Porc Noir de Bigorre, AOP – An Ancient Breed of Pig That Provides the Most Highly Rated Cured Ham in France. The Porc Noir de Bigorre in French Cuisine.

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

The Porc Noir de Bigorre, AOP.

Pork is the most popular meat in France, though restaurants prefer to highlight more expensive cuts of beef and lamb. Nevertheless, there will be jambon cru, cured hams, and other costly cuts from some of the most famous porcine breeds in France on most menus, along with farmed and real wild boar and top-level cured ham imports. In the French lineup of famous porkers, one pig is far ahead of all others in quality and taste, and that is the Porc Noir de Bigorre AOP, the Black Pig of Bigorre. This ancient breed of pigs has been raised for at least 1,000 years around the old French Province of Bigorre, now included in the modern departments of Hautes-Pyrénées, Gers, and Haute-Garonne. (Since 1-1-2016 these departments have been part of the region of Occitanie).
   
The Porc Noir De Bigorre is free-range for 70% of the year.
 
Flavor in pork comes from fat and the Porc Noir de Bigorre is very flavorsome, coming as it does from a 55% fat to meat ratio. However, that was too much fat for many farmers after WWII when the farmers needed inexpensive fast-growing breeds with more meat per kilo, and so by the 1980s, the tasty Porc Noir was nearly extinct. Nevertheless, there were always a few farmers who kept raising these pigs as a hobby while waiting for an educated public who would pay extra for the quality and taste of the Porc Noir de Bigorre. 

By 1992 there were enough producers who had agreed breeding and quality standards to begin offering the wider public a uniquely tasting saucisson, a salami type sausage, and jambon sec, dry-cured ham, with a fabulous taste, along with other cuts. The public responded, and in short order, the farmers couldn't keep up with the demand. The Porc Noir, however, is a slow-growing pig, and its dry-cured ham is aged for at least 18 months with its very best offerings aged for twenty-four. Long aging takes up a lot of expensive climate-controlled storage, and they can't compete with popular cured hams that are only aged for seven to twelve months. Altogether, that makes for an expensive product, but at the end, the proof of the pudding is in the eating, and the Jambon de Porc Noir de Bigorre melts on your tongue. In 2017 the Porc Noir de Bigorre received its AOC, and a Pan-European AOP closely followed that. (The Porc Noir de Bigorre AOP is also one of the few hams supported by the Slow Food Movement).  
    
Slices of cured ham from the Porc Noir De Bigorre AOP.

The Porc Noir de Bigorre of French menus :

Carré de Porc Noir de Bigorre, Flan de Haricots Tarbais et Jus Corsé – A pork chop from the Porc Noir de Bigorre accompanied with a savory tart made from the Label Rouge Tarbaise dried bean and served with a Jus Corsé, a sauce made from the natural cooking juices. The dried white Haricot Tarbais bean was the first dried bean to be awarded the French Label Rouge, the red label, for its unique and consistent quality. 

A Porc Noir de Bigorre sow will also have fat piglets.

Gambas et Poitrine De Porc Noir De Bigorre Caramélisées Et Poivrées - Caramelized large shrimps with pepper accented pork belly from the Porc Noir De Bigorre.

Porc Noir Burger: Pain Burger, Sauce Fumée, Oignons Confits, Ventrèche De Porc Noir De Bigorre - A Porc Noir Burger served with a burger roll, accompanied by a smoke-flavored sauce, onions confit (slowly cooked and offered as a sweet jam with their taste made to contrast with the meat) and pork belly from the Porc Noir De Bigorre  

A store of Porc Noir hams.
  
Jambon de Porc Noir de Bigorre et Langoustine Croustillante de Kadaïf, Assaisonnés D'une Huile de Noisette du Gers, Fraîcheur de Pomme Granny et Gingembre – Cured ham from the Porc Noir de Bigorre served with crispy Dublin Bay Prawns (the real scampi) wrapped in the thin pasta strands of Kadaïf, flavored with oil from hazelnuts from the department of Gers and slices of chilled Granny Smith apples flavored with ginger.

Kadaïf is a pastry with both savory and sweet versions that were brought to France with North African cuisine, though it is found all over the Middle East as well as in Turkey, Greece, and Albania.  Kadaïf is made from pasta-like vermicelli in very thin angels’ hair strands made from wheat flour, corn starch, salt, and water. Kadaïf may be on menus as Knafeh, Knofa, and Kadaïfia.
 
 Assiette de Charcuterie: Jambon de Porc Noire de Bigorre, Rillet des d’oie, Saucisson sec, Pate de Campagne - A platter of Jambon Noir de Bigorre served with goose rillets accompanied by, a small salami type pork sausage and a country pate. (Goose rillets are goose meat that has been slowly cooked in goose fat until the meat can be made into a paste to spread on toast or bread).
   
Porc Noire Saucisson
The Black Pig of Bigorre’s salami type sausage.

The Black Pig of Bigorre live freely for 70% of the year in small herds in natural settings in open forest where they feed on wild herbs and flowers, acorns, chestnuts, and locally cultivated vegetable additions. The piglets are raised freely by their mothers until they are weaned and no antibiotics or growth hormones are permitted.

In the countryside of the old province of Bigorre:

The whole areais very much into fine foods:


The Porc Noir de Bigorre AOP will not be on every menu, so look out for it and do not pass it you by.

