Showing posts with label Bretagne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bretagne. Show all posts

Homard - Lobster. The Two-Clawed European Lobster. Lobster in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


    
The two-clawed lobster
Photograph courtesy of Brad Cerenzia
www.flickr.com/photos/bradcerenzia/245070270/
  
Homard, Homard Bleu or Homard de Bretagne –. The two-clawed European lobster, a first cousin of the two-clawed North American lobster. 

The two-clawed European Lobster in French
 
On French menus, the European lobster, the homard, will often be called the homard bleu, the blue lobster. European lobsters are mostly blue or blackish-blue when taken from the sea, hence that French name. After cooking the European lobsters turn red just like their American cousins. Within France, it is accepted that the best lobsters come from Brittany, and that explains another of the European Lobster's names, the Homard Breton.
   
   
The two clawed lobster is very different from the rock lobster,
the owner of the lobster tail.
   
The two clawed lobster is on the right,
the rock lobster is on the left,

Lobsters or lobster tails? 
 
The two-clawed lobsters, the homard, whether American or European, are never to be confused with the clawless spiny lobster or rock lobster, in French the langouste  The spiny or rock lobster has no claws and it is the provider of all those tasty, lobster tails.  Additionally, the two clawed lobster provides even tastier meat with a better texture than the lobster tail.  That being said the European two-clawed lobsters also taste a little sweeter than their American cousins. But they are much, much, more expensive and usually seen in small sizes. Price and size are the reasons you will see imported North American lobsters on French menus.

Fresh local crabs will be competing for space on the menu.

In season, are two excellent locally caught crabs the “Crabe Tourteau,” the edible brown crab and the “Crabe Araignée,” the European Spider crab;  will be on many menus. Both of these crabs are full of lovely white crab meat. The “Crabe de Neige,” the snow crab, may also be listed though it is a frozen, but tasty, import.

   
The two-clawed lobster on French menus:
  
Bisque de Homard Bleu – A European lobster bisque. This bisque will be made with pureed lobster prepared with white wine, cream or crème fraiche. Nevertheless, when lobster bisque is on the menu it always pays to ask the server how this dish is prepared. Changes to the traditional recipe can sometimes be very flavorful as every chef will have his or her preferred recipe.
  
Lobster bisque
www.flickr.com/photos/closari/3205875508/
  
Demi Homard Gratiné, Pince Décortiquée en Croustillant Sauce au Corail de Homard - Half a grilled lobster with its shelled pincer already shelled and served when crispy with a sauce made from the lobster roe.
  
Éclaté De Homard au Vin Jaune Fine Raviole à l’Oseille, Morilles et Pointes d’Asperges. Lobster served (with its shell cracked for easy access) flavored with the famous yellow wine from the French Department of Jura in the region of Franche-Comté. This is a special wine that yellows as it ages fir It is not made like a sherry; but, its taste is somewhat like a dry fino sherry. The lobster is served with ravioli stuffed with sorrel and accompanied by morel mushrooms and asparagus spears.
     
Fricassée de Homard aux Légumes Primeurs en Cocotte Lutée – Stewed lobster cooked with early vegetables in a cocotte lutée with added morel mushrooms and asparagus spears. This is a lobster fricassée, a lobster stew, and the original fricassées were only made with chicken; however, that was originally. Today fricassées are made with veal, other poultry, shellfish, vegetables and occasionally lamb or rabbit.  A fricassée may also be called a ragoût blanc, a white stew.  

A coquette is a casserole and a "coquette lutée" is a casserole covered with pastry. The pasty cover allows the contents of the casserole to breath as a metal or ceramic cover would not, and it still keeps all the flavors in. N.B.  The pastry cover used in covering the contents, even when very attractive, is usually not intended to be eaten.  Other dishes with decorative pastry covers are mostly added after cooking.  Those coverings may be referred to as berets, like the head coverings. 
   
