AOP, IGP and Vin de France. The Labels on French Wines.

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

Vin de France

How the labels have changed.

AOC has become AOP
                                 QVDS has disappeared.                                        
Vins de Pays have mostly become IGPs.
Vins de Table have become Vins de France.  
Wines bottled before 2012 may keep their old labels.

AOP  has replaced the AOC on the label.
AOP

AOC


AOP in French stands for Appellation d'Origine Protégé, t
he Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) in the UK and Ireland. For French wines, AOP will indicate specific grapes or blends made in distinct growing areas called appellations. France has over 300 distinct appellations. 
 
What does the AOP mean for the consumer?
 
The wines that previously carried the AOC label were grandfathered in and so all have become AOP wines.  The consumer who bought a specific vintage AOC wine from a particular producer before now buys the same wine with an AOP label. They will find that nothing in the production system has changed.

The AOP labels, like the AOC label before, cover the grapes that may be used, the vineyards that grapes may come from, the way the grapes are grown, the way the wines are blended, and the method used.  Unfortunately, no retesting was carried out when the labels were changed. Nevertheless, the year of vintage continues to make a significant difference to a wine's taste. Three years ago the wine may have been excellent, next year who knows? It would be best if you had an up-to-date wine book or a wine expert when ordering wine, and the  pocket wine book you buy before you travel you'll find just as useful when used at home.  

Wine in carafe and glass.
www.flickr.com/photos/birdies-perch/3045164784/

The same grape will make wines that have very different tastes.

As an example, here are three famous Burgundy wines that use the Chardonnay grape and have very different tastes:

Côte de Beaune includes the wines from Puligny-Montrachet, Chassagne-Montrachet and  Corton-Charlemagne. 

Chablis comes from the four distinct Appellations around the town of Chablis and is associated with the original grading of the vineyards.

The Mâconnais wine region produces the famous Pouilly-Fuissé wine and others.
 
In the French world of food and wine grading, today the AOP is the big one. Even for the locals, an AOP is the most impressive of the different grades printed on the labels of French foods and wines. The fact that a wine’s rating may have been handed out over 80 years ago and not checked since unfortunately worries very few.

What can you tell from an AOC or AOP wine label?

An AOP wine may not show the AOP icon on the label, but all AOP wines must show their Appellation.  Only AOP wines have wine-growing areas called Appellations. 

A wine may have two or three labels on the bottle and another on the cork. A wine’s vintage may be on a label on the bottle’s neck and lower down and may also be one or two more labels with the wine producer's name, its appellation, the place where the wine was bottled, along with the alcohol content and the bottle's volume. Finally, usually at the end of the label, comes the name of the vintner or wholesaler followed by an address.

Where the wine was bottled will be shown on a label.

Bottling the wine within the winery is considered a sign of quality. However, not all small wineries can afford or produce enough wine to own their private bottling plant, but the industry has a solution for that. In France, I have seen mobile bottling plants being driven into a winery's property. Over one to two days, that year's vintage is bottled and labeled, and then the plant will move on.  Then, like the bigger winery a mile (1.6km) away, the label will read Mis en Bouteille au Domaine or Chateau, etc., bottled at the winery.

A mobile bottling plant on the back of a trailer.

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How many French wines bear an AOP Label?

There are over four hundred and fifty different French wines entitled to an AOP label, and in Bordeaux, for example, there are more than 6,000 chateaux (wineries), and many produce two or more different wines. With numbers like these, how likely are you to know a particular wine, winery, and the best years? Then more to the point, how do you know which wines suit a particular dish? A small wine list in a small but good restaurant may offer 30 or even more different wines. That restaurant will have chosen its 30 wines from among France’s tens of thousands of wineries. Even for the knowledgeable owner of a French restaurant and his or her very learned sommelier and chef, making up a wine list is not easy.
 
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Have the wines changed in the last 100 years?

