Dining in Limousin, France. The Departments of Corrèz, Creuse, and Haute-Vienne.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

  
A herd of Limousin cattle.
www.flickr.com/photos/metay/17051456537/

Limousin may not be on France’s main tourist routes, but it influences all of French cuisine and the city of Limoge is the historical center of fine porcelain and the birthplace of Auguste Renoir and the town of Aubusson is a world heritage site for its tapestries.  Limousin’s three departments, Corrèz, Creuse, and Haute-Vienne are green and forested with hills, rivers and lakes set close to the center of France and since 1-1-2016 part of the new super region of Nouvelle Aquitaine.
   
Autumn in Limousin
www.flickr.com/photos/algarve04/24056079268/
  
Limousin’s produce and products star on menus all over France whether named on the menu or not.  Limousin’s Label Rouge, red label, beef, is the most popular IGP beef in France and the only French apples with an AOP rating are the Pomme du Limousin AOP. Limousine is also home to many farms that grow the Noix de Périgord, AOP, the Périgord Walnuts and a large part of Limosin has thick chestnut forests.
  
Clafoutis

Famous Inside and outside France are Limousin’s favorite tarte the Clafoutis (pronounced in the singular or plural form as kla-fou-tee). Tarts made with a crepe-like batter and originally with Limousin’s abundant sour cherries. Clafoutis are now famous all over  France, and they will be made with other fruits and ingredients and served for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.  The flaugnarde (pronounced with the letter g silent, so flaugnarde is pronounced flo-nyard) is Limousine’s other famous tart and very similar.
 
 
While very little wine is produced in Limousin it is close to the Loire valley and those wines will, along with the wines of Burgundy, be on all the wine lists. Limousin’s oak forests have provided all the oak for the barrels used in Rémy Martin Cognac for more than 100 years,

Limousin on French menus:
 
Boudin Noir à la Châtaigne du Limousin et sa Purée de Pommes – France’s version of the UK and Ireland’s black pudding (a pig’s blood sausage) prepared with Limousin chestnuts and apple puree.  Dishes like this may be on the menus as “à la Limousin,” in the manner of Limousin and are often recipes with made with its abundant chestnuts or AOP apples.
 
Emincés de Magrets de Canard aux Pommes Du Limousin AOP et Gelée de Coing – Slices of duck breast prepared with Limousin’s AOP apples and quince jelly. 
  
Farcidure or Farcidure de Pommes de Terre – This winter dish from Limousin is made with grated potatoes cooked with salt pork or fatty bacon and flavored with onions, shallots, and garlic.  The exact recipe may change as local variations add or remove one or other of the ingredients. 

Limousin has learned from the AOP wineries, and they have a Route de la Pomme du Limousin, an apple road in the department of Correze. The French language website is easily understood using Bing or Google translate apps.  The route will take you through magnificent scenery allowing stops at farms (on Thursdays in season) and of course past many restaurants.
   
  
Slices of duck’s breast
N.B. Duck in France will be served rosé; if you prefer it well cooked, ask.
www.flickr.com/photos/sushi_kato/4531739518/
 
Filet de Bœuf Limousin, Sauce à la Lie-de-Vin de Touraine – A cut from the tenderloin, the fillet, from Limousin beef served with a red wine from Touraine sauce. Limousin Label Rouge, red label, beef is well marbled and not from cows fed in feeding lots. The cows are at least 28 months old and will have been free range for six months of the year.  The red wines from the Touraine appellation in the Loire Valley are known for their strongly colored, almost violet-red wines and the term Lie de Vin is also a color.
  