Homard d'Audresselles    Two-clawed European lobsters caught off the coast near the fishing village of Audresselles, France.  These lobsters are considered by some to be superior to even the lobsters from the region of Bretagne, Brittany. This is known as the terroir of the sea; terroir is a long story and will have to be a separate post.  Suffice to say true gourmets have labeled these lobsters unique.
  
 Audresselles is a small fishing village and tourist-centric commune in the department of Pay-de Calais, the region of Nord-Pas de Calais. It is famous for all its seafood and fish. Audresselles is  25 km (16 miles) from Coquelles, the first stop on the train from England when it exits the Channel tunnel on its way to Paris.  I have heard of those who come to France with Audresselles their first and only stop in France. They get off the train from London in Coquelles and rent a car, or take a taxi, to a previously chosen restaurant in Audresseles. A few hours later they return to London on another train; that is this lobster’s power of attractions.  If you love lobster, this is where you may check out the very best that France has to offer.
 
Homard aux Aromates – Lobster with aromatic herbs; at least that is the direct translation. However, this dish is much more than just lobster prepared with aromatic herbs.  The lobster in this dish will be cooked in white wine, together with shallots, butter, leeks, green beans, carrots and then the herbs are added; crème fraiche will be added just before serving. Originally this dish would have been flambéed at your table.
      
 Homard Canadien Grillé – Grilled Canadian lobster. The North American two-clawed lobster will be on quite a few French menus. It does not matter whether it was caught in Canadian or US waters when imported to France it becomes the Homard Canadian, the Canadian lobster. This name, instead of calling the lobster a Maine lobster, is a traditional show of support for the French-speaking part of Canada.

Homard Mayonnaise - Lobster served with Mayonnaise.
www.flickr.com/photos/johnkarakatsanis/4838012886/

Homard Canadien Froid avec Mayonnaise The Canadian lobster served cold with fresh mayonnaise. Fresh French mayonnaise is wonderful and together with cold lobster an unbeatable combination.  Umm!
    
Seared Crab Cakes
Avocado puree with wild arugula, oven-dried tomato & shaved fennel salad
www.flickr.com/photos/prayitnophotography/45174756561/
    
 Homard Thermidor – One of France’s most famous lobster dishes; now in its second century on French menus.
   
The original recipe is the meat from a European two-clawed lobster prepared with white wine and Madeira or port and flavored with shallots and herbs, especially tarragon. All is then cooked in a sauce béchamel prepared with mustard.  Before serving the lobster meat it is replaced in the original shell and served gratiné, that means it is browned under the grill usually with a little cheese.
  
 Homard Thermidor was created by the chef Leopold Mourier or his sous chef Tony Girod at the now closed, but still famous, Café de Paris in 1891.  The dish was named after an ongoing hit play called Thermidor that was being performed at the Comédie Française.  The Comédie-Française was founded in 1680 and continues today; it is a very French theatre. The play was written nearly one hundred years after the French revolution when the 11th month in the French calendar was Thermidor. The French revolutionary months had 30 days and were named after particular seasons.  The month of Thermidor began round about the 20th of July in today's calendar and indicated the hot month. Thermidor comes from the word thermos in Greek, which means heat.

The month of Thermidor, in 1794, saw the end of the terror and mass executions ordered by Robespierre. Thankfully, among the last to be guillotined that month was Robespierre himself and the terror was over.  Emperor Napoléon I ended the use of the revolutionary months, in 1805, and returned France to the Gregorian calendar.
  

 When dining on Homard Thermidor, or even a less expensive Langouste Thermidor raise a glass to the idea of Fraternité, Liberté, and Égalité.  Brotherhood. Freedom and Equality. That ideal from the French revolution remains as France's "raison d'etre," its reason for being. It is an ideal much like the USA  Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.
  
Homard Thermidor

Ravioli de Homard Bleu a l'Effilochée de Fenouils avec Escalope de RIs de Veau au Curry de Madras – Ravioli stuffed with the meat of the European lobster and served on strands of fennel with slices of veal sweetbreads flavored with Madras curry. This menu listing was taken from a family members’ dinner menu on the Orient Express when they took that unique train from Paris to Venice.  It is a French offering, in all its glory, from the blue lobster, and the veal sweetbreads, down to the Madras curry.   France, of course, still remembers and honors the Battle of Madras, India, when they defeated the English in 1746!
   
