Showing posts with label Vin de Château-Chalon AOC/AOP. Behind the French menu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vin de Château-Chalon AOC/AOP. Behind the French menu. Show all posts

Cuisses de Grenouilles. Frogs' Legs in French Cuisine.

Cuisses de Grenouilles. Frogs' Legs in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

     

Cuisses de Grenouille a la Provençale.
Pan-seared with garlic, parsley and olive oil
Photograph courtesy of NwongPR
    
Cuisses de Grenouilles – Frogs’ legs.

Until thirty or so years ago, Italian deep-fried calamari, deep-fried squid, was a strange dish. Then about twenty-five years ago along came Japanese sushi and sashimi. They made many different fish and seafood dishes widely available on our menus. Around the same time, travelers brought back a taste for conches and goats they had discovered in the Caribbean while others told us about the reindeer steaks they enjoyed in Scandinavia. Our exposure to different meats, disparate fish, diverse cheeses, offbeat fruits, and different wines also prepared us to enjoy frog's legs.


Stir-fried frog’s legs.,
www.flickr.com/photos/ruocaled/6330547866/
 
The taste of frog’s legs?

Frog’s legs have their own mild taste. The nearest taste comparison, not the texture, I would give to the tails of freshwater crayfish. Crayfish are no more visually attractive than frogs, but their tails are as equally tasty as frog’s legs.  Like many other foods, including fish, beef, chicken, and crayfish the final taste is directly related to the manner of cooking and the sauces used.  While enjoying your frog’s legs remember they are also good for you as they have plenty of Omega 3.

What about the texture of frog's legs?
   
Frog’s legs have a texture somewhat similar to the meat on chicken wings; however, that is the texture, not the taste. They have thin bones, and the meat may be served on or off the bone.  NB: Frog’s legs and their meat are not at all greasy; if you are served fatty frog’s legs, that is the fault of the chef cooking them in too much oil or butter, so send them back.
      

Frog Legs with capers in tomato sauce
www.flickr.com/photos/danielchownet/30851669241/
   
When you see Frog’s legs on the menus in France, do not pass them by.

Frog’s legs have a texture somewhat similar to the meat on chicken wings; however, that is the texture, not the taste. They have thin bones, and the meat may be served on or off the bone.  NB: Frog’s legs and their meat are not at all greasy; if you are served fatty frog’s legs, that is the fault of the chef cooking them in too much oil or butter, so send them back.
     
Frog's legs on French menus:

Cuisses de Grenouilles Frites au Citron et à l'Ail – Deep-fried frog’s legs flavored with lemon and garlic.

Cuisses de Grenouilles à la Provençale - Frog’s legs cooked in tomatoes, white wine, shallots and flavored with garlic and parsley.


Frog legs, salsa negra, scallion, lime.
www.flickr.com/photos/68147320@N02/39076909505/

Cuisses de Grenouille Sautées aux Ananas – Frog’s legs lightly fried with pineapple.

Ravioles de Grenouilles aux Morilles et Vin Jaune – Raviolis stuffed with frog’s leg meat and morel mushrooms and served in a yellow Jura wine sauce. The wine used with this dish is the Vin Jaune, the yellow wine made famous in the French department of Jura in the region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté. This is a very aromatic dessert wine with a taste somewhat like a dry fino sherry.
  
Quiche aux Épinards et Cuisses de Grenouilles – A spinach and frog’s legs quiche.
   


Deep Fried Frogs' Legs


Frog’s legs used to be on every bistro’s menu as a  traditional low-priced dish. Then highly-trained French chefs who had grown up enjoying frog’s legs at home or in a local bistro began applying their knowledge. Now they have created recipes that adorn the menus of the most elegant restaurants. You will be offered frog’s legs meat served with pasta, frog’s legs meat in pies, frog’s legs with wild mushrooms and excellent wines as well as frog’s legs pizza. 

Nevertheless, like many other food products, the rise in the standard of living, along with the popularity of frogs’ legs, has created a shortage of domestic frogs raised in frog farms.  Today, over half of France’s requirements are imported from the Far-East.  Domestic French frog farming is trying to catch up, but it has a long way to go before it can meet the local demand.

Where else can you enjoy frogs’ legs in Europe.

Frog’s legs popularity is not unique to France. Frog's legs will be on the menus in Spain, Germany, Italy and other Western Europe countries. The USA, Canada, and the UK all have their own frog farms to supply part of their domestic demand.

The Froggies.

Eating frog's legs shocked British soldiers in WWI when they found out that the French ate them!  Eating frogs’ legs earned the French soldiers the British nickname “ Froggies!”

Frog’s legs in the languages of France’s neighbors:

(Catalan - anques de granota), (Dutch - kikkerbenen), (German - froschschenkel), (Italian- cosce di rane), (Spanish - muslos de ranas).

Frogs legs and the inventor Luigi Galvani's who changed our lives.

Luigi Galvani's work with frog’s legs made him famous. Galvani’s name is associated with the Galvanic cell, the Galvanometer, and Galvanization. That fame began with this medical doctor’s early experiments using frog’s legs to show the effects of electricity on nerves. Galvani's probably enjoyed eating frog's legs, but his scientific tests were not in the kitchen. I have included Galvani in this post as he is an interesting subject for discussion while dining on frog's legs.
   

Statue of Luigi Galvani (1737 – 1798) in Bologna, Italy.
www.flickr.com/photos/127226743@N02/26655411816/

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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2014, 2018, 2020


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