Monday, November 16, 2009

J'aime bien Alsace


Field

We spent last weekend in Alsace which, as anyone who has studied 20th century history knows, is the region in the very east of France which has changed hands between Germany and France no less than 3 times. The reason for the very sought-after land is abundantly clear from even a brief visit. Aside from being exceptionally pretty, it houses the river Rhine and some very fertile agricultural lands which now produce excellent wine and a large part of France’s hops for beer production.

Vines

We roughly followed the Route du Vin, a road that takes you through some very lovely towns with colourful maisons cordonnages (not sure what the direct translation is, but they are the houses with the wooden beams on the exterior...), lunched in Bergheim and spent the night at Turkcheim.

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Being an inveterate celebrity spotter, I could not resist staying at the L’Hotel des Deux Clefs after I learned that Generals Leclerc and de Gaulle both stayed there. Not that I expected to find them there (although the hotel is reportedly haunted by fairies...) The hotel dates from the 15th Century and has a lovely sitting room at the bottom where one can sit and sip Gerwurztraminer and play chess. The rooms are warm and sweet, with pink wallpaper and red tiled bathrooms (with big baths) and the beds were super comfortable. The window glass resembled the bottom of wine bottles and opened out onto a little square.

Hotel Deux Clefs

My favourite village was Ribeauvillé which I understand is the most heavily touristed of all of the towns on the Route du Vin. It is utterly charming with cobble-stoned streets and plenty of medieval buildings. We sprinted up the walk up to the chateau at Saint Ulrich (one can do a walk of the three chateaus surrounding Ribeauvillé) as we were losing light (don’t start this walk after 5pm in November...), but it was absolutely worth the rather treacherous walk down in the almost-dark. The castle is huge and sits on top of the town. You get a great view of the town and the plains of Alsace below for your efforts and you can easily imagine a medieval battle or two taking place over the stone walls of the ruins of this very atmospheric castle.

Hike to St Ulrich

The walk down to the square below can yield a very welcome, refreshing beverage at the name-appropriate Bar Saint Ulrich on the place de la République which has around 100 artisanal beers and an almost equal number of scotch whiskies. It is also a real “pub” in the english manner - dark wood, can-barely-see-where-I am going lighting, which is something I occasionally miss living in Paris.

Road to Haut-Koenigsbourg

Sunday lunch at A La Couronne in Scherwiller was great and absolutely huge. We had a very light lunch of grenouilles in a cream sauce in vol au vents pastry followed by two enormous tartes flambées covered in creme fraiche, munster cheese and lardons. Phew! (Alsace does not produce haute cuisine sized portions, just haute cuisine calorie-density). Lucky we had a few glasses of Pinot Blanc and Riesling to get us through. A La Couronne also has a tiny bar out the front where you can wait for a table or have a digestif after your huge meal- much needed, in theory at least.

Haut-Koenigsbourg

The following week in Strasbourg was only slightly less calorific, but fortunately, we stayed right near the Foret de Neuhof which is a huge woods in the south of Strasbourg. During a run in the forest one morning we discovered a charming, small farm with geese and goats and a couple of donkeys. There was a small restaurant right next to this farm in the middle of nowhere. We were intrigued and had to book a table for Friday night. The farm is actually owned by the daughter of the restaurant owners. The restaurant was called Restaurant Oberjaegerhof and was so warm and homey and managed to avoid looking twee in the manner of many of those regionally decorated establishments which I always thinks should come with a warning: do not try this at home, regardless of how lovely it looks in situ.... Our dinner was delicious. We chose another tarte flambée which we shared and then had some great fish (salmon and filet de loup (which I think is a sea bass)) and washed it all down with a Pinot Gris from Turckheim - for the sake of nostalgia.

Le bois

And then we were back to Paris and back to the gym.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Grand Marnier

GM

I love Grand Marnier. And Cointreau. Love, love, love. I especially love them in Crêpes Suzette which is very 1970s but utterly delicious. I have only had it made for me once, and I enjoyed it so much, I may have over done it. But that was years ago and I think I am ready to get back on the horse. Unfortunately, my crêpe maker has disappeared to Strasbourg, so I will have to wait until his return.

In the meantime, I made these little biscuits the other day. They are mainly ground hazelnuts and ground almonds, which I hand ground with my little Zyliss contraption that renders cheese and nuts fine and powdery indeed. Then you bake them and pour a Grand Marnier syrup all over them and then toss them in icing sugar. Delish.

PS. I did buy the cordon jaune (yellow label) GM which is apparently lower quality than the cordon rouge but also perfectly appropriate for using in desserts. Yum. If you want the recipe, drop me a comment.

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Sunday, November 1, 2009

Jardin du Luxembourg


trees

Well aware that I am repeating themes, there could be no place one earth more beautiful at the moment than the Jardin du Luxembourg. Not being accustomed to the existence of actual, distinct seasons, I have failed my whole life to appreciate the beauty of a true Autumn - the colours of the falling leaves and the feeling of the first bite of a real winter. Last week I sat in the Jardin du Luxembourg positively speechless, staring at the colours of the trees while munching on my sandwich. The plants around Le Sénat have mostly been replanted in yellows and oranges, but they look almost artificial next to the true stars of the garden - the leaves of the deciduous trees falling around them. These leaves are made even more beautiful by the fact that they will soon be gone! It’s hard to believe that all that colour will soon disappear, leaving just naked branches and the cold, cold, cold.