Homard
www.flickr.com/photos/claveirole/13762943134/
    
 Homard à la Américaine or Homard à la Armoricaine – Lobster in the American manner, or lobster in the manner of Brittany. The original recipe for this dish was created by the French chef, Pierre Fraisse in the 1850’s. After 170 plus years the dish is still on many menus, The sauce is made with butter, olive oil, white wine, cognac, garlic, lots of tomatoes, onions and shallots and herbs along with the coral, the roe, and the liver of the lobster; all served in the lobster’s shell.
  
Brittany’s ancient name is Armorica
 
This dish’s name has caused great confusion through the years as the chef and creator Pierre Fraisse had lived in America for a number of years. What name did he give this dish?  Arguments about the correct name and translation for this dish have broken up close friendships in the kitchen. That continues, despite the existence of a letter sent to Curnonsky, France’s most famous food critic. (1872-1956). Curnowsky’s copy of a letter from the chef gave the name Homard à la Armoricaine, lobster in the manner of Brittany. (Curnonsky also gave the name Bibendum to Michelin’s rubber tire man and founded the Confrérie de la Chaîne des Rôtisseurs.  This Confrérie, mostly just known as La Chaîne, is still the world’s largest international gastronomic society).
 
Where the names Bretagne, and Armorica come from.

 Bretagne, Brittany, is where most of the best French lobsters are considered to come from. Bretagne was originally called, over 2,000 years ago, Amor.  When the Romans settled the area they called it Amorica and the largest national park in Bretagne is today the Parc Naturel Régional d'Armorique. The Bretagne name came with the influx of the British Celts escaping the terror of Roman and Viking incursions among others. These were real Britains. That means that if you want real British food you can go to Bretagne. The Celts also brought the alcoholic mead of their Druid priests, Chouchen. You may buy chouchen in Brittany and celebrate with the French-speaking descendants of the British Celts and Druids.

Armorique has nothing to do with the origins of the name America that is down to the Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci.  The website of the incredibly beautiful National Regional Park of Armorique is in French only but easily read with Google or Bing Translate:


 With France’s two-clawed lobster being so expensive.  It is no surprise that the wonderful Sauce Thermidor that Pierre Fraisse originally prepared for lobster is now changed somewhat and used with served with other shellfish dishes. These sauces are not made with the original ingredients; but some sauces, despite their difference, are tasty.

 Tartare de Homard et sa Gelée de Carotte et Sésame Noir, Aumonière aux Pinces de Homard - Lobster tartar served with a jelly made with carrots and black sesame. Accompanied by a small pastry purse holding the lobster claw.
  
Homard Grillé au Parfum de Citron et d’Aneth
Grilled lobster flavored with lemon and dill

Two clawed lobsters in France, as elsewhere, are caught in the wild. Farming lobsters is a work in progress. Lobsters grow very slowly and take five years to reach a half kilo in weight (1.1 lbs), and that is a very small lobster. A three-pound lobster, (2.4 kilos), is probably twelve years old.

The two-clawed European lobsters caught in France are not usually caught in the Mediterranean; they prefer the cooler waters of the Atlantic. On French Mediterranean menus, you will be more likely to find the langouste, the clawless spiny lobster or rock lobster; the owner of the lobster tail.  Some restaurants do import the two clawed lobsters on ice; but note the difference in costs for the lobster’s traveling expenses.

Lobster in the languages of France’s neighbors:
  
(Catalan – llamàntol and), (German –hummer), (Italian – astice europeo), (Spanish – bogavante (European) or lubigante and  bogavante Americano (American)).
 