Yes, of course, they have. Some have changed the grapes included in a particular blend, and nearly all have made changes in their vineyards' growing practices. In a restaurant with a sommelier, a wine steward, you can ask and discuss the wines in your budget.   The sommelier will have studied wines for many years and, apart from selling wine, it's their responsibility to taste the wines, see to their storage and careful aging. The sommelier must build a wine list to cover a wide range of tastes and price levels. A wine that was graded in 1935 or before will not be exactly the same wine when produced today.   The sommelier is expected to know all the wines on their wine list and to guide you. Caveat emptor, the owner, may be pushing the sommelier to sell a particular wine, so ask for options.
 
Since 1935, when the original AOC grades became law, the way the soil is treated, the way the grapes are treated and the way the wines are aged has become a science.  For the consumer, those changes are not easily understood; a wine that received its AOC rating in 1935 may then have been just good enough to make a particular “cru.” The same wine from its 2015 vintage may now be superb or possibly disastrous; however, the consumer will not know that from the label. Equally, an individual winery may be making a terrible wine with a great name, but it will not have had its AOP rating removed if it kept precisely to the rules.  Most consumers will be unlikely to know about its terrible quality.   When you do go to France, take an up-to-date pocket wine book with you or download an eBook; an encyclopedia is not required!

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What you need to know about AOC or AOP wines.
with
Champagne as an introductory example.

There are some 100 Champagne houses, but most of us will only recognize the names of three or four, while the locals may have heard of thirty; the rest will have their own unique and determined aficionados, but they will have a limited output. A Champagne House is a wine producer and blender that sells Champagne under its own name. Most of these houses buy the bulk of the grapes used in their brew from independent growers. After the Champagne Houses come wholesalers, called négociant distributors.  These wholesalers buy and sell already bottled Champagne bought from cooperative blenders and bottlers and have them labeled and sell them under their own names; these wholesalers will be behind your local supermarket’s label. The small wholesalers will even sell 100 bottles with your own name; Caveat Emptor the freight may cost you more than the bottles. Knowing a little about these Champagne can help make a better choice and save a great deal of money.
   
Krug Champagne

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Bordeaux wines as a more puzzling example:

Bordeaux wines require even more knowledge as there are so many variations. Bordeaux produces 57 different AOP appellations; that's 57 distinct wine-producing areas, all with different names including St. Estephe, Pauillac, Margaux, St. Emilion, and Medoc, and then on to the other 53 remembering that each of the 57 has different producers, tastes and gradings.
 
Following on, you need to learn about the more than 9,000  different wineries! Finally, to confuse us even more among the wines are five crus (grades) for the older red wines that were allocated in 1855 and three crus for other reds. To that, there are also three crus for Bordeaux white wines. So, you do need that wine book or a wine expert to hold your hand since, with two exceptions, these wines have never had their grades (crus) checked or changed in over 150 years! 
 
Luckily, restaurant wine-lists of Bordeaux wines are not divided into 57 different sections. Most restaurants that offer Bordeaux wines divide Bordeaux into just seven affiliated groups. No restaurant could offer every good Bordeaux wines by name, including the crus and the best wines of the last twenty-five years; that would cost tens of millions. Apart from Bordeaux wines, France has nearly 400 other non-Bordeaux AOP wines competing for space on the wine list and tens of thousands of wineries. None of this makes the Bordeaux wineries happy; their 9,000 plus wineries will all be fighting to get their name on a wine-list when there may only be space for 10.
 
From the examples of Champagne and Bordeaux above, you will quickly learn, as I did, that choosing a wine, despite the new AOP label, is not easy. The true connoisseur requires a lifetime of learning and deep pockets. I have neither the time nor the bank balance, so use your "up-to-date" book on French wines when considering a Bordeaux.

A 1964 Bordeaux wine label.
 

The English language website for all Bordeaux wines https://www.bordeaux.com/gb

French wines include the greatest wines in the world and a well-educated sommelier who knows the diner’s budget can make all the difference. The sommelier can guide the diner away from a famous and expensive wine that comes from a bad year and offer a good wine from a good year from a lesser-known producer at one-quarter of the price.

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VQDS
The label that is no longer used.

