Ris de Veau or Ris d'Agneau - Sweetbreads on French Menus. When sweetbreads are on the menu in France do not pass them by.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Thyme-roasted sweetbreads over polenta.
Photograph courtesy of Edsel Little.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/edsel_/5580782737/

Veal or lamb sweetbreads will be on many French menus. Chefs and gourmands highly prize these uniquely delicate cuts with their clear and mild flavor and texture

Where do these cuts come from?

Sweetbreads are the best of the inside cuts like liver, tongue, and kidneys. Sweetbreads are the pancreas and thymus glands, with some gourmands preferring one to the other; others prefer veal over lamb. I, however, cannot tell the difference when these delicate cuts are served with a light sauce or fried. Sweetbreads have a somewhat similar texture to the most delicate milk-fed calf's liver, but the similarity ends, and please note that I only said similar, not the same.


Crispy sweetbreads.
Photograph courtesy of Edsel Little
www.flickr.com/photos/edsel_/4508636746/
   
What does the word sweetbread mean?

Sweetbreads contain no bread. Dictionary.com notes the word comes from old English where "swēte meant sweet and "bræd" meant flesh; hence sweetbreads for sweet meat.

In North America and the UK, sweetbreads are rarely on the menu. Nevertheless, sweetbreads are a delicacy, and in France, all good French restaurants will regularly have them on their menus. Sweetbreads may be on the menu fried, poached, grilled, stewed, and even roasted in the oven. Sweetbreads may also be served as hot or cold hors d'oeuvres. From my experience, sweetbreads are best when offered with simple dishes that do not include tastes that compete with the meat's delicate flavor. 

Sweetbreads on French menus:

Ris de Veau - Calf sweetbreads.

Ris d'Agneau- Lamb sweetbreads

Ris de Chevreau Kid sweetbreads. A 4-6-month-old goat, a kid, a chevreau's sweetbreads will also be on some menus.

Cassolette d'Escargots et Ris d'Agneau à l'Oseille - A snail stew made with lamb sweetbreads and flavored with sorrel. A snail cassoulet is very different to the meat cassoulets of Southern France.

Ravioles de Ris d'Agneau au Gingembre et Citron - Ravioli stuffed with lamb sweetbreads and flavored with lemon and ginger.

 
Veal sweetbread ravioli served in a cream of artichoke sauce.
Photograph courtesy of Kent Wang
www.flickr.com/photos/kentwang/3717165076/

Ris de Veau à la Crème et aux Champignons – Sweetbreads with a cream and button mushroom sauce.

Ris Braise - Lightly fried sweetbreads. The menu should indicate whether these are veal or lamb; if not, ask. While I cannot tell the difference, I like to know anyway.


Crispy veal sweetbreads
with diced parsnips, small potatoes, and black truffles. 
Photograph courtesy of Charles Haynes
www.flickr.com/photos/haynes/998280252/

Ris de Veau Croustillantes, Jeunes Carottes et Graines de Moutarde  -Crisply fried sweetbreads served with baby carrots and flavored with mustard seeds.

Ris de Veau aux Girolles - Veal sweetbreads prepared with wild chanterelle mushrooms.

Ris de Veau Poêlée, Jus à la Cardamone et Panais - Lightly fried veal sweetbreads served with the sweetbread’s cooking juices flavored with cardamom and accompanied by parsnips. N.B. Cardamom is a spice with a heady aroma and a unique taste often used with hot spiced wines. In Western Europe, outside of France, cardamom is only occasionally seen in the kitchen, and therein lies a small but important difference in European tastes. The Swedes use cardamom in pastries, and cardamom is important for all of Scandinavia. Without cardamom, there would be no Scandinavian Aquavit liquor with 40% alcohol to drink on festive occasions.


Sweetbreads and duck confit ravioli
Photograph courtesy of stu_spivack
www.flickr.com/photos/stuart_spivack/578387276/

Bouchée a la Reine au Ris de Veau – Here, a puff pastry vol-au-vent will be filled with veal sweetbreads with a cream sauce. Originally all Bouchées à la Reine were made with sweetbreads or sweetbreads and chicken; however, that is no longer the case. Bouchée means a small mouthful and is often on the menu as an amuse-gueule, a small complimentary appetizer. Only occasionally will the Bouchée a la Reine on the menu be with veal or lamb sweetbreads, and then it may not be complimentary.


Sweetbreads with fried water chestnuts
Photograph courtesy of Peter Dutton
www.flickr.com/photos/joeshlabotnik/824737578/

Why chefs love cooking with sweetbreads.

One of the significant advantages of sweetbreads is that not too easy to overcook them. Unlike many dishes that should spend, at most, one or two minutes in the pan or under the grill and then are forgotten for three extra minutes will see the dish become inedible. Sweetbreads forgive the chef. Sweetbreads will remain juicy for close to double the time indicated in a recipe. Fried sweetbreads will remain crispy on the outside while the interior will be bursting with the juices from the meat even if the recipe indicated frying for 3 or 5 minutes and the chef left them for 10 minutes.