The European two-clawed lobster in other languages:
    
(Bulgarian –oмарите), (Chinese (Mandarin) -  龙虾,  lóngxiā), (Danish – hummeren),
 (Dutch - kreeft or zeekreeft) (Estonian - Euroopa homaar), (Finnish - Hummeri  or euroopanhummeri ), (Gaelic – lumbrigante), (Hebrew – lobster - לובסטר), (Hungarian - európai homár), (Norwegian – hummar or europeisk hummar), (Portuguese - lavagante), (Russian - Wропейский омар ), (Slovanian - Evropski jastog  or jastog Evropski jastog ), (homer or Europeesk homer), (Polish - homar europejski), (Ukrainian – pакоподібні), (Latin - the European lobster is homarus gammarus and the American lobster - homarus americanus).For translations of some of these names, thanks go to Wikipedia with their Creatuive Cimmons Deed. 


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


Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
French menus?
   
Just add the word, words, or phrase that you are searching for to the words "Behind the French Menu" 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 400 articles that include over 3,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations.
   

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2015, 2017, 2019.
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
    
  
   
  
  

    
    
  

Coco de Paimpol - France's Famous Bean from Paimpol in Brittany. The Cocos de Paimpol AOP in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

  
The Coco de Paimpol.
www.flickr.com/photos/marckjerland/4044122852/
    
The Haricot de Cocos de Paimpol AOP is the most famous bean in Brittany. The French love beans and this bean is the gourmand’s bean. The Cocos de Paimpol took the slow boat from the New World to the Old World and only began to be recognized for their distinctive taste and texture in the 1930s
  
When did the Coco de Paimpol arrives in Brittany?
  
Within one-hundred and fifty years of Christopher Columbus and the Conquistadors discovering South America in 1492 beans and maize was being grown all over France along with French-produced hybrids. However, no one is entirely sure when the original bean that would become the Cocos de Paimpol arrived in Brittany, but it did not reach via Spain with other beans. Cultivation began in the 1930s, and by the end of the 1940s, the Cocos de Paimpol was famous. 

Saucisses de Toulouse aux Cocos de Paimpol
Toulouse Sausages with Cocos de Paimpol.
   
The bean itself
  
This white bean has an oval shape with a pale yellow pod that has slight violet markings; it is sold as a haricot demi-sec, a semi-dry bean. Semi-dry means the bean will be sold without the pod but not dried like many of France’s traditional beans, which require prolonged soaking to rehydrate them before use. The Haricot de Cocos de Paimpol will be in recipes from soups to salads, accompanying roasts, and many other dishes and, of course, will be in stews and cassoulets.

The Cocos de Paimpol on your menu in France:

Filet de Sole Cuit Meunière, Cocos de Paimpol aux Truffes, Beurre de Persil Plat- A filet of sole prepared with a Sauce Meunièr beans with truffles and flat parsley butter.  Sauce Meunier is a tasty but straightforward butter sauce made with added lemon juice and parsley. Accompanying the sole, the fish, are the Cocos de Paimpol beans flavored with truffles and a parsley butter made with the slightly stronger flavored flat parsley. A wedge of the parsley butter is placed on the fish just as it is served to allow the butter and parsley to flavor the fish as it melts. (For decoration, curly parsley is preferred, but the flat parsley is used when more parsley flavor is required). 

The truffles offered in this dish will not be France's famous Black Perigord truffles or the nearly as famous Burgundy truffles; otherwise, they would have starred on the menu. Nevertheless, France has a number of truffles that do add their own flavor to a dish and are relatively inexpensive. The truffles offered here may be the Truffle d'Été, The Summer truffle; it is a lightly scented truffle or the Truffe d'Hiver or Truffe Brumale, the Winter Truffle. Ask.
       
Dos de Haddock.Cocos de Paimpol.
A thick cut of smoked haddock accompanied by the Cocos de Paimpol.
  
Pavé de Thon Mi-cuit, Compotée de Coco de Paimpol Frais  A thick cut  of very, very, lightly cooked tuna served with a compote made from fresh Coco de Paimpol beans. Fresh beans will only be on menus from the end of June through October.
    