VQDS wines may still be on a few wine lists. The logo stands for Vin Délimité de Qualité Supérieure. These were the wines that were considered candidates for upgrading to an AOC.  With the arrival of the AOP, the wines that carried that VDQS label were either upgraded to the full AOP status or given the lower IGP status. The last year with wines with VQDS on their label was the 2015 vintage.

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IGP
The IGP logo has replaced the Vin de Pays label.
IGP means Indication Géographique Protégée, in English, that's the PGI, the Protected Geographical Indication.

The Vins de Pays label for wines preceded the Pan-European IGP for fifty years. These were selected wines from a particular region, and the IGP continues that tradition. However, like the AOC (now AOP) wines, all the Vins de Pays were grandfathered into the new IGP label. Whatever you enjoyed and relished as a Vin de Pays may continue to be appreciated and valued as an IGP. (In the UK there are wines and liquors with IGP status including over 130 scotch whisky distilleries). IGP means Indication Géographique Protégée, in English that's the PGI, the Protected Geographical Indication, 
   
The English PGI label.

IGP wines may show the grapes used and will always show the area of France where the wine was made. When a visitor to France sees an IGP wine made with one of the famous grapes that are often seen on the bottles of New World wines such as Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, or Chardonnay, etc. that visitor has a good idea of the taste. When in France compare a local IGP wine made with a grape that you know from home, the taste will be different and usually better. As an example, when you buy a Chardonnay IGP Pays d'Oc, you will see the name of the producer, the place where the grapes were grown, the wine produced, and the year the grapes were picked. You can order that same Chardonnay wine again and again. Pay's d'Oc wines are from France's southern Languedoc-Roussillon that is now part of the region of Occitanie.
  
The label of a Chardonnay Vin de Pays d'Oc
Now it has been replaced by a Chardonnay IGP
www.flickr.com/photos/ipalatin/3811322682/

IGP wines are also allowed to add a subtle amount of pure water made with boiled oak chips to aging wines; that provide more of that natural oak taste! But do not be surprised about the use of oak chips; those were always part of the wines make-up. Knowing how the wines are made does not change their taste. CognacArmagnac, and Calvados also permit the use of oak chips just as Champagne and other wines have their permitted, but different, accepted additions. 

Overproduction in an IGP vineyard

If an IGP producer's vineyard produces too many grapes per vine, that will lower the quality of the wine, and so that is not permitted and will push that year's wine into the Vin de France category. IGP regulations also include taste tests, but I admit that I know little about this, and I have never seen the results of a taste test, nor heard anything about the people who do the tasting.

IGP wines on the top restaurant wine lists.

Over the last few years, some excellent IGP wines have joined the wine lists of some of France's top restaurants, including those with Michelin stars. The sommeliers, the trained wine stewards, who with the chef, will have tasted the IGP wines that are offered. Then, a few of the best will make it to the restaurant's wine list and replace less well-considered AOP wines. There are now more than 150 IGP Vin de Pays wines with reds, whites, and roses, and many many wineries. Knowing which IGP is the best value from which winery in a particular year requires that wine book.

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Vins de France

Vins de France replaced the Vins de Table (table wines), and they are considered France's lowest ranking wines, though they are often far from being bad wines. Vins de France are sold without their area of origin on the label.

The regulations that previously applied to Vins de Table remain, more or less, the same. For Vins de France. Vins de France are typically sold under the producer's name or use a brand name that will make it easier for the consumer to recognize. For a single grape wine, the name of the grape used is permitted, and the other wines are blends, Most Vins de France are relatively young wines that are meant to be drunk with only a little aging.

On the table in the home of French consumers, over 75% of the wines are IGP or Vin de France. With the tradition of drinking wine at home, the French consumer tests a few bottles of different Vins de France and then buys a case or two of the best.  French consumers know their wines, though the French consumption of wine has dropped steadily over the last 30 years. Despite that, the French still hold the title for the highest per capita consumption of wine, with the average French citizen drinking just over one bottle a week.

