’s AOP new potatoes; they come from strains of Alcmaria, Charlotte, and Léontine potatoes. You may enjoy these potatoes on their home turf by visiting the island’s potato fair in May, their Fête du Lilas.  Then the local restaurants will make sure that you do not miss out.  There are those who believe that the heavens open and magnificent singing is heard when the Pommes de Terres Nouvelles AOC de l'Île de Ré are placed on the table.
   
l'Île de Ré AOP new potatoes.
   
Jambon de Bayonne, Melon du Haut-Poitou – The Charentaise type red-label Melon du Haut-Poitou served with France’s most popular cured ham, the Jambon de Bayonne. This fruit is a light-green round melon with ordered dark green stripes and a fragrant and sweet orange flesh inside.
  
 
Haut- Poitou melons.

La Moule de Bouchot en Velouté Froid au Safran d'Angoumois et Cristes Marines  –  A cold velvety soup prepared with the small, red label, mussels the Ile de Re's Moules de Filières Label Rouge. The soup  with the coastal vegetable called samphire or salicornia and hand-raised saffron from the old province of Angoumois, now part of the department of Charente.
   
Lapin de Mille Ventes aux Pruneaux et Raisins, Frites, Salade - The red label Mille Ventes rabbit stuffed with prunes and raisins and accompanied by French fries and a salad. Rabbit and hare are farm-raised in France.
    
L'Entrecôte de Boeuf Race Parthenaise Grillée à la Fleur de Sel de l'île de Ré – Two unique local tastes in one. An entrecote, a rib-eye steak from the red label Parthenaise cattle grilled over the flower of salt from the l'île de Ré. The Parthenaise is a local breed of cattle that were brought back from extinction and are recognized for their excellent meat.  The Île de Ré is an island off the coast of the fishing port and city of La Rochelle.  Île de Ré is famous for its Fleur de Sel which are the crystals of sea salt rich in iodine and magnesium that are hand-gathered from the top of a salt drying pan.
  
There’s nothing to eat in Charente-Maritime.
www.flickr.com/photos/mikegras/38188217725/
 
Plateau de 6 Huîtres N°3 (Fines de Claire Marennes-Oléron) – A plate with 6 No 3 size red label Fines de Claire Marennes-Oléron oysters.  The Marennes-Oléron is the largest oyster growing center in France and produces the only two oysters that have a red label rating.  Their Fines de Claire are European oysters about three-years-old that are fattened for one month in the estuary's tidal waters; during that month they grow fatter along with their friends as there are only 20 oysters per square meter. The number 3 on the menu listing indicates the shelled weight of each oyster; that is 56 - 65 grams (2.00-2.30 oz). These red label oysters are raised on the island of Oleron and the coast opposite to where the town of Marennes leads to the bridge that connects the mainland to the island.
   
Oysters and mussels on sale.
www.flickr.com/photos/loloieg/223576897/

Chabichou AOP - Chabichou (also known as Chabichou du Poitou AOP) is a traditional soft, unpasteurized, natural-rind, French goat’s cheese with a firm and creamy texture. Chabichou is aged for a minimum of 10 days and up to 6 weeks. A young cheese may be part of a salad while a more mature cheese will be stronger tasting and part of a cheese platter.

Goats’ cheeses and the Chabichou Route de Fromages.
 
Goats’ cheeses are made in all the four departments of the old Poitou-Charentes regions. The region is not as famous as Provence for branded goats’ cheeses, but they produce a great deal more; nearly 20% of France’s total consumption. Consider spending a few hours on their unique Chabichou and goat’s cheese road, their Chabichou Route de Fromages.   The map for this cheese road is carefully set out with entrances and exits on Charente-Maritime and the other three departments. The stops are carefully planned to be near to producers of wines, cognac, and restaurants.
 
The Chabichou Route de Fromages website is in French only, but is easily understood using the Google or Bing Translate Apps:


Marans
  
The Marans’ chicken eggs color chart.
     
Not to be ignored is the inland fishing port of Marans near La Rochelle, the capital of  Charente-Maritime. Marans is famous for its fresh saltwater fish and seafood restaurants.  You may see the fish coming off the boats but Marans’ international fame claim to fame comes from its chickens,   The Marans chickens have a place in the world of gastronomy as they lay naturally dark brown to amber and deep red eggs. While the eggs taste exactly the same as other chicken’s eggs, two boiled eggs from Marans chickens can make breakfast a whole new experience.


There are four islands off the coast of Charente Maritime.