RIs d'Agneau aux Cocos de Paimpol, Jus de Veau Réduit  - Lamb sweetbreads  served with Cocos de Paimpol beans and a reduced sauce made from a veal base.

Soupe aux Haricots Coco de Paimpol - Coco de Paimpol bean soup. A soup made with the Coco de Paimpol will be creamy and velvety.    
  
Crème de Cocos de Paimpol à la Poitrine Fumée
Cream of Coco de Paimpol soup
flavored with smoked streaky bacon; in the USA, smoked slab bacon.
Photograph courtesy of Cuisine Actuelle.
   
Souris d'Agneau Confite et Caramélisée, Haricots Cocos de Paimpol  Souris d’Agneau is the foreshank and knuckle of lamb served as a caramelized confit accompanied by the Coco de Paimpol beans. In this menu listing, the lamb confit has been caramelized, probably with honey and wine vinegar.  To a confit, caramelization adds additional texture and taste.

 A Souris d’Agneau is nearly always prepared as part of a stew or, as here, as a confit. Confits were, and are still, made by slowly cooking the meat on a low heat in its own fat and juices. A slow, low, heat breaks down the muscle and other tissues so that the meat will, practically, melt in your mouth. Historically, duck and pork confits would be preserved under a layer of the same fat in which it was cooked,  allowing the flavors to mingle. Just as a soup or stew tastes better the day after it is cooked, so these confits which were kept for the winter months in airtight containers while their taste improved with time.  Today, a lamb confit will not have been stored under fat, rather very very slowly simmered.  

Translating the Souris on your menu listing.
 
N.B.: When translating menus with a traveler’s English-French dictionary or Google Translate, you will find the word souris in French also means a mouse or a rat. However, worry not; this is a cut of lamb, and no mice or rats are included. In the days when French cuisine was in its infancy, culinary names were either traditional names or allocated with kitchen humor without any need to be politically correct. The uncooked cut was said to resemble a mouse, and despite its unfortunate connotations, the name stuck. 

Choosing your aperitif and digestif in Paimpol.

Choose a glass of ice-cold Chouchen, the alcoholic mead that the Celtic Druids who came from Britain to France brought with them. You may also choose a Kir Royal in the manner of Brittany as your aperitif. That is a Kir made with Brittany’s sparkling cider replacing the original champagne. or Brittany’s Pommeau de Bretagne  AOP. With your meal you might choose Brittany’s Cidre Cornouaille AOP. This is the Bretagne, Brittany’s delicately sparkling semi-dry AOP cider. Its apples come from the area called Cornouaille in the département of Finistère. If you are visiting this area, take their Route du Cidre AOC Cornouaille, their cider road.

Your digestif in Brittany will be their famous Lambig apple brandy, over that, there will be no discussion.
    
A Brittany Lambig Apple Brandy.
Horse d’ Âge – Over six years old.
  
Around Paimpol and within Côtes-d'Armor
  
Around Paimpol and within the department of Côtes-d'Armor, you will see the names Goëllo, Penthièvre, and Trégor again and again. These are the names of the old Brittany Provinces that today make up the department of Côtes-d'Armor.  The names came from the hereditary Counts who held these areas as their personal fifes. The department of Côtes-d'Armor was created during the French revolution, but many businesses and place names still have the old names linked to them.
   
In Brittany celebrations always include oysters.
They will often be accompanied by Cidre Bouché, not champagne.
   
Visiting Paimpol
  
Paimpol is not only famous for its beans. Long before the beans arrived, it was an important fishing port and a vacation center. Paimpol and the area around have excellent beaches, and today there is a lot of activities, restaurants, fetes, and celebrations in town. However, in July and August, you will have problems finding even one hotel room if you did not book the year before. During the French holiday season in July and August, the area’s population increases by more than 300%. Nearly all of that population growth comes from French citizens who know a good thing when they see one.