I noted above that Vins de France wines are, often far from being bad wines. The wine may come from a vineyard just outside the areas of an AOP or IGP wine. The producer will have no choice but to grade his or her wine as a Vin de France. The wine produced may be an excellent wine, equal or superior to the vineyards next door. Still, the vineyard just 100 meters (328 feet) outside the precisely graded wine-growing areas will be a Vin de France.

There are also cases where an AOP vineyard used plastic sheeting to prevent too much water from reaching the grapes during a period of heavy rain, and for that, the wine was downgraded to a Vin de France; the producer broke the rules. Adding a different grape to a blend will also lose the producer the right to hold an AOP or IGP grading.

Vins de France with a brand name on the label.

Some producers of these otherwise fine wines that do not meet the prescribed format of AOP or IGP have begun selling their Vins de France graded wines with brand names that the consumers and wine critics will remember. Small restaurants and bistro owners taste these wines, and when they find a good quality Vins de France, they become their house wines; they will buy as many crates as they need for five or six months. House wines' low prices and good quality will bring the local diners back again and again. Other producers of Vins de France have chosen the path of low-priced marketing with boxed wines and/or adding fruit flavors that attract a younger crowd. The success of the New World Wines has shown that you do not need an AOC, AOP, or IGP to sell good and inexpensive wines.


A branded Vin de France.

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i
A very short history of the French wine grades.

A few French wines have been graded under one system or another for some 500 years. These grades are known to oenophiles, the wine connoisseurs, but that information has little value for most of us. Today's grading began in 1885 when the wine merchants demanded a way to grade Bordeaux wines. Then, "crus," grades, were allocated to wines by using the accepted public thinking of the time along with the current selling price. In the 150 years since then, only two wines have had their ratings changed despite the changes in the art of growing grapes and making wines. Following on the publicly accepted Bordeaux wine grading in the 1900s, the French government got involved and made rules for all of the country's wines. In 1935, the government created the Institut National des Appellations d'Origine (INAO).  INAO now oversees labels used for all of France's foods and wines, including the Label Rouge and the AB label for organic produce. The appellation legalizes and limits the wines that may be grown in a specific area. The regulations have changed very little over the years. Included in the rules are the crus and the names of the chateaus, villages, which are other forms of grading within the approved grade of AOP, IGP, or Vins de France. The untrained visitor to France needs that book on French wines today.

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Are you considering buying an old wine at a bargain price?

If you see a famous or impressively named French AOP wine five or ten years old, or even older at an enticingly low price, do not buy it! If the wine was marvelous, the French wine mavens would have been there long before you. Caveat Emptor, just as there is no free lunch, there are no famous and good old French wines at bargain prices.

There are no free lunches,
and that is especially true when it comes to wines.
www.flickr.com/photos/143106192@N03/43513743862/

History

Historically France's different grapes were nearly always blended to produce the best tastes. The first overseas buyers mostly came from England, and they drove the vintners to produce better wines. France's most important wine market was the Port de Bercy, a tax-free village on the Seine River just outside Paris's original walls. In the 1820s, Bercy was the largest wine market in the world. Then the Bercy wine wholesalers produced, in their cellars, the first blends of quite many wines and sent their recipes back to their growers. Some of these blends remain today, and many other wines are versions of blends that began in Bercy.

Wine storage in Bercy.
  
Despite all the science behind the modern wine industry, the wine experts will tell you and show you that the grapes grown on different soils do produce wines that taste differently. To that, add the weather in a particular year and that unique French expression "Terroir." Terroir, in wine, is the unique difference in taste that comes again and again from a specific part of a vineyard. A vineyard in the same appellation, but 100 yards (91 meters) away, may not have that unique difference in taste. Year by year, the part of a one-acre vineyard may produce markedly better wine than the neighboring acres, and that is its Terroir. That Terroir comes from the soil, the slope on a hill, the shade, or lack of it, and so far, no algorithm has reproduced the difference.

