Baies de Cassis – Blackcurrants and Crème de Cassis In French Cuisine. Black Currants on French Menus.

  

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


Blackcurrants - Baies de Cassis or Groseillier Noir
https://www.flickr.com/photos/72284410@N08/9930651595/
   


                              Blackcurrants in France's history. 
     
Blackcurrants are one of France’s favorite fruits.  It is a wholly French fruit and not one of the many that arrived with those Mediterranean sea-based wholesalers the Phoenicians. The Phonecians were responsible for spreading many fruits, vegetables and herbs around the Mediterranean.  The other usual suspects who brought fruits, vines and trees, including apricots and cherries, to France were the Romans and the Greeks; however, the blackcurrant was there before all of them.  Blackcurrants have grown wild in France for thousands of years.
   

Blackcurrant Cheesecake
Photograph courtesy of Eldriva

The blackcurrant in French cuisine today.
  
Blackcurrants are enmeshed in modern French cuisine. Blackcurrant may be the jam offered at breakfast, in the flavor of an hors d’oeuvre or as a sauce for an entrée, the French first course.   Then blackcurrants may be the sauce for a main dish or part of a dessert or fresh blackcurrants, alone,  or with chantilly cream and possibly other berries may be the dessert.
   
Crème de Cassis and Ratafias.


Then there are many many Frenchmen and French women, along with many visitors, who consider blackcurrants are at their best in one of France’s favorite alcoholic eau-de vie’s: Crème de Cassis.  While the greater part of Creme de Cassis may be flavoring alcoholic drinks another part is the heart of flavorful blackcurrant recipes. The story of Crème de Cassis and ratafias in French cuisine may be seen further down this link.
        
Blackcurrants on French menus:

Baie de Cassis Frais, en Coulis -  A purée of fresh blackcurrants. A fruit coulis usually includes a suitable alcoholic crème; here it will be Crème de Cassis.
 
Confiture de Cassis A blackcurrant preserve or jam.
   

Blackcurrant jam and Petit Suisse cheese.
Petit Suisse is a uniquely tasty fresh French cream cheese.
  
Eventail de Melon aux Baies de Cassis –  Melon served in a fan or flower shape accompanied by fresh blackcurrants.
     
Le Sanglier Mitonné et Confit aux Baies de Cassis – A confit of wild boar slowly cooked with black currants. A confit of wild boar will have been cooked in its natural fat and stored. After one or two weeks when all the flavors have set the meat will be removed from the fat and slowly cooked again, here with blackcurrants. The wild boar in this menu listing will have been farmed. In season wild boar may be hunted, but then they would then be on the menu listing as Sanglier Sauvage.


Apple pie with blackcurrant crumble
https://www.flickr.com/photos/iaincpatterson/14973165487/
   
Noisette de Râble de Lièvre Sauce Poivrade aux Baies de Cassis –  A small center cut from the saddle of a hare served with a Sauce Poivrade flavored with black currants.  The saddle is the center of the back and the meatiest part of a rabbit or hare. The Sauce Poivrade is a red wine and meat stock based sauce often served with game; here the sauce is flavored with black currants. (Hares and rabbits are farmed in France and while they may be caught in the wild the farmed varieties are tastier and larger. Wild rabbits and hares will be stringy, though flavorful, and require marinating and a very long cooking process.  Consequently, most French chefs prefer the farmed variety and If, unlikely as it may be, a wild hare was being served the menu would read lièvre sauvage ).

Magret de Canard, Sauce aux Baies de Cassis – Duck breast served with a blackcurrant sauce.  Duck was and is often traditionally served with a bitter orange sauce, usually Seville oranges, but the blackcurrant has continued to gain in the popularity stakes and will be on more menus today.
   

Duck breast with a blackcurrant sauce,
  
Mousse Citron Vert, Crémeux aux Baies de Cassis – A creamy lime mousse served with fresh black currants.
  

