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Sunday, September 22, 2013

Visiting Sauternes, the Bordeaux (France) village of honey-like wine with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting Sauternes, the Bordeaux Region (France) village of honey-like wine with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget 


The petite village of Sauternes belies the legendary acclaim of its dessert wine.

This white wine made from semillon, sauvignon, and muscadelle grapes is harvested late, allowing a beneficent mold to grow on the grapes and concentrate the sugars. When aged, Sauternes becomes amber colored and pours viscously from the bottle.  It tastes of honey and gives a French meal a grand finale, letting the wines that preceded it build up to it.

The French consider Sauternes to be the best wine produced in the Bordeaux region.  Château d’Yquem is the most renowned producer, but d’Yquem receives much competition for the market from Château Rieussec and Château Guiraud among others. In the village on the day we visited, the Maison de Sauternes was closed. This meant no tasting, purchasing, or receiving the crucial map of the châteaux.

We struck out on our own on the châteaux route and were struck by the differences between Sauternes and the Médoc regions of Bordeaux. Towns abound in the Médoc with many outlets for purchasing wine.  The châteaux road in the Médoc sports gussied-up architectural gems with room for parking and taking photos.  In Sauternes, the châteaux road features walled in vineyards in places and châteaux hidden by forests.

I thought the people making this honey-like wine resembled honeybees themselves.  They hid in their secluded châteaux and cellars and made wine just like bees hide their hives and make honey.  The châteaux that were visible reminded me of well-tended manor houses that would surround a castle like the one portrayed in the book Les Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry (circa 1412 – 1416). 

This book illustrates the life of everyone for its era from peasant to prince and how nature and its rhythms regulated life.  On a sultry day like the day we visited, everyone was absent from the vineyards. They were no doubt checking the advance of an impending hail storm.

My husband asked me if I would like a photo a château as a souvenir.  (There was no place to buy postcards in the village.)  I smiled and asked for photos of the well-manicured vineyards.  The leaves covered the grapes in the canopy and appeared to obtain the greatest surface area for photosynthesis.  The heightened level of photosynthesis allows sugar to develop in the grape, making it a prime target for late harvest, noble rot.

We did not buy any Sauternes wine, because no place to do so was open. This just drove home the fact for me that Sauternes is a wine for holidays and special events; an item to be savored and cherished.

By Ruth Paget - Author of Marrying France and Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books




Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography


Ruth Paget Selfie


Thursday, September 19, 2013

Visiting France's Biscarosse Lake and Landes Region Museum outside Bordeaux with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting the France's Biscarosse Lake and Landes Region Museum outside Bordeaux with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Biscarrosse attracts tourists for its three lakes that are just inside the Atlantic oceanfront below Bordeaux in the Landes region.

The three lakes named Cazaux-Sanguinet, Biscarrosse, and Parentis feature sailboating and swimming as their main watersports.  Our destination was next to Lac Parentis and offered a glimpse into the life of the region; the Musée des Traditions et de l’Histoire de Biscarrosse (Museum of the Traditions and History of the Biscarosse) is small yet very informative.

My husband and I began our tour by watching a video in French about forest industries and hunting, which are traditional activities in the Landes.  Paper manufacturing and resin collecting are modern and traditional ways of making a living from wood. The little resin collectors’ cabins were made available to everyone in the past and are at the origin of Landais hospitality according to the video.

The hunters of the Landes region walked on six-foot stilts called échasses.  A better vantage point for shooting and perhaps surer footing in the underbrush might explain the use of échasses.

The museum itself housed a reproduction of a resin collector’s cabin, lacework, a dinner table set with dishes, and a pair of échasses among other traditional items. We bought a Landais beret at the exit, which my husband noted was softer than a Basque beret.

Out by Lac Parentis, there was a small summer camp for children. They were dressed as knights and were fighting with collapsible swords.  They were probably learning how to sail in calmer moments as well; there were smaller sailboats alongside larger ones lined up on the lakefront.