Wine is the perfect accompaniment for French cuisine, and French diners know very well that a good wine can add to their enjoyment of their meal. The French diner also knows what damage an expensive wine can do to his or her pocketbook or wallet!  Even as I love wines, I will not pay more for a wine than I pay for a meal. When someone else is paying, I may enjoy a wine that I usually would not consider.
  
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Organic wines

To all of the three wine grades noted above, you may see additional labels indicating wines produced from organically grown grapes. The French government AB label, which is the most trusted of all organic labels, will be seen on wines of all three grades.
     
AB Label.
Agriculture Biologique, Organic Agriculture

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman 
Copyright 2010, 2013, 2017, 2023.
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

  
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La Truffe de Périgord, la Truffe Noire - The Perigord Truffle, the Black Truffle in French Cuisine.

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

Perigord Truffles
The Black Perigord Truffle, the Black Diamond.
The most famous and expensive of all French truffles.
www.flickr.com/photos/60173925@N06/32162819631/

Truffles are members of the funghi family along with their cousins the mushrooms. Wild mushrooms can pop up in your garden or in the woods after the rain, but truffles are more difficult to find as they grow and mature under the ground, among the roots of trees.  Many mushrooms have been cultivated and are now available all year round, but truffle cultivation remains a work in progress. There are some claims of success for cultivated truffles, but not enough reaches the markets to affect prices.
  
Farmer with trained truffle pig, painting from 1911-1912
Farmers use trained dogs and pigs to smell for the hidden truffles.
Nouvel atlas de poche des champignons comestibles et vénéneux. v.1.
Paris, Léon Lhome,1911-1912.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/6459652917/sizes/m/

Truffles have a unique ability to flavor and scent food. The Perigord truffle, grated onto fried or poached eggs or lightly flavored foods such as boiled vegetables, creates an aroma and taste that makes you want to eat. If you try and smell the Perigord truffle on its own, in a market or in a restaurant before it is grated, then you can sense, not just smell, the slightly sweet, mushroomy, and hazelnut scent and taste. However, on food, the aroma changes as it blends with those of the foods making the mouth water and the food tastier.
  
Spinach and the Perigord Truffle.
www.flickr.com/photos/travelingmcmahans/8558979067/

The ancient province of Perigord, now mostly included in the department of Dordogne, became internationally famous, along with its truffles, in the early 19th century with the formalizing of French Haute Cuisine and the popularity of restaurants with the public. (Before the French revolution began in 1789 there were less than 100 restaurants in Paris versus 2,000 not long after). The Perigord truffle that was found there in quantity (now much reduced) is, however, not unique to Perigord, it bears the name because that’s where they were first found in quantity. Perigord Cuisine remains one of the most important cuisines of France.
  
lobster consomme with shrimp dumplings
flavored with the Black Truffle of Perigord and wild mushrooms.

Altogether, there are six French truffles competing to be on your menu, but only two can really set a gourmet’s mouth water just thinking about them. In order of importance, the two are the Perigord truffle and the Truffe de Bourgogne, the Burgundy Truffle. This post is about the Perigord Truffle, the Truffe de Périgord,, also called the Truffe Noire, the Black Truffle, the Truffe du Vaucluse, the Truffe du Tricastin, the Truffe de Bonneville, the Truffe Vraie or the Tuber Melanosporum which is its Latin name.
  
Farmer training his dog to search for the Perigord truffles.
Most of the farmers have switched to dogs from pigs that were trained to find truffles. Dogs are more photogenic even if their sense of smell is below that of a pig.

Fresh black Perigord truffles are available from the end of November to mid-March, and since truffles have a short shelf life any that are not used within two weeks will become truffle oil or truffle essence. There is more on truffle oil and truffle essence at the end of this post.

A restaurant’s menu may note:

Truffes en saison – Truffles in season. 

Truffes Selon Caprices du Temps – Truffles are available according to the quirks of the market! Some days there will be very few truffles and on others an overabundance. This notice will be on many menus in restaurants famous for their truffles.

Asperges Vertes à la Truffe Noire du Périgord - Green asparagus served with the black Périgord truffle. Here thinly grated pieces of truffle will be added, when served, to the freshly, but lightly, boiled asparagus.