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman 
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com
Copyright 2010, 2019, 2023


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Grondin Rouge - Red Gurnard. The Red Gunard in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


The Red Gunard.
www.flickr.com/photos/barnoid/2347475633/

The Grondin Rouge, the Red Gunard is a tasty fish with firm white to white ivory meat. It will be fresh on nearly all of France's fish restaurant menus, and they are also popular in the home as they are easily and quickly cooked. The fish are almost always bought and served as filets because most fish are too large for a single diner. The small fish are very bony but are sought after for the flavor they bring to fish soups..
  
The Red Gunard is a member of the scorpionfish family, and it does have a little poison in some spikes on their gils and on their dorsal fins (back fins).   Worry not they will have been removed before being sold in the supermarket or offered by a restaurant.
The red gunard and close family members will be on menus all over France as they are caught both in the Mediterranean and the Atlantic; they will be offered grilled, fried, poached, or baked. 

Red Gunard
Print from 1763-1764
www.flickr.com/photos/fdctsevilla/22166394736/


 The Red Gunard on French Menus:
 
Filet de Grondin Rouge Sauce Saint Jacques au Crémant - Red Gunard served with a sauce made from the king scallop meat with a Crémant sparkling wine. (Since this menu  listing came from a menu  in Burgundy it  would have been the Crémant de Bourgogne).


Grondin Rouge Provencal.
   
Filet de Grondin Rouge, Soufflé de Homard, Sauce Champagne – A filet of red gunard served with a soufflé made from the two-clawed European lobster and a Champagne accented Sauce.

Grondin Rouge, Caviar d'Aubergine, Légumes de Printemps Braisés, Jus Charcuterie - Red Gunard served with eggplant caviar and braised spring vegetables. Eggplant caviar has many variations though the most well-known is Papetond'Aubergine.  I imagine that this is the recipe used here or it will be very close.  The sauce, a Jus Charcuterie is a meat sauce; here it will have been made with the addition of white wine and flavored with herbs. (Charcutiers originally only sold cured or uncooked meat products but now are usually joined together with Traiteurs who originally only sold cooked foods.  Many of these combined Charcuterie- Traiteurs are incredible, fabulous delis).
  
Charcuterie – Traiteur.
  
Grondin Rouge et Ratatouille Citronnée, Sauce Vierge – Red Gunard served with lemon accented Ratatouille and a Sauce Vierge.  Sauce Vierge - A virgin sauce with the name coming from the use of virgin olive oil. Sauce Vierge will most usually be on your menu with fish dishes.  With the virgin olive oil will be fresh tomatoes, garlic, lemon juice, basil, red wine vinegar, salt, and black pepper. The sauce will be served slightly warm but not cooked as olive oil loses all of its flavors when cooked. The sauce will be poured on the fish just before it is served. The inclusion of  Ratatouille and a Sauce Vierge allows me to place this dish in the City of Nice on the Meditteranean or certainly in Provence. 
    
Ratatouille
www.flickr.com/photos/avlxyz/42677986/
    
Grondin Rouge, Juste Cuit / Courgette Fleur Farcie / Vierge Acidulée   –   Red gunard perfectly and lightly cooked served with stuffed courgette (USA zucchini)  flowers with a slightly acidic virgin sauce.  (For more about Virgin Sauce see the menu listing above).

Pan-fried cod filet with sauce vierge.
www.flickr.com/photos/foodista/8451017061/

Grondin Rouge Juste Rôt i, Jeunes Poireaux et Shimeji – A red gunard perfectly roasted and served with young leeks and Shimeji mushrooms. -  Shimeji is the Japanese name and the adopted French name for an Asian mushroom now farmed in France. (A close family member does grow wild in Northern Europe).  The variety called the buna-shimeji is the one most likely to be on this French menu. This particular mushroom is admired because it passes on to the foods cooked with it the taste of UMAMI.  (The Latin name of  buna-shimeji  is hypsizygus marmoreus or hypsizygus tessellatus). 


Red Gunard
 
 This fish is rarely seen on UK menus as the Brits demand their favorites, Cod, Salmon, Tuna, and Shrimp, none of which are caught locally.   Despite being headlined by celebrity chefs, the gunard family members rarely make UK menus.  British fishermen and women consider this a bycatch:  they happily unload their unwelcomed catches onto French boats where it will be sold in France as a very tasty and relatively inexpensive fish. The red gunard and its family members are flown to the USA chilled or frozen from as far away as New Zealand.

Red gurnard with cockles and vegetables.
www.flickr.com/photos/thecssdiv/5491001335/

The Grondin Gallinette, the Sapphirine Gurnard , tub gurnards or Common Searobin is another member of the scorpionfish family. Sapphirine gurnard and the Red Gunard are both highly valued for their taste and one or another of these two very similar fish will be an essential part of an authentic Bouillabaisse or Bouillabaisse Marseille and in the North of France in the different tasting Bouillabaisse de Nord.

The Grondin Rouge, the Red Gunard in the languages of France's neighbors:

(Catalan -  iluerna roja), (Dutch -engelse poon), (German -seekuckuck), (Italian - capone coccio), (Spanish - peona), (Latin  - aspitrigla cuculus)

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

Copyright 2010, 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, Bing, or another search engine.   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.

Connected Posts:
  
 
 

  
 
 


 
 
 
   


    
 
 
  



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