Our lunch reflected the oceanfront location of the region. We ate boiled whelks and shrimp followed by duck kebabs and cheese.  It was a delicious finale to a lovely day in Biscarrosse.

By Ruth Paget - Author of Marrying France and Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books




Ruth Paget Selfie





Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Visiting the Dame de Brassempouy Museum with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting the Dame de Brassempouy Museum with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


Driving southwest from Bordeaux, my husband and I went through the flat Landes region full of pine forests until we met the road towards Pau, leading to the foothills of the Pyrenées Mountains.

Our tourist destination was the village of Brassempouy, which houses a small yet very informative archaeological museum.  We arrived after the formal tours were given, but were still given a mini tour in French to orient us to the museum.

I asked our guide if we were still in Gascony after our long drive through the Landes.  The guide pointed to a detailed map on the wall and indicated that Gascony comprised a good deal of the Eastern Pyrénees Mountains and the area south of Bordeaux, which included the French and Spanish Basque regions.  I wondered if “Gascon” was the French word for “Basque.”  Many of homes we passed in the Pyrénees foothills did resemble Basque houses with their asymmetrical, sloping roofs.

We admired the collection of prehistoric rock tools, which are distinguishable from rocks by the smooth grooves cut into them that come to a point.  The tools fit in the hand and the weight of the rock would make it a powerful tool for breaking things like the skull or bones of an animal I thought.  The cave where these tools had been found was recreated in the museum with scattered bones on the cave floor.

One of the most important finds in this cave was the Dame de Brassempouy (Lady of Brassempouy).  The original sculpture is housed in the Musée des Antiquités Nationales in Saint-Germain-en-Laye outside Paris for security reasons. A replica of the sculpture of the Dame de Brassempouy is in the village museum.  The original sculpture is 25,000 years old and is unique in that it portrays the hair, face, and neck of a woman.  It is one of the oldest representations of a human face.

Bangs and shoulder-length hair that looks like it is crimped surround the face that sits on a very long neck. The sculpture’s usage is unclear and would probably be conjecture in any case as this item comes from a pre-literate and pre-historical society.  However, I did remark to my husband, “She looks just like the young woman we saw at breakfast.”

In the museum store, I bought a copy of Connaître la Préhistoire de Pyrénees (1996, Editions Sud Ouest), because Brassempouy was in it and to plan any future outings if we were in the area.  I love good reference books.

On the way back to Bordeaux, we drove through the end of the “Running of the Cows” in Mont de Marsan.  Everyone is town was wearing white shirts and trousers with red bandanas around their necks.  Several people wore berets.  Barricades were removed as we drove through town; I hoped the cows had all been corralled.

Dinner that night was a typical Gascon dish – magret de canard, or duck breast of a duck raised for the foie gras industry.  According to Connaître la Cuisine Gasconne (1990, Editions Sud Ouest), the French traditionally only eat foie gras on Christmas and New Year’s Eve.  I have always thought foie gras was a symbolic food to condemn gluttony.

If you eat too much foie gras, especially goose foie gras whose fat is extremely rich, you can become so ill that you will never eat it again.  For those who eat reasonable amounts of foie gras, it is a reminder that we were put here to have dominion, or responsibility, for the earth and should avoid gluttony not only of rich foods, but also gluttony of dairy products, fish, vegetables, grains, fruits, and wine as well.

The best wine that goes with the magret de canard that I ordered, especially when it is grilled, is a Gascon wine called Madiran.  It is made from cabernet sauvignon, cabernet franc, and tannant grapes. It resembles a red Bordeaux, but has more tannins, which makes it slightly bitter. Tannins are anti-oxidants and seem to help digest magret de canard with its thick lining of fat that helps protect and baste it during grilling.

By Ruth Paget, Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France


Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



Laurent Paget Photography

Laurent Paget Photography


Ruth Paget Selfie