French

France: Chocolate Truffle Ice Cream á la Place des Vosges

Paris is one of the great dessert cities of the world (which is one of the reasons why it makes so much sense for the excellent David Lebovitz to have settled there). At certain times of day (starting around five minutes after you thought your breakfast had settled...) it begins to seem as if there's a patisserie on every streetcorner, if not several of them in any given block... all their windows filled with stunning pastries and sweets.

The last time EuroCuisineLady was passing through the City of Light, she was on her way to a business gig, and had an overnight stay in a hotel in the Place des Vosges, Paris's oldest square. The Place is a beautiful place to just lounge or relax, but EuroCuisineLady's work schedule meant she was going to have to spend all of her "break day" and evening hammering on the laptop and sorting out various issues with people who were working on the same project.

Fortunately there was an unusually congenial place to do this. Café Hugo, just down the square from Victor Hugo's old home, offers WiFi access at reasonable rates: so ECL wandered in there, found a comfy table near the door where she could at least watch Paris go by if not actually participate in the scene, had a snack, and got on with business.

The weariness of the end of the work day, though, was broken by something unexpected. On a whim -- or rather, subliminally stimulated by the memory of the glossy gleam of chocolate in all those patisseries she'd seen on her one swift walk around the block early in the afternoon -- ECL asked for some chocolate ice cream for dessert. What she got went way beyond any possible expectation. Her memory is now vague on whether or not the ice cream came from one of the high-end glaciers like Berthillon. But it was terrific: a luscious, rich, creamy ice cream with the most amazing truffle-y mouthfeel, perfectly augmented by a shake of plain dark cocoa over the top.

Normally ECL is not the type to go insane trying to reproduce foods she eats on the Continent. She prefers either to remember them fondly from a distance, or to go back as soon as possible and eat them again. But when EuroCuisineGuy looked up at the electric ice cream maker a week or so ago and muttered, "How long has it been since we used that thing?", the memory of that ice cream drifted to the surface. And there was cocoa in the house, and eggs, and cream, and plenty of chocolate...

The recipe that follows is -- by one of those miraculous flukes that sometimes happens in the kitchen when you're improvising -- very, very close to what ECL had in Café Hugo that evening. The mouthfeel, at least, is right on, due at least partly to the use of both cocoa and chocolate in the mix. It is rich: all cream, no milk, three eggs (well, two egg yolks and a third whole one)... so if you're dieting at the moment, save this for later.

Finally, please note that you really need a mechanical ice cream maker for this.

Click on "read more" for the recipe and the method.   

Your rating: None Average: 3 (16 votes)

Belgium: Why French Fries Aren't French

Some of our readership may remember how, once upon a time -- oh, six or seven years ago -- some members of the United States Congress got cranky with the French government, and administered what somebody apparently considered a stinging rebuke by changing the name of the dish "French fries", in the Congressional cafeterias, to "Freedom Fries".

This kind of thing has happened fairly frequently in recent history -- as for example during World War II, when many foods with German names in the USA had new and more politically correct names slapped on them for the duration. Sauerkraut, for example, became "liberty cabbage", and even the innocent and theoretically all-American hamburger got turned into "victory steak". But this maneuver is at its funniest when there's enough confusion about the origin of the food for the gesture to be meaningless -- in the most recent case, because "French fries" are actually from Belgium.

Unfortunately, in our short-attention-span world, there are too few people who're either familiar with or concerned about the details of such events as World War I. In that war, American and Canadian soldiers assisting in the liberation of Belgium arrived in a French-speaking part of the country and were served extremely tasty fried potatoes, which they promptly started calling "French fries" even though they weren't particularly close to France at the time. By the time anyone noticed the error, it was too late: the name was stuck.

The French were probably as bemused by this as anyone else. France at that time just didn't have the "frying culture". But the Belgians (and the Dutch as well) had it in spades. They have it still. Even the smallest of Belgian villages has a frietkot, a little place to get your fries -- sometimes a shop or little restaurant, but often just a small mobile building or temporary structure of some kind, even a shack. (Please note, however, that some of these "shacks" have WiFi and/or broadband.)

Frietkots naturally sell other things too, such as sausages and burgers and various snacks that you might like, fried or grilled. But the fries (and the many tasty sauces that go with them) are always the star. Every frietkot prides itself on serving the quintessential Belgian frietjes (pronounced "FREET-yes"), cut thin so that they'll achieve the perfect level of crunch, and always fried twice.

Click on "Read more" to find out how they do it...

If you're looking for online sources for sauces for friet / frites, please try this link: Belgian and Dutch Mayonnaise and Friet / Frites Sauces. Also -- are you a Belgian visitor looking for a frituur? Try VindEenFrituur.be.

(And hi there, JustHungry visitors! Make yourselves at home.)

No votes yet

France: Three Chestnut Recipes (en français)

Three Chestnut recipes

(Being held here for translation by EuroCuisineGuy)

Your rating: None Average: 3 (1 vote)

France

Syndicate content