Brouillade aux Truffes Noires du Périgord (tuber melanospurum)-
Brouillade is a light version of scrambled eggs that originated in Provence, France. The eggs whites are beaten separately and only then mixed with the yolks; that provides a light and delicate form of scrambled eggs. I have tried this three times, and only once could I taste and enjoy the change that truffles make; then, the truffles were grated in front of me. The other times, the dishes had no truffle taste, just a few black dots and a hint of garlic, and that was it. Only order black truffle dishes where the truffles are grated in front of you!  BYW, truffles, like virgin olive oils, lose their taste when cooked.
  
Brouillade à la truffe noire
www.flickr.com/photos/couleurlavande/8634163499/

Carpaccio de Bœuf Juste Mariné à la Truffe Noire du Périgord - A beef Carpaccio marinated with the black Perigord truffle; truffle oil will be used here along with the grated truffle.
      
Consommé à la Râpée de Truffe du Périgord - A consomme flavored with shavings from the black Perigord truffle. The consommé soup used here will, like all traditional consommés be a clear soup and here it is almost certainly made with a veal stock that is then flavored with the truffle when served.
   
Sweetbreads with a truffle, salsify and mushroom ragout.
www.flickr.com/photos/stuart_spivack/12214272873/
 
Crème Brulée aux Truffes du Tricastin – Crème Brulée flavored with the Tricastin truffle.  The Truffe du Tricastin –The Tricastin truffle is the same truffle as the Périgord truffle, but here in the old province of Tristan they use the local name.

Demi Langouste en Salade, Huile de Truffe du Périgord - Half a rock-lobster, that’s the owner of the lobster tail; here it is served with a salad flavored with Perigord truffle oil. There is more about truffle oil and how it is made at the end of this post.
  
Puligny-Montrachet is a great white wine
Pair one with your rock-lobster; but order one that’s two or three years old. The price of the 1955 in this picture may give you indigestion.
www.flickr.com/photos/titounet/5813026136/

Filet de Bœuf Rôti, Sauce à la Truffe Noire du Périgord – A filet of roast beef served with a sauce made with the black Périgord truffle.

Glace à la Truffe Noire Ice cream flavored with the Perigord truffle; this is a rarely seen dessert. When I next see this on a French menu, it will be a rare opportunity to enjoy something I have always missed.
          
Oignon de Roscoff Cuisiné à la Truffe Fraîche du Périgord – A Roscoff onion cooked, here it is probably baked, and then on serving flavored with the black Perigord truffle; this is an entrée, the French starter. The French, in this menu item actually translates as “with a fresh Perigord truffle”; however, there is no way any French chef could or would use a truffle that is not fresh; it would be bland and close to useless.
  
Onion Johnnies from Roscoff still working in the UK in 2014
www.flickr.com/photos/forkcandles/15567183182/

The onion noted above is the unique Oignon Rosé de Roscoff AOP, from the area around the port of Roscoff in Bretagne, Brittany. This onion has a story known to those from the UK who remember buying strings of onions when many "Onion Johnnies" cycled around Britain in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s selling their wares; a few still do. If you love onions, then when in the area of Roscoff on the 3rd Saturday and Sunday in August, do not miss out on the Fête de l'Oignon de Roscoff, the Roscoff onion festival with its market.
Tagliatelle With Black Truffles
www.flickr.com/photos/dionhinchcliffe/13869792214/
    
Risotto Carnaroli à la Truffe Fraîche du Périgord, Copeaux de Parmesan - A Carnaroli rice risotto made with the black truffle of Perigord served with shavings of Parmesan cheese. Carnaroli rice may not be well known, but amongst Italian and French chefs, it is indisputably the best, and also the most expensive rice for risotto. Carnaroli rice comes from the same area of Piedmont Italy as the better-known, and less expensive, Arborio and Baldo risotto kinds of rice.