Sweetbreads in French country restaurants

On village and country restaurant menus, there may be ris de porcelet, piglet sweetbreads, or ris de bœuf, beef sweetbreads. These animal's sweetbreads have a stronger taste than lamb or veal, and among the big city cognoscenti, they are not appreciated. These are country comfort foods, and I have enjoyed kid's sweetbreads on more than one occasion in southern France.

------------------ 

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, 2018, 2021
 
--------------------

Connected Posts:
  
Carottes - Carrots in French Cuisine.
   
Cassoles, Cassolettes, and Cassoulets. Along with Four of the Most Famous Cassoulets on French Menus
 
Champignons on French Menus. The Champignon de Paris, the Button Mushroom in French Cuisine. The Mushrooms of France I.
  
Chanterelle Mushrooms, the Most Famous Four. Chanterelle Mushrooms on French Menus. The Mushrooms of France
 
Chèvre and Chevreau or Cabri – Goat’s Cheese and a Young Goat, a Kid, on Your French Menu.
   
Citron – The lemon; the fruit behind many of France’s culinary successes. Also the Citron Vert - Lime, the Cedrat – the Citron, the Combava – the kaffir lime and the Chadec - the Pomelo.
  
Escargots - Snails on French Menus and How to Order Snails in France. If You Enjoy Cockels, Mussels, and Conches, Then Snails will not be Strange.
 
Gingembre – Ginger, the Spice. Ginger is very important in French Cuisine, and Gingerbread is Very Popular.
  
Jus – Fruit or Vegetable Juice and/or a cooked dish’s natural juices on French Menus.
 
La Truffe de Périgord, la Truffe Noire - The Perigord Truffle, the Black Truffle in French Cuisine.  
 
Morille, the Morel Mushroom. Morel mushrooms on French Menus.
  
Moutarde – Mustard and Dijon Mustard in French cuisine.
 
Rognons - Kidneys on French menus.
   
The Button Mushroom. Mushrooms in France I. The Champignon de Paris.
   
The King Scallop and the Queen Scallop. On French Menus the Saint-Jacque, the Coquilles Saint-Jacques and the Vanneaux or Pétoncle.

Thyme in France. Thym, Serpolet, Farigoule and Thym Citron, Lemon Thyme in France. Thyme. One of the most important herbs in French cuisine.

Turnips, (Navets) Parsnips (Panais) and Swedes (Chou-Navets or Rutabaga). Traditional Root Vegetables in Modern French Cuisine.
 

 

Romarin – Rosemary. Rosemary the Herb in French cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

 
Rosemary
Photograph courtesy of Andy / Andrew Fogg
www.flickr.com/photos/ndrwfgg/101554662/
 
Rosemary

Unlike diners in many other countries, most French diners want to know which herbs and spices are used in menu listings. As a result, few French chefs omit from the menu listing details of how a dish was flavored. Seeing the herbs and spices used on the menu tells the diner how the dish will taste.

The wide variety of herbs and spices in French cuisine.

French cuisine uses a wider variety of herbs and spices than any other European country. Many of these herbs came to France with Catherine de Medici. Then in 1553, at age 15, Lorenzo de Medici, the absolute ruler of Florence, sent his daughter Catherine to marry Prince Henry of France (later King Henry II). At that time, Florence was considered the leader and creator of the best European cuisine. Catherine came with a unique wedding retinue that included chefs, cooks, vintners, along with market gardeners. The chefs brought both new recipes and new ways to use the herbs that France already had, including Rosemary.  Rosemary is not a French import; it is native to the Mediterranean. Apart from Rosemary’s use as a herb on its own, it is part of France’s two most important herb groups Les Fine Herbes and the Herbes de Provence.

Flowering Rosemary
www.flickr.com/photos/dionysia/109623018/

Later, France would add new herbs, fruits, and vegetables from the New World, India, and Africa. France’s wars and colonies would bring even more. When wealthy French colonists came back to visit France, they often brought their colonial cooks with them. To those cooks, France added the French chefs who had gone to serve the French overseas administration and returned to France with new ideas. They brought into French cuisine the flavors and aromas of new herbs and spices and how they are prepared.


Cultivating Rosemary.
Photograph courtesy of rmburnes
www.flickr.com/photos/93363727@N00/5126582865/
        
Rosemary in French cuisine.

French chefs usually prefer fresh herbs because many dried herbs lose much of their flavor and aroma when dried. However, fresh rosemary is always used as a fresh herb because its fresh leaves provide a gentler flavor than the dried variety. In France, obtaining fresh rosemary is never a problem as it is an evergreen plant. Wild Rosemary and that grown by market gardeners assure French consumers of a plentiful supply all year round. Mediterranean wild rosemary is naturally abundant as it can withstand heat and requires little water. In France and many Mediterranean countries, rosemary is also cultivated as an ornamental shrub that may be seen in hedges alongside roads.