Pavé de Veau Limousin, Tranche de Lard Colonnata et son Jus Corsé A particular cut from the rump of Limousin’s Label Rouge, red label, veal prepared with a cut of Lard Colonnata, and a sauce made from the cooking juices. The Label Rouge veal from Limousin come from calves raised until weaned by their mothers while completely free of antibiotics or growth hormones. The Lard Colonnata (Lardo de Colonnata) was originally part of an Italian quarryman’s daily meal in the small town of Colonnata in Tuscany, Italy; today it is a gourmet flavoring. It is made from a cut of cured pig fat cured with garlic, salt, pepper, rosemary, and sage in baths made of marble; the result is a firm lard with a truly unique taste. French chefs, like the Italians chefs, use the Lard Colonnata for flavor and even serve it directly on toast though that has made me consider my cholesterol.
  
Salade Limousin –  A limousin salad will be on many menus and the salad greens used will vary with the season but will always include Perigord walnuts or Limousin chestnuts, and the vinaigrette may be made with walnut oil.
 
Souris d’Agneau Limousin Braisée à la Crème d’Ail Douce – Braised Limousin lamb shank served with a cream sauce made with sweet garlic.  This dish is always prepared and served with the bone left in; the bone and bone marrow provides lots of flavors. Limousin’s Label Rouge, red label lambs, are raised until weaned by their mothers and are free of antibiotics and growth hormones.  Souris d’agneau is a dish designed for restaurants; they have the time and the staff to control the slow process required to prepare this dish. The souris d’agneau will be cooked for hours, so the slow, low, heat breaks down the muscle and other tissues. The meat will practically melt in your mouth with all the taste locked in, and that’s the beauty of a souris d’agneau.
  
Souris d’Agneau
www.flickr.com/photos/marsupilami92/26325089461/
.  
Tarte Façon Bourdaloue Pommes Du Limousin AOP, Pignons Dorés -  Tarte Bourdaloue is classic fruit pie made with a pâte brisée pastry; here it is made with Limousin’s AOP apples and browned pine nuts over an almond or frangipane based cream.  (The name comes from Rue Bourdaloue in Paris where the Patisserie that first made tarte was situated in the 1850s). 
Tarte Bourdaloue

www.flickr.com/photos/lejoe/5051989570/
  
The cheeses of Limousin.
 
Limousin has many excellent cheeses made with cow’s, goat’s and sheep’s milk though most have limited production, and so despite their excellence they are only available locally. One that I recommend is called the Corrézon au Torchon; this is a traditional cow’s milk cheese with 45% fat, that is produced much like a fresh cheese but is in fact aged for anywhere from one to three months.

Other cheeses that will be on restaurants cheese trolleys or on sale in the fromageries, cheese shops include:
  
Brayo, cow’s milk
Foissac Saint Hilaire, sheep’s milk.
Gouzon, cow’s milk.
Leconet, goat’s milk.
Millevaches, cow’s milk.

Porcelain

The City of Limoges was home to the world’s first fine porcelain industry before it lost out to the Far East, but before that loss, it created amazing products and designs that are part of France’s unique art history. The National Museum of Porcelain Adrien-Dubouché has the world’s most significant collection.
  
From the Adrien-Dubouché collection

Tapestry

The town of Aubusson is home to the Cité Internationale de la Tapisserie d'Aubusson that has nearly 1,000 examples of Aubusson, tapestries, carpets, and furniture from the 17th century.

The picturesque old town of Guéret has a Museum of Art and Archeology with a fabulous collection of Limoges painted enamels but is now being redecorated for the first time since it opened in 1905 and will reopen in 2021
  
Limousin has many fetes connected to various culinary specialties from cheese to ham and sausages etc.,  the local tourism office will be able to supply dates and subjects along with market days for all the local villages and towns.

Limousin and Limousines.

Of course when in the region of Limousine everyone tries to find a connection between the name of the region and those top of the line automobiles, the limousines. Well, some answers have been offered, but nothing that seems plausible is on my list. Maybe once upon a time, there was a connection.

Racing in Limousin
  
Chateau de Pompadour is a castle famous throughout France not for so much for its architecture as its beautiful Hippodrome racecourse and stud farm
   

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

Copyright 2010, 2019.
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A Weekend in Foix, Ariège, Occitanie.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

  
The town of Foix and its castle.
    