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Monday, October 26, 2009

Les Couleurs d'Automn - Autumn Colours

Trees
Jardin des Tuileries


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Ditto

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La Seine

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Jardin du Luxembourg


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Jardin des Tuileries





Friday, October 16, 2009

Le Salon du Chocolat




I spent a couple of hours this afternoon at the Salon du Chocolat at the Parc d’Expositions at Porte de Versailles. I had seen the posters and imagined that I might find rivers of thick chocolate, chocolate boats with chocolate sails, chocolate flowers and chocolate flowing from fountains galore - in short, something straight out of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (frankly one of the most influential movies of my life). If there is anything the French do well, it’s those things in need of acute attention to detail, things that taste incredibly good and look exquisite. I have stood at the windows of countless, beautiful Chocolateries and marvelled at how something so novel and so fine could be made from chocolate.

Alas, reality never quite measures up. I found instead a rather depressing warehouse full of booths under ugly, fluorescent lighting with people flogging their wares and slightly desperate-looking people lining up to get free stuff, presumably to offset the hefty entrance fee (and fair enough, too). Disappointed, I adopted a can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em attitude and set off to find something beautiful.

Nothing photographed well under the hideous lighting, but I did indeed find some pretty things. Perhaps thanks to the mood-enhancing effects of the dark stuff, I began to enjoy wandering around the stalls and finding friendly, earnest, knowledgeable people happy to talk at length about their products and their craft. I also found the wine stand at a most opportune time (although the chardonnay didn’t quite complement the Bailey’s milkshake I'd consumed only minutes before).

I can’t say I loved anything I tasted. Champagne doesn’t go with chocolate, people. And we all know it doesn’t taste like hard liquor, either. White chocolate caramel paste = unpleasantly sweet goo with indeterminant purpose. But I appreciate the creative impulse.

In future, I think I will stick with my Lindt and my window shopping.

Chocolate ballet shoes:


Colours of les sucreries:

Cute man from the Ritz Escoffier (of course):

Love an iconic, Parisian building made from chocolate:

Acadamie Nationale de Musique

Opéra Garnier

Good time had by all:

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Le beau Panthéon



One of the best/worst things about my life at the moment is that I have to get up at 6.45am to cycle in the cold, half-light up to the Sorbonne for my french classes that start at the very un-Parisian hour of 8am. The best thing, though, is turning onto Rue Soufflot and riding towards the glorious, still sleeping Panthéon.

This morning I remembered to bring my camera.

Monday, October 12, 2009

L’oignon de Roscoff



I recently wandered into the local supermarket vegetable aisle and happened upon these perfect, pinky-brown onions. L'oignons de Roscoff they are called and were “hand stringed” in this lovely string bag. Apparently, the pretty onions are fragile and need to be hand-packed. Being an absolute sucker for new food, cool packaging and pretty things, I decided I absolutely had to have them despite their rather exorbitant cost.


There was even a little history lesson on the back of the pack. According to the propaganda, historically, producers and sellers of the Roscoff would sell their onions in these string bags from door to door in England. Because of the excellent keeping qualities and the high vitamin content the Roscoff was the ideal travelling partner for Breton sailors all around the world for centuries.

The onions’ website (yes, this is France, onions have their own website...) says that it is the proximity to the sea that provides the ideal climate for the cultivation of the Roscoff. Regular rains all year-round and deep and fertile soils give the Roscoff its great flavour. The AOC (Appellation d’Originale Contrôlée) guarantees that my pretty onions were produced in a traditional manner. Each Roscoff is braided by hand to another Roscoff to ensure that it is preserved until spring, so you actually pick your onions of the other each time you want to use them.

After concluding my research, which included eating a number of Roscoff, I decided 5 Euros for a bag of hand-braided, fragile, sweet little pink onions was very reasonable indeed. Especially as they are also deliciously yummy and crunchy with lots of freshness and a mellow flavour.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Né dans la Rue

The latest artwork from the changing exhibition outside the Fondation Cartier Né dans la Rue (Born in the Street) Graffiti Taxonomy exhibition until 29 November.
















Saturday, September 19, 2009

Apollo

Apollo at the back of Denfert Rochereau RER Station is a rare thing in Paris: it houses a large, open balcony which is, given its location at the top of a train station and at the eastern end of the busy Denfert Rochereau crossroads, also remarkably quiet.

The terrace is a lovely oasis of quiet and calm outdoors - a summer evening outside at a restaurant where you can talk to your companions without the distractions of ambulance sirens and pedestrian fashion is a rare thing indeed. I secretly think we also like it because the sheer vastness of the space reminds me of home - a bit like sitting amongst the tall buildings at the Roof Bar at the Skygarden in Sydney, except you are really only one story up from street level (although, NB. to the designers - the astro turf really has to go...)




The food is very decent and the service attentive and friendly. We are always seduced by the menu formule (a set price for a specific entrée, main and dessert) as it is often far more economical and I am the most indecisive person on earth when it comes to food. Basically I want to try it all. God help us if we get a waiter who cannot make a recommendation... The formule takes out all of this drama (although it is sometimes not the best thing the restaurant has to offer) and means we get to order before the kitchen closes.



Our formule had a very good meaty mushroom with parsley jus entrée which was sufficiently buttery (but not overly so) and the perfect amount of garlic. It was topped with a perfectly cooked egg with runny yolk. Our main was grilled fish and vegetables in a dark soupy broth. The slow roasted cherry tomatoes on the side were excellent and the fish well-cooked but the dark broth was far too salty and muddy for my tastes and the veg overcooked.



Disappointing main, but the Chocolate Mousseux dessert was well worth it (the formule allowed you to order off the menu for dessert - happy days!!). The warm spongey outside gave way to a gooey chocolate inside and was well matched with a caramel ice cream. We also chose a spiced poached Pear and grapes with a gingerbread snap which I thought would be good for the warm autumnal evening. The flavours were good but it was cold (deliberately so) and left me regretful we didn't get another mousseux chocolat. Next time.