Blackcurrant, Vodka and Lemon Sorbet
https://www.flickr.com/photos/50496541@N03/5377073686/

Tournedos de Cuissot De Daguet aux Baies de Cassis Mousseline Cèleri et Rutabaga A thick cut from the haunch of a young male deer prepared with blackcurrants and served with a mousse of celery and Swedes.
 
Ratafias

Ratafias were the forerunners of most alcoholic, eau-de-vies, fruit liquors including Crème de Cassis. The name ratafia comes from the Latin “rata fiat” to settle or “ratify” an agreement.  Back then, as still happens today, a deal could be sealed with a drink: "let's drink on it.” 
 
The most famous of the original ratafia style drinks available today include the Pineau de Charente from the Cognac region, which is grape juice with Cognac; Floc de Gascogne, grape juice with Armagnac; Pommeau made in Normandy with fresh apple juice and Calvados. The most famous blackcurrant ratafia is the Ratafia de Neuilly from Neuilly-sur-Seine in the department of Hauts-de-Seine which is right next to Paris. The  Ratafia de Neuilly laid the ground for Creme de Cassis.
    

Ratafia de Cassis
Photograph courtesy of http://ja6.free.fr/
  
Ratafia and crèmes were, and are made, for the most part, by allowing different fruits to macerate, steep, in sugar and an eau-de-vie. When ready any extra alcohol required would be added and then the crème or ratafia will be bottled. Today these crèmes and ratafias are mostly part of other drinks, especially aperitifs, or in the kitchen, they will be part of a recipe that needs the creme's particular flavor.   Ratafias are all slightly sweet, as they contain a significant amount of sugar, and are usually served chilled as an apéritif.
  
Crème de Cassis
      
With the popularity of the Ratafia of Neuilly in the 19th century, the first commercial liquor called de Crème de Cassis was produced in Dijon.  Crème de Cassis de Dijon is considered, in France, by most consumers, to be the best and some of the Dijon producers have been making Crème de Cassis for over 150 years.  Nevertheless, since 2015 the other Crème de Cassis producers from Burgundy have registered their brand called the “Crème de Cassis de Bourgogne IGP,” the Crème de Cassis of Burgundy IGP. The IGP guarantees the Burgundian origin and the minimum quantity of berries used in its production. They are strong competition for the producers of the Crème de Cassis de Dijon.
  

Crème de Cassis
https://www.flickr.com/photos/25850415@N02/3982751131/

Crème de Cassis on French menus:

Filet de Canette Caramélisé à la Vergeoise, Étuvée de Choux Cabus, Réduction à la Crème de Cassis Breast of duckling caramelized with brown sugar and served with steamed white cabbage and a sauce from the natural cooking juices flavored with crème de cassis.
  
La Crème Brûlée aux Baies et Crème de CassisCrème Brulee with berries and creme de cassis.
  
Poire Pochée au Beaumes de Venise et Crème de CassisPear poached in the sweet Muscat  wine from Beaume de Venise and crème de cassis.
   
There are a number different blackcurrant plants and those chosen for Crème de Cassis will guarantee the final taste of the crème.  The areas selected for growing blackcurrants include many regions where grapes vines are present, and this area is called "Black Burgundy."  Do not be surprised that blackcurrants grow in areas famous for grapes and wines; the land that produces the grapes for Burgundy's wines is also good for France's blackcurrants.
    

If you really love blackcurrants you may join:
The Grand Order of  Brother and Sisterhood of the Blackcurrants from Dijon.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/25850415@N02/3983509642/

Blackcurrant Celebrations

Burgundy has many wine and blackcurrant celebrations and for more information see the English language website:



Crème de Cassis was first served mixed with a dry white wine to make Vin Blanc de Cassis in the early 1900s.  Then in the mid 20th century the Mayor of Dijon, Canon Felix Kir, who was famous as a WWII resistance fighter, served this aperitif along with Crème de Cassis and Champagne at official functions. These aperitifs became so popular that they were named after him: Kir and Kir Royale. Today Kir Royale will most likely be prepared with Burgundy's excellent sparkling Crémant de Bourgogne.
    