The  Île de Ré

 
Sunrise from the Île de Ré

 Île de Ré is the most famous island off the Charente-Maritime coast with 20,0 year-round residents, a number that reaches more than 150,000 at the height of summer.  With nearly all the holiday-makers French who return here year after year you know the place is exceptional.  If you wish to book a hotel room for a week or two in July and August, you had better try four years in advance. However, finding a hotel with a room for one or two days is possible or make a day trip to the fabulous beaches, excellent restaurants and casino.  Apart from its beautiful beaches, oysters, mussels, fresh sea fish, seafood, Fleur de Sel, and AOP new potatoes, there is Cognac.  The small island is home to three Camus brand Cognacs that are grown there and distilled in the town of Jarnac but aged on the mainland, 

The  Île d'Oléron
   
 
Dining at an oyster farm
www.flickr.com/photos/jmenj/29080069007/

Île d'Oléron is the largest island off the coast of Charente-Maritime, 30 km (19 miles) long and 10km (6 miles) wide. While it is a dot on the map compared with Corsica France’s largest mainland island, it is still mainland France’s second largest island.  Like the Île de Ré, it is also a trendy vacation center for the French.  Despite the importance of tourism of even greater significance to the local economy is its enormous aquaculture industry which includes the only two oysters to have been awarded the French Label Rouge mark of quality.  These are the only oysters in the world with a merit badge; they hold their ratings by virtue of their consistent taste and texture.

La Fine de Claire Verte Marennes Oléron, Label Rouge -  The red label Marennes Oléron European oyster fattened for one month.
 
La Pousse en Claire Label Rouge –The red label Marennes Oléron Creuze, crinkly shelled, oyster fattened for four months.
   
The  Île d'Aix

Île d'Aix is a small island that has a year-round population of 200 who are mostly engaged in fishing and mussel and oyster farming. The island's central claim to fame is the three days in 1815 when from 12 to 15 July Emperor Napoleon I spent his last days on French soil there before being exiled to St Helena. It is a place for a half-day trip with a visit to an oyster farm. 
   
Grondin Perlon - Tub Gunard in UK & Sea Robin in the USA.
A very tasty member of the rascasse fish family.
www.flickr.com/photos/marsupilami92/21830329278/
   
The Île Madame
    
Mussels in the market
www.flickr.com/photos/entreprise/37519314071/

 Île Madame is in the River Charente estuary is the smallest island in this group and is joined to the mainland by a natural causeway. All around the island are oyster beds with the waters around the island home to a particular algae, called the navicula blue. This algae results in an oyster with a green tinge and the farm includes a welcome center where you can order as many as you wish.  If you arrive on the Island at the wrong time, you may have to wait until the low tide to get off.

There are two other tiny dots on the map; these are offshore forts of Fort Boyard and Fort Enet.  They remain, more or less as they were when they defended the coast, an assignment that ended with the Napoleonic Wars. Now they are a stop off for day trips, the site of TV specials and of course, oyster farms.
   
Fort Boyard
www.flickr.com/photos/hellolapomme/2248527353/

The two principal towns in the old region of Poitou-Charentes:
  
La Rochelle
  
The most important town in Charente-Maritime is the department's capital La Rochelle on the Atlantic Coast; it is both a seaport and fishing port on the Bay of Biscay, with a long and famous history.  La Rochelle has a wonderful array of fresh fish and seafood around the old port and two central fish markets.  Apart from being a visitors base camp La Rochelle is the commercial center of Charente-Maritime and hosts the largest shopping centers including a branch of Galeries Lafayette. La Rochelle is home to the largest boating marina in Europe with space for over 5,000 boats, and yachts and also the mainland end of the bridge that connects to the Île de Ré.  (New Rochelle in New York State is named after La Rochelle, and they are twin cities.  New Rochelle was settled by refugee Huguenots (French Protestants) in 1688).

Cognac
   
The Île de Ré  Camus range of Cognacs.

The digestif that will be offered in every restaurant in Charente-Maritime is Cognac. The town gave its name to the brandy that is one of France's most significant contributions to the world of gastronomy. Like the Cognac made on thÎle de Ré all the Cognac in the world aged is aged in or close to the town of Cognac in the neighboring department of Charente.  It makes for an interesting day trip from La Rochelle, 104 km (65 miles) with direct trains taking one hour and fifteen minutes.

Dutch merchants found that by distilling one liter of brandy from eleven liters of local wine, they produced a very pleasant digestif.  The Dutch called their creation brandewijn, meaning burnt wine. Brandewijn was the word that would become brandy. The Dutch found that the very best wines for this young brandy, an eau-de-vie, came from wines around the town of Cognac and they set up distilleries.  Then the French discovered that if the brandy, still an eau-de-vie,  was distilled twice it produced something that was much better than the original brandy with an aged eau-de vie becoming a fine Cognac.
  
For information on deciphering Cognac labels and how to tell the age and grade of a Cognac click here. For more about the ageing and blending of Cognac click here. For more about visiting the town of Cognac and trying different Cognacs click here.

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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 400 articles that include over 3,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations.

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman 
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com
Copyright 2010, 2018, 2023, 2024




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