Marche de Truffes, a truffle market in Perigord
  
Salade de Roquette à l'Huile de Truffe Noire du Périgord – A salad of wild rocket leaves, flavored with olive oil that has been flavored with the black Perigord truffle. Wild rocket leaves have a cleaner taste than the larger farmed leaves. For truffle oil, see the end of this post.
    

Chocolate truffles.
Chocolate truffles were originally filled with real truffles, hence the name. Unfortunately for all of us, there is nere a truffle in chocolate truffles today.

Perigord truffles by any other name:

Truffe de Bonneville - This is the same truffle as the Truffe Noir de Périgord but found in the department of Charente in Nouvelle Aquitaine. If you are visiting the region between December and February, then consider that there is a truffle market that begins at 9.00 am every Tuesday in the Hotel Fox in the small town of Jarnac in the department of Charente. Double-check the market days with the French Government Tourist Office as French market days are not written in stone.
      
Truffe du Tricastin –The Tricastin truffle; the same truffle as the Truffe Noir de Périgord.  Tricastin is a historic region in the Rhône valley of southeastern France and includes part of the department Drôme in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes and part of the department of Vaucluse in the region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. Here in the village of Grignan and three other, close by, villages between Lyon and Avignon, they have truffle markets on Saturday, Sunday, and Monday mornings, from mid-November to mid-March. The markets alternate among the villages. If you are traveling in the area, the local French Government Tourist Office will advise you which one village holds the truffle market when you visit.

The village of Grignan also has an annual truffle and wine market and fair, the Marché aux Vins et Truffes du Tricastin just before the end of the year. If you are visiting, then along with the truffles, you will have an opportunity to visit a miniature Provencal village and to taste the local red, white, and rosé wines. Grignan is close to the Abbey of Aiguebelle, where they produce the herbal drink Alexion and to the town of Nyon with its famous black olives. 

Truffe du Vaucluse – This truffle is the also same as the Perigord Truffle.  By using the name of their department, they are trying to make sure that everyone knows the source is not Perigord/Dordogne. Vaucluse is a department in the region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. Already at the end of the 18th century, the region was well-known as an excellent place to find the Perigord truffle. To improve the quantities available in the early 1800’s they planted hundreds of oaks trees here;  it was already well understood that truffles loved the protection of oak trees. Today Vaucluse, through that foresighted planting of oak trees, produces nearly 50% of all the Perigord Truffles in France.

Today, there are many truffle markets in Vaucluse. If you are going to be in the area between the beginning of December and March check the dates with the French Government Tourist Information Office. 

Essence de Truffle – Truffle Essence
                                                 
Essence de Truffe – Truffle essence; this is a concentrated flavoring made by steeping truffle peelings in sweet wine, usually Madeira. Truffle oil is produced in a similar manner. Truffle essence imparts some of the flavors of truffles to dishes while using slightly past their prime the truffle shavings, and without adding oil. More importantly, for the chef, truffle essence may be stored and is available all year round. Most French chefs prefer to make their own, and then they control the flavor of the finished product.

Truffle oil
   
Huile de Truffe – Truffle oil; chefs have made truffle oil for at least two hundred years by soaking truffle shavings in olive oil. The final product is a strongly flavored oil that will add some of the flavors of truffles, and truffle oil may also be stored year-round. When you buy commercially prepared truffle oil, it is unlikely that the amount of truffles used is anywhere near the amount of truffle a chef would use in his or her homemade product. Look carefully at the label, and like truffle essences, do not buy products that note they are made with truffle flavor; that is not the real thing and from my experience doesn't taste like the real thing. .Remember, neither truffle oil or truffle essence can add any texture
   
Black truffle oil
     
The Perigord Truffle in the languages of France’s neighbors:
(Catalan - tòfona negra), (Dutch - zwarte truffel ), (German - schwarze trüffle, echte trüffel, Französische truffle, perigord trüffel), (Italian- tartufo nero, nero pregiato), (Spanish - trufa de Périgord or trufa negra), (Latin - tuber melanosporum).

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Behind the French Menu

by
Bryan G. Newman 
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com
Copyright 2010, 2013,  2019, 2023.

 
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