Kir Royale
It may be out of fashion, but its taste has not changed

https://www.flickr.com/photos/cowbite/3282171953/ 
 
Cultivating the blackcurrants in France.
From French church reports, we know that blackcurrant cultivation was already beginning in the 11th century.  Then in the 16th century, we know from early French cookbooks, that blackcurrants were already much-appreciated in the kitchen and as a table fruit.  So from early on the blackcurrant has had a place of importance in French cuisine and its popularity is seen in the significant number of recipes that include blackcurrants.   Blackcurrants became and remain a very significant French agricultural product.  Today, France is the 5th largest producer of blackcurrants in the world.


Blackcurrant mechanical harvesters

Blackcurrants in the languages of France’s neighbors:
  
(Catalan - groseller negre), (Dutch - zwarte bes), (German - schwarze Johannisbeere), (Italian -  cassis, ribes nero ), (Spanish - cassis, grosellero negro).
   
Connected Posts:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 

 

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2016


Fromage Port Salut - The Port Salut Cheese and the Entrammes and Saint Paulin Cheeses.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

  

Port Salut Cheese.
  
The Port Salut cheese comes from the department of Mayenne in the region of the Pays de Loire. The cheese is a mild, semi-soft, 27 % fat cow’s milk, cheese made with pasteurized milk and aged from 14 to 21 days. Along with Port Salut’s mild flavor comes a surprisingly strong smell when the cheese is opened; however, though that in no way detracts from the cheese’s popularity and you will see Port Salut on many cheese trolleys and cheese plates. The cheese is made in sizes of 200 grams (7 ounces), 320 grams (11 ounces), and 2.2 kilos (5 lbs).


A Port Salut pre-prepared croissant
Pre-prepared snacks of Port Salut are very popular.

Taking Port Salut home.
 
This cheese is made with pasteurized milk and appropriately packed will not smell on the journey home.  For more about buying French cheeses and taking them home click here.
   
The cheese is sold with a number of names including SAFR Port Salut, Entrammes, and Saint Paulin. All the names relate to the Abbey of Notre Dame de Port Salut and its history. The cheese was created by the Trappist monks in the Abbey in 1873.    The abbey may be visited and is just 16 km (10 miles) from the town of Laval, the departmental capital of Mayenne in the Pays de Loire. Just a little further down the road, 96 km (60 miles) away is the town of Lemans so famous for its 24 hours car race and the longest go-kart track in the world.

The abbey may be visited and also offers rooms for guests. They have a French language website that may be viewed in English with the Bing or Google translation apps.
  
   
Port Salut leaves the abbey.
 
As the Port Salut cheese became more and more popular in the 20th century, the monks could no longer produce the quantities that were being ordered. They solved that problem by selling the name and the production rights to a private company whose initials were SAFR and the so the name SAFR Port Salut is seen on the labels.   
 
Despite the sale of the production rights of the Port Salut cheese the monks retained the right to make their cheese in smaller quantities with a different name and that was originally destined for their personal consumption. They gave that cheese the name Entrammes after the village next to the Abbey. However, that cheese also became popular and consequently again became too much for the production capacity of the Abbey which was seeing fewer and fewer monks joining.  Now a local fromagerie called La Fromagerie Bio Du Maine in the village of Entrammes, next to the Abbey, makes the cheese.
   

The Entrammes cheese packed and aging
  
                          Producing the Entrammes Cheese.
    
The Fromagerie Bio Du Maine now makes the Entrammes cheese in four versions, which apart from the traditional version includes a cheese flavored with caraway seeds and another with pepper. The Fromagerie may be visited, and they have a French language website. Nevertheless, using the Bing or Google translation apps, you may view this site in English.
    