Ariège, in the summer, is ideal for those seeking the beauty of France, far away from masses of tourists.   Ariège’s mountains and valleys are devoid of big cities, big towns, big villages and crowded tourist centers; it is a beautiful place for the visitor seeking nature as well as peace and quiet, with other visitors coming for water sports, fishing,   hiking, history, and camping.  Half of the department includes the Natural Regional Park, the Parc Naturel Regional des Pyrenees Ariègeoises. The park’s website is in French but using the Bing or Google translate apps everything will be clear.
      
   
There is a well-traveled route from Barcelona to Calais for the car ferries to England, but some years ago I took the road less traveled. In October I drove via the Principality of Andorra and its capital, Andorra la Vella which is the highest capital city in Europe, at an elevation of 1,023 meters (3,356 feet) up in the Pyrenees.  I had wanted to see Andorra and arrived late in the evening and in the morning walked around Andorra La Vella’s main business street as the weather was wonderful. Then and now Andorra’s main summer business was selling tax-free products and now the roads are jammed packed with French and Spanish tourists making a quick trip to Andorra to go home with up to 900 Euro per person free of the VAT tax. The country boasts over 1,500 shops with the world's top brands on sale alongside an incredibly large business in tax-free cigarettes and liquor,
    
Andorra La Vella

Andorra La Vella 
After walking around Andorra La Vella for five hours, I had been there and done that.  I was not in the market for any special tax-free goodies, and I was far too early for winter sports, and shopping and winter sports are modern Andorra’s raison d'être. In the afternoon I headed towards Foix the departmental capital of Ariège in what was until 1-1-2016 the Midi-Pyrénées region of France.  (Since 1-1-2016 the old administrative regions of the Midi- Pyrenees and Languedoc-Roussillon are joined together in the super region of Occitanie). The drive to Foix is just 98 km (62 miles), and just under 2 hours; but when I drove it took three and a half hours. From my hotel, I did not need a car to enjoy the center of the town. 
   
Andorra La Vella to Foix with Google Maps.
   
Foix
  
Foix has around 10,000 inhabitants, having seen along with the rest of Ariège a devastating population loss as the young people headed out to the big cities. The whole population of Ariège is now under 165,000.  The drive into the town and the view from nearly everywhere is the castle, the Château de Foix first built in 987.
     
The morning after I arrived was market day in Foix. There is a French language website information about all the markets in Foix but using the Bing and or Google translate apps it is easily understood, just click here.  The Foix Tourist Information Center has an English language website:
 
  
The market was filled with fresh local fruits and vegetables, freshwater fish,  jambon, hams, bacon in at least twenty varieties, and sausages of all types including the Saucisse de Foie Seche de l'Ariège, the dried pork liver sausage of Ariège which inspired one of France's well-known nursery rhymes about a liver merchant in Foix.

Il était une fois,
Dans la ville de Foix,
Une marchande de foie,
Qui vendait du foie...
Elle se dit : Ma foi,
C'est la première fois
Et la dernière fois,
Que je vends du foie,
Dans la ville de Foix  
  
The rhyme is a nonsense jingle, but by the age three or earlier all French children will have heard of the town of Foix.. (With thanks to Michel Masse who opened the door to French childhood memories).
  
The menus of Ariège’s restaurants have much of France’s best cuisine but star with local ingredients including duck confit which results in many savory dishes and of course, there is also duck foie gras. If you are lucky, your restaurant’s menu may also offer wild trout or écrivisse, crayfish from one of the local rivers or streams. Chou, cabbage dishes; cabbage soupes, soups, and other dishes with cabbage will be on nearly all the menus. In season breakfast omelets with wild mushrooms that include cèpes, France’s porcini mushrooms or morels are a great start to the day.
   

Étang de Cabanas, Ariège,
 
Winter specialties.
Not on the menu when I was there but soon to be included for the winter is Ariège’s traditional cassoulet, locally called mounjetad and their Garbure Ariégeois (a thick duck and cabbage stew).  These and other winter stews and dishes will include their local Lingots de l'Ariège, a variety of France’s ubiquitous white dried beans; elsewhere mostly called Haricots Blanc. I missed out on Azinat Ariégeois, the pot-au-feu from Ariège.
   