Natural rosemary hedges along a path 
www.flickr.com/photos/derek_b/8801551042/
  
Rosemary on French menus:

Calamars Grillés au Romarin, Salade de Roquettes et Copeaux de Parmesan Calamari, squid, grilled with rosemary and served with a rocket salad flavored with shavings of parmesan cheese.

Carré d'Agneau Rôti au Thym et au Romarin – A rack of lamb roasted with thyme and rosemary.


Orange, Lemon, and Rosemary Roast Chicken
Photograph courtesy of the GbergT
www.flickr.com/photos/habesha/411908215/

Filet d'Agneau du Charolais aux Senteurs d’Ail et Romarin, Écrasé de Patates Douces - A Charolais lamb fillet, the tenderloin, scented with garlic and tosemary and served with crushed sweet potatoes. Écrasé or écrasées in French may be translated on your menu as mashed; however, the word for mashed in French is purée. Écrasé indicates a rougher texture.

Fraîcheur de Melon et Mousse de Chèvre au Romarin – Chilled melon served with a goat’s cheese mousse, flavored with rosemary.

Mignon de Veau à la Fondue d'Oignon, Jus de Viande au Romarin - A cut from a veal fillet, the veal tenderloin, served on a bed of very well cooked onions, practically an onion jam. The veal is served with the cooking juices from the meat that is flavored with rosemary.

Pêche Rôtie au Miel et Romarin – Peach roasted in honey and rosemary.


Racks of lamb with rosemary
Photograph  courtesy of Adrian Gonzales
www.flickr.com/photos/virexmachina/3511435165/

Filet de Dorade Royale Rôti aux Herbes de Provence et Son Beurre Blanc - A filet of gilthead, the fish, roasted with the herbs of Provence and served with a white butter sauce.


A whole roasted gilthead with rosemary butter.
Photograph courtesy of Peter Smith
www.flickr.com/photos/purpaboo/4499071875/
 
Rosemary as a homeopathic medicine.

Rosemary, in French homeopathic medicine, is used for many aches and pains. All French homeopathic pharmacies and there are nearly as many as regular pharmacies, will offer rosemary in many forms and explain their uses. There are rosemary herbal teas, (tisanes in French), rosemary creams, and more.

If you travel a great deal, you will find rosemary all over the world, especially in Asia, where it is just as much at home as it is in the Mediterranean. 

Rosemary in the languages of France's neighbors:                  

(Catalan -  romaní ), (Dutch -  rozemarijn), (German – rosmarin), (Italian – rosmarino), (Spanish – romero), (Latin – salvia rosmarinus).

--------------------- 

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.
 
Agneau Charolais du Bourbonnais, Label Rouge. Charolais lamb on French Menus.
   
 Basque Cuisine. The Basque Cuisine of the Pays Basque. Ordering Basque Dishes.
 
Carré d'Agneau (Carre d'Agneau) - A rack of lamb. A rack of Lamb in French Cuisine. Ordering Lamb in France II.
 
Catherine de Medici. Italy’s Greatest Gift to French cuisine?
 
Chèvre and Chevreau or Cabri – Goat’s Cheese and a Young Goat, a Kid, on Your French Menu.
   
Dining on Calamari in France - Look out for Calmar, Calamar, Chipirons and Encornets
 
Dorade, Daurade or Dorade Royale on French Menus. The Fish Gilthead or Gilthead Sea Bream.
 
Filet Mignon on French Menus and Filet de Bœuf in French Cuisine.
 
France's Butter Sauces I. The Three Most Popular Butter Sauces on French Menus.
 
French Fries, Frites, Pomme Frites, Chips in the UK. French Fries on French Menus.
  
Herbes de Provence - The Herbs of Provence.
   
Jus – Fruit or Vegetable Juice and/or a cooked dish’s natural juices on French Menus.
 
Les Fine Herbes; the Most Important Herb Group in French Cuisine.
 
Miel - Honey. The Many, Varied and Wonderful Honeys of France. Honey on French Menu.
 
Oignon or Ognon – An Onion. Onions on French menus. France’s most famous onions and their history.
 
Ordering Lamb in France II. Carré d'Agneau (Carre d'Agneau) – A rack of lamb. Ordering Lamb in France II.
 
Parmesan, the Italian Parmigiano-Reggiano is an Important Ingredient in French Cuisine.
 
Pêche – A Peach: the Fruit. Peaches in France. Peaches on French Menus.
 
Patate Douce - Sweet potatoes. Sweet Potatoes on French Menus
   
Tartare, Tatar, on French Menus: Steak Tartar, Fish Tartar and Vegetable Tartar. Tartare on Your French Menu?
     
Thyme in France. Thyme, Serpolet, Farigoule and Thym Citron, Lemon Thyme in France. Thyme. One of the most important herbs in French cuisine.
 
Tomme de Savoie IGP and Cows’ Milk Tomme Cheeses.
   
What Does Copeaux Mean on a French Menu?
 
 

Responsive ad