Port Salut on French Menus:

Tourte aux Pommes de Terre et Port Salut – Potato pie flavored with Port Salut

Suprême de Poulet Farci aux Cranberries et Fromage Port-Salut  - Chicken breast stuffed with cranberries and Port Salut.

Entrammes on French Menus:

Tartine à l’Entrammes au Poivre Vert, Miel et Noix  - An open sandwich made with Entrammes cheese  green pepper, honey and walnuts.
 
Noix de Saint Jacques dans le Coquille en Croûtes d’Herbes Étuvée de Poireaux a l’Entrammes et Figues Séchées –  A King scallop cooked in its shell covered with herbs and accompanied by steamed leeks, Entrammes cheese and dried figs.

Fondue a l’Entrammes au Cidre Fermier, Pommes, Boudin Blanc, Pain de Campagne – A cheese fondue made with Entrammes cheese and a farmhouse cider accompanied by apples, pork sausages and country bread.

Saint Paulin on French menus:
 
Légumes Farcis au Saint Paulin Vegetables stuffed with Saint Paulin.
   
Soufflé au Saint Paulin et aux Amandes – A Saint Paulin souffle  with almonds.
  
Saint Paulin
 
Saint Paulin is another cheese with a taste very similar to the Port Salut; however, this time it was not produced after being sold by the monks. It makes you wonder if someone stole the monk’s recipe!  The Saint Paulin Cheese's name is not protected like the Port Salut cheese and so it is produced by a number of dairies in the North of France as well as by dairies elsewhere in Europe and in Canada.
  
Saint Paulin

Connected Posts:
  
   

 
 
 
  
 


Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2016

Cannelle - Cinnamon. Cinnamon on French Cuisine. Cinnamon on French Menus.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

   

Ceylonese Cinnamon
https://www.flickr.com/photos/manuuuuuu/6437950307/
  
Cinnamon is traditional in certain French desserts and pastries and absolutely a must in hot punches; nevertheless, its use is a fraction of that seen in recipes from one-hundred years ago.

Despite cinnamon’s drop in popularity, it will still be in many pastries and desserts, and powdered cinnamon will also decorate cappuccino coffees while whole sticks of cinnamon will be used in pickling.
     

Cappuccino with Cinnamon
 
Cinnamon on French Menus:

Pomme au Four à la Cannelle  - Baked apples flavored with cinnamon.

Salade d'Oranges Fraîches Parfumée à la Cannelle – A salad of fresh oranges scented with cinnamon.
   

Cinnamon Rolls
Photograph courtesy  of Daryn Nakhuda
https://www.flickr.com/photos/ddaarryynn/2955397132/
     
Tarte Tatin et sa Glace Cannelle Tarte Tatin served with cinnamon flavored ice-cream.

Crêpe,Poire  Pochée au Gingembre et Cannelle, Sauce Chocolat Chaude – A crepe served with a poached pear flavored with ginger and cinnamon and covered in a chocolate sauce.

   

Cap'n Crunch Cinnamon Roll Crunch
https://www.flickr.com/photos/jeepersmedia/15949684770/

  
Glace a la Vanille de Madagascar et Mirabelles Poêlées a la Cannelle De Ceylan –  Ice cream flavored with vanilla from Madagascar and served with France’s own Mirabelle plums cooked with Ceylonese cinnamon.

The island of Sri Lanka

The island of Sri Lanka (formerly called Ceylon), southeast of India is home to this popular member of the cinnamon family.  Several attempts have been made to transplant cinnamon trees to other parts of the tropics, but outside of Sri Lanka, in commercial quantities, it has only been successfully transplanted to the Seychelles where it also grows wild.
  

