Sunday 31 March 2013

GIVE US THIS DAY OUR DAILY BREAD


French Village Life

The French are still slightly more religious than the heathen English and the part of the Lord’s Prayer they take the most seriously is “Give us this day our daily bread”.  The boulangerie is still an essential part of daily life that most families visit most days of the week.  It is even one of the few institutions other than the Church open on a Sunday.

In fact it was on a Sunday that I made my first visit to La Mie Dorée (roughly translated as the golden
Religieuse au cafe from La Mie Doree
crumb), 5 Route Sancerre in Veaugues.  An artisan boulangerie it is a delightful little place that makes and serves beautiful bread, croissants and a small selection of cakes.  As I am convinced that a good boulangerie in walking distance must put the price of your house up in France I intend to frequent it whenever I am I am there. There is a duty, I think, for owners of résidences secondaires to support local businesses as much as possible otherwise they kill off the village life that attracted them there in the first place.

What I like most about France is its difference to England.  Vive la difference as the English say much more often than the French!   Perhaps one of the most striking differences is the French love of good crusty bread whilst us English eat those horrible soggy triangles called sandwiches.  Every meal in France is accompanied by bread, most commonly by the ubiquitous baguette.  About three quarters of all bread sold in France is the baguette.

Although I travel in France a lot, I rarely get to eat a good baguette – too many hotels and restaurants have gone over to serving sub-standard petit pains or poor imitations of baguettes.  Thus it was essential when finding a residence secondaire in France that it was near a good boulangerie.  Don’t expect to get a good baguette in a supermarket either.  One has to go through the formality of talking to the boulanger before getting a good baguette; it cannot be obtained through just impersonally grabbing one off the shelves.  Everything in France requires time, patience and politeness!
  An Excellent Boulangerie in Veaugues

Talking about patience, I was rather hoping to find a queue in the boulangerie to remind myself of the etiquette of visiting a small shop.  Although us English seem for some reason to believe that the French hate queuing in fact they prove themselves more than capable of it in a boulangerie.  My hope of a queue this March Sunday was not disappointed and as I entered I rather timidly announced "Bonjour messieurs, mesdames!"  I then had time to look around and decide what I wanted and listen to other shoppers.  Not that I understood much except that it was the usual village tittle-tattle.  Soon I was able in my best French accent to try out “Bonjour Madame, je voudrais un baguette s’il vous plait”, which I had been practising in my head the last five minutes.

Having amazingly been understood, I then returned home practising my well-practised trick of looking
Jane and I "En Veaugues"
French by chewing the end of my baguette.   Surprisingly, the baguette isn’t really a French invention at all but was imported from Vienna along with the Croissant and many items of viennoiserie.  However like the curry in England it has been absorbed into the popular culture. The baguette apparently became popular in France as it doesn’t take too long to make and bake and thus the Boulanger can stay in bed longer in the morning!

Never has anything required the label “Don’t try this at home” more than the baguette.  It just doesn’t work unless you have some amazing steam oven.  Otherwise you end up with a less than crunchy crust and a soggy middle without the required honeycombing.  Although you can’t bake a good baguette at home there are many other breads worth trying such as the one below for Beetroot Bread or Pain aux Betteraves.

Recipe of the month

I am a lover of beetroot and it is a great accompaniment to goats cheese and thus the wines of Sancerre.  Recently, I tried to make a bread made with raw beetroot and used our Thermomix to make it.  It turned out really great and I really suggest you try it if you like great artisan type bread with a real earthy taste.
My Beetroot Bread

The original recipe for Beetroot Bread that I roughly followed can be found at http://taste-for-adventure.tablespoon.com/2011/03/01/beet-bread/ .Well done to girlversusdough for this recipe.   Jane who helped me convert the recipe to the Thermomix has also blogged this bread.  Her blog can be found at http://www.whyisthereair.com/2013/03/03/pink-and-earthy-beetroot-bread/
Slices of Beetroot Bread

No need for me to repeat the recipe here – really easy even for an amateur bread-maker like myself and very different.  Do try either of these recipes.

Wine of the month

We were fortunate during the handover of our new second home in Veaugues to be introduced to a new vigneron that we had not encountered before.  The previous owner of our home had taken part in the harvest of their grapes for the past few years and they were very kindly driving him down to his new home near Valence in the Rhone Valley.  However, we all got together the previous day at the Domaine Des Caves Du Prieuré where we met Gilles Guillerault and Sébastien Fargette and tasted their wines for the first but certainly not the last time.

I was particularly taken by two of their wines:

Les Panseillots Blanc 2011 – A Sancerre AOC white wine made with 100% Sauvignon Blanc, its character comes from the fact that it is made 50% from grapes grown on 50% caillottes and 50% terre blanche and is left to ferment on its lees.  Although, you still get the fruit it has a great minerality coming from these argilo-calcaire soils.  A lovely wine for fish, shell fish and cheese including the local chèvre.  It  costs around €8 from the domaine.

Les Marnes 2006 – A Sancerre AOC red wine made from 100% Pinot Noir, this wine has been matured in oak for 12 months.  Les Marnes has a lovely fruity acidity balanced with the oak and makes a good food wine.  We enjoyed it later with some paté and some roast chicken but it would also accompany game and steak with a sauce.   It costs a little under €11 from the domaine.

As well as the tasting we had a nice tour of their winery and caves.

Very nice people and very nice wine.  Do visit them at:

Domaine Des Caves Du Prieuré
2, rue du Lavoir
Reigny
Crezancy en Sancerre
18300

They have some Chambre D’Hôtes to stay in should you wish to stay nearby.  There website is http://cavesduprieure.canalblog.com

Sébastien told me that one of their white wines is available at Costco, so look out for it there if you can’t make it to Reigny.

Until the next time in Veaugues.  Á bientôt!