In Paimpol
    
If you are in the area during the first weekend in August, make sure that you are ready for the Fête du Coco de Paimpol, the bean from Paimpol celebrations. Apart from opportunities to taste the bean and to pick up some recipes, you may join in traditional competitions such as the ramassage, bean picking, and the all-important d'écossage, bean podding. Who knows what fabulous prizes you might win?

Apart from the celebration and fete connected to Paimpol’s famous beans, there are other celebrations, concerts, and fetes every month. An example is the bi-annual "Fête des Chants de Marin." This is a sea shanty festival with groups bringing shanties from all over the world. It attracts thousands of visitors for three days in August.
   
A Breton procession in Paimpol.
www.flickr.com/photos/mwf2005/14665004689/
   
 In the summer, there are often two events in the same week. That is in addition to a Tuesday morning street market, night markets, and the "Mardi du Port" - where locals and visitors enjoy music beside the port every Tuesday. There is also a weekly farmer’s market where everything from beans to ciders, local cheeses, seafood, sausages, poultry, and more are on sale.
   
Paimpol Port.
Paimpol, apart from being an active fishing port, has a large harbor for the growing number of visitors who arrive in their own yachts.
www.flickr.com/photos/12195219@N02/1242829387/
   
Paimpol’s English language Tourist Information website:


To see the calendar of events for the whole year in Paimpol, click on the box on the lower left on the home page. It is entitled “Events: Diary of the Paimpol Country.” 
   
Tasting local products close to Paimpol

Within a short distance from Paimpol, you may visit oyster and mussel farms and cider mills. From the Tourist Information Office, get addresses for those who accept visitors and make a morning visit to the seafood farms and taste their products for lunch. 
  

Langoustines - Dublin Bay Prawns and Huitres – Oysters
For lunch.

In the afternoon, visit producers of Brittany’s famed cider, Chouchen, Pommeau, and Lambig, but with a designated driver!
  
 Paimpol is also home to the first Label Rouge, red label, sea-farmed turbot, the fish. The Label Rouge level of excellence requires adherence to humane farming methods apart from the quality of the product.
  


Wild Turbot on sale.
www.flickr.com/photos/cvalette/20707640115/

The coast around Paimpol
  
Along the excellent beaches close to Paimpol are a wide range of fish and seafood restaurants. When you have had too much fish, and seafood you will find other restaurants a few miles inland where the local Label Rouge free-range chickensturkeys, pork products, veal, and the pre-sale lamb will be on the menu.
   
Pêche à Pied.

This part of the coast of Brittany has many places to join in one of the more popular Breton seaside sports, La Pêche à Pied. La Pêche à Pied is fishing while on land, literally, it translates as fishing on foot. Whenever there is a high tide, buy a net, a hand rake, a bucket, and gloves and join the locals and other visitors at low tide, which is in the afternoon. There among the rocks and sand pools look for and collect crabes, crabs: crevettes, shimps; amande de mer, dog cockles; langoustines, Dublin Bay Prawns;  coques, cockles; and more. If you are lucky, you may find a langouste, the rock lobster, and the owner of the lobster tail. All may be collected for dinner.
  

Pêche à pied, fishing on foot.
www.flickr.com/photos/rhian/36291882871/
  
Paris to Paimpol
  
Paris to Paimpol is 450 km (281 miles) by car or three hours by TGV train to St Bruec, followed by a forty-minute drive by bus or train for the 46.0 km (30 miles) to Paimpol.

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2012, 2015, 2017.
  
 
--------------------------------

Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
French menus?
 
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, Bing, or another browser.  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.
    
 Connected Posts:
    

  
   

  
   
   



  
      

                                               



 
  




  
  
  

   


   
Behind the French Menu’s links include hundreds of words, names, and phrases that are seen on French menus. There are over 400 articles that include over 2,500 French dishes with English translations and explanations.  Just add the word, words or phrase that you are searching for to the words "Behind the French Menu" and search with Google.

Bryan G. Newman

Behind the French Menu

For information on the unpublished book behind this blog contact Bryan Newman
at
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

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