Ceylonese Cinnamon Quills
https://www.flickr.com/photos/cinnamonvogue/14724175617/

Cinnamon, for the French, is the bark of Ceylonese Cinnamon tree. Despite that, four-hundred years ago the Chinese Cinnamon, called Cassia, was the cinnamon that was used in France.    Then with the discovery of the route around Africa Ceylonese Cinnamon became available in quantity and at competitive prices and by the early years of Haute Cuisine, 200 years ago, Chinese Cinnamon, Cassia, was pushed into the background
   

Cinnamon quills in the market in Lyon
https://www.flickr.com/photos/vanjasphotos/8031845241/
    
There is a large family of cinnamon trees, but the Ceylonese cinnamon has a stronger aroma, and it is sweeter, with none of the kick of Chinese cinnamon. The Egyptians were the Ceylonese Cinnamon importers who brought Cinnamon from India to Egypt on camel trains. Their wholesalers to the Mediterranean countries were, as usual, the Phoenicians and they made Ceylonese Cinnamon a sought after spice.  The long overland trek to Egypt and the additional costs involved in the subsequent secondary distribution limited quantities and made Ceylonese cinnamon very expensive, but despite that the Egyptians used Ceylonese cinnamon in cooking and even in their embalming fluids!
 
Until the Europeans found their way around Africa, only the wealthy could afford Ceylonese cinnamon.   The beautiful part about both cinnamon trees is that their bark is cut down, and that supplies the cinnamon quils. Then the bark grows back, and one year later it may be harvested again.
     
 
Cinnamon Bread
https://www.flickr.com/photos/brownsugarsweets/6246772500/
www.brownsugarsweets.com
   
Ceylonese cinnamon has a sweet taste and clear aroma that is missing in all other cinnamon family members.  Try both Chinese Cinnamon and Ceylonese Cinnamon in a blind test and you will immediately sense the difference.
 
Sri Lankan Cinnamon (Ceylonese) in the languages of France’s neighbors:
 
 (Catalan - canyella),  (Dutch   - kaneel),  ( German – zimt, echter zimt, zimt Cinnamomum),  (Italian – canella),  (Spanish – canela).

    
Cannelle de Chine, Casse, Canéfice
Cassia, Chinese Cinnamon.
   
The Cassia tree is larger than that of the Ceylonese Cinnamon tree, but that does not mean the Ceylonese tree is small, it grows to over 12 meters. The Cassia has pale yellow flowers that are pollinated mostly by flies, and birds, which swallow the soft black fruit as soon as it is ripe and scatter the seeds.
  

Cassia
https://www.flickr.com/photos/jul/5101650364/
 
In Chinese cookery, cassia is an essential ingredient and used in the famous Chinese five spice powder and in spice mixtures used for slowly simmered dishes. Together with other spices, cassia is also essential for several Chinese cooking techniques.  Nevertheless, Ceylonese cinnamon is making its way into the Chinese kitchen and even into the Chinese five spice powder.
  

Cassia
https://www.flickr.com/photos/zoyachubby/464108350/

Chinese Cinnamon, Cassia on French Menus:

Crumble de Fruits de Saison à la Cannelle de Chine, Glace aux Gousses de Vanille – A crumble made with the season’s fruits, flavored with Chinese Cinnamon and served with ice-cream flavored with vanilla pods.

Filet de Canard Rotî aux Cinq Parfums Anis Étoilé, Graines Fenouil, Girofle, Cannelle de Chine, Poivre Sichuan – A cut of roast duck breast flavored with five spices: star anise, fennel seeds, cloves, Chinese cinnamon, and Szechuan pepper.  (This menu listing came from an excellent French-Chinese restaurant).
 
Cassia, Chinese Cinnamon, is still today the cinnamon mostly widely used in Asian cuisine. However, I have seen it advertised in French homeopathic pharmacies where the essential oils of Cassia are offered along with other Cassia potions.
   

Chinese Cinnamon
    
Chinese Cinnamon, Cassia in the languages of France’s neighbors:
   
(Catalan -  cassia  cinamom xinès,  ), (Dutch -  kassie, bastaardkaneel, valse kaneel), (German - Chinesischer zimt, kassie, cassia), (Italian -     cassia, cannella della cina),  (Spanish - casia, canela de China).
     
Connected Posts:
 
 

 

 
 
 
 

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2016

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