     
The local wines are mostly reds but include whites and rosés; these were the Vin de Pays de l´Ariège, now the IGP Ariège wines. Ariège’s many neighbors influence Ariège’s wines as well as its menus, local languages, and dialects. To the South are Spain and Andorra, to the West and North is the French Basque country and to the North, North-East, and East are the other Languedoc-Roussillon departments that are now joined together as Occitanie. To all these influences add Gascogne to which Ariège has linguistic and historical connections.
     
Grapes outside of Foix
www.flickr.com/photos/angela_llop/29990341246/
   
Ariège restaurants offer good, and different, local cheeses including many rarely or never seen outside the area.   When visiting try one of their farm-made Tommes, these are semi-firm, farm-made cheeses.  The best of these local tommes are made by the farmers high up in the Pyrenean pastures who work with unpasteurized milk. Many farmers only bring their cheeses down when the cows come down for the winter. Other local cheeses are also unique. 
  
A wedge of Tomme cheese.
www.flickr.com/photos/salim/70137444/
 
There are tens of local cheeses on sale in the markets and apart from those that are part of cheese plates in restaurants.  With friends, I bought a local breads, butter, four kinds of cheese and two sausages for a picnic. The four cheeses were:

Bethmale -  A mild and semi-firm 28% fat, cow’s milk cheese  made with unpasteurized milk  aged for three months.

Chèvre de l'Ariège – A goat’s milk cheese from Ariège aged for one month..

La Toudeille – You may be offered a version made with goat’s, cow’s or sheep’s milk or even all three different kinds of milk combined.  Each of these La Toudeille cheeses offer different textures and different tastes.  If this cheese is on the cheese plate or cheese trolley then ask which milk was used? We enjoyed the goat’s milk version

Le Rogallais  – A creamy, 45% fat, cow’s milk, cheese from the Rogalle high pastures aged for one month though more mature cheeses are available.
   
Water in Ariège.
    
In Ariège water is everywhere. The thermal baths in Ussat-les-Bains are just 20 minutes 22 km (14 miles) from Foix and you may drive to lakes 1,000 meters above sea level  in the mountains or visit the long Labouiche underground river. This is Europe’s longest navigable underground river. You may take a short cruise in small metal boats that you push along by hand for about 1.50 km (0.90 miles).  You can read more about this in the English language France-voyage website below:

   
 
The Ariège River in the town of foix.
   
Saint-Girons

 If you planning to be in the area in late July or the beginning of August contact the tourism office in the town of Saint-Girons 44 km (27 miles) from Foix.   Then the Pyrenean farmers have an annual competition for the best farm made un-pasteurized milk Tomme cheese. The English language website for the town is:


For many Ariège is best known for the caves of Niaux and its famous Prehistoric Park.  Here, are some of the world’s earliest cave paintings, The Niaux Cave is located in the northern foothills of the Pyrenees, just south of Foix.  The cave is one of many in this region but is one of Europe's most impressive Paleolithic rock art galleries of cave paintings. These incredibly preserved cave paintings represent bison, horses, and ibex.  The English language website of Niaux gives all the contact information.
   
                     
Paintings in Niaux.
  
Only 20 people at a time are allowed into the caves, and there is a 45-minute wait between each group; read up on this unique place before coming as there are no tours in English.  In the summer, there are, at most, 14 tours a day; that’s a maximum of 280 tourists a day. Out of season, there are then only three tours a day; that’s 60 visitors a day.  Book now!  Reservations to visit should be made long in advance as your chances of getting in without a reservation are not good, to put it mildly!  I could not get in though I waited for a no-show for over three hours.
   
The valley of Niaux
www.flickr.com/photos/pedrocaetano/37922852832/
 
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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 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, 2019.

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