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Thursday, August 30, 2018

Frederic Bartholdi: The Alsatian Beer Buying Game for France Created by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Frédéric Bartholdi: The Alsatian Beer Buying Game for Alsace (France) Created by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Bartholdi is the sculptor who created the Statue of Liberty and many of the funicular trains that go up into the Pyrénées Mountains in French Catalonia.  He was born in Colmar, Alsace, which is why I named the game after him.

I do not know if he drank beer or not, but Alsace is a huge beer producing region as well as a wine producing region.

I found out about Alsace’s beer-producing regions when I lived in Stuttgart, Germany for five years and went grocery shopping in Strasbourg, France once a month at Auchan in Ilkirch-Graffenstaden.  That particular Auchan had a great book section as well as groceries and home supplies.

On one weekend grocery trip to Strasbourg (France), I found a book called La Route de la Bière en Alsace by Gabriel Thierry and Elénore Delpierre – Itinéraires de Découvertes.

There is an entire culture in Eastern France devoted to beer that extends from Northern to Southern Alsace.  If you can read French, you can use this book to plan a trip to Alsace’s Beer Country.

There are several beer festivals listed in this book, but the big one is held in a town of Schiltigheim, which has been brewing wine since the 14th century.  The beer festival has been held in Schiltigheim since the 19th century.

If you are interested in attending this festival, look at their website for information on it, hotels, and restaurants.

There are four breweries in Schiltigheim that might be able to arrange for tours, if you look at their website for information:

-L’Espérance
-Adelshoffen
-Fischer
-La Perle

Fischer has a large brewery in downtown Strasbourg (France) that probably does tours, if you check their website.

For the other regions, I have listed the number of breweries in each beer-producing region just to give an idea of how large the Alsatian beer industry is in Alsace:

-Downtown Strasbourg

5 Breweries

-North of Strasbourg

5 Breweries

-Outside Strasbourg

5 Breweries

-Haut-Rhin

5 Breweries

-Brewer Cooperatives

4 Breweries

The Beer Culture of Alsace (France) is relatively unknown and unexplored. 

A trip to Strasbourg for the month-long Christmas market in December might be a good time to explore Alsace’s Beer Route and to buy some lovely French food and wooden toys for children like Playmobil products or Kathe Wolwert Christmas tree decorations.

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

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books




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Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Felix Kir: The French Cocktails, Liqueurs, and Digestifs Buying Game Created by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget






Félix Kir: The French Cocktails, Liqueurs, and Digestifs Buying Game Created by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Introduction


I named this game for Félix Kir (1876 – 1968), who was the mayor of Dijon in Burgunday, France.  Mayor Kir wanted to promote the products of his region and created a cocktail using crème de cassis (blackberry liqueur – 1 tablespoon) and a white Bourgogne aligoté wine.

The cocktail he made is simply called a kir.  If you use champagne to make it, it is called a kir royal.  Many regions of France make kir with a local, sweet white wine such as Chablis, Vouvray, or Côteaux de Layon.

I like drinking kir royals with rillettes (cooked pork conserved in its fat) and rillons (cooked pork strips conserved in its fat) from Tours in the Loire Valley.

What are the Difference Between Cocktails, Liqueurs, and Digestifs

Cocktail – before-meal drinks, usually sweet

Liqueur – sweet after-dinner drink

Digestif – after-dinner drinks such as Cognac, Armagnac, and Calvados (apple brandy) with a high-alcohol content

In the 1990s, the lines between cocktails, liqueurs, and digestifs blurred, especially when people began drinking whiskey as a cocktail.

Today, I would even suggest a light Loire Valley Red such as Chinon, Saumure-Champigny, or Bourgeuil with homemade cheddar cheese sticks, Portuguese New Year’s Eve cheese-and-butter balls (the Brazilians make these, too), or even Cheez-its crackers.

Ten High-Quality Cocktails, Liqueurs, and Digestifs

-Lillet – Bordeaux-region sweet cocktail that comes in white and red versions

-Suze – Alpine herb liqueur that tastes of vanilla and orange

-Chambord – blackberry and raspberry liqueur from the Loire Valley

-Izarra – sweet liqueur that comes in yellow and green versions from the French Basque region

-Benedictine – herb-based liqueur at the Abbey of Fécamp in Normandy

-Chartreuse – French herb brandy made outside Grenoble

-Cointreau – orange liqueur made from sweet and bitter oranges in Angers in the Loire Valley

-Calvados – apple brandy from Normandy

-Poire William – pear eau-de-vie from Alsace

-Mirabelle – yellow plum eau-de-vie from Lorraine

Suggested Appetizers

You can buy most of these items at Fauchon or Hédiard in Paris (France).

-canned vegetable terrines with or without truffles for toast

-slices of warm confit de canard – cooked duck breast that you just have to warm up, slice, and serve on toast

-white asparagus points on toast squares with mayonnaise served with sweet wines.  The cooked, white asparagus points come in a glass jar ready to use.

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

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books




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Paul Bocuse: The Lyon (France) Touring Game Created by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget






Paul Bocuse: The Lyon (France) Touring Game Created by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Introduction


I chose to name this game after Paul Bocuse, the Michelin-starred chef whose home base was in Lyon.  Bocuse was awarded the Légion d’Honneur for his service to the French nation for popularizing nouvelle cuisine, preparing meals for French president Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, and agreeing to sell frozen nouvelle cuisine under his name to Japan (and the sausage eaters of downtown Lyon).

Background Reading

Paul Bocuse’s cookbooks are a joy to read, but the dishes described in them are difficult to prepare:

-Paul Bocuse’s French Cooking translated by Colette Rossant

-Bocuse à la Carte translated by Colette Rossant

Lyon has some terrible history that they choose not to forget.   Many of the crime stories have been turned into television series and movies.  Lyon’s history is the subject of many nonfiction and fiction books:

-The Killer of Little Shepherds by Douglas Starr

Belle Epoque serial killer – a true story crime fiction like Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood.

-Shantytown Kid by Azouz Begag

The problems of a star pupil from a minority group in France living in Lyon

-Resistance and Betrayal: The Death and Life of the Greatest Hero of the French Resistance by Patrick Marnham

-Unhealed Wounds: France and the Klaus Barbie Affair by Erna Paris

-Cours and Traboules de Lyon by Gérald Gambier

-The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

Places to Visit in Lyon

-Musée de Beaux Arts

Located in a former Benedictine Convent, this museum houses art from Egypt to a large collection of Impressionist paintings.

-Old Town Lyon

The Quartier Saint-Jean and the Quartier Saint-Georges resemble Italy with their ochre-colored buildings with a few red ones here and there.

-Musée Gadgne

Puppetry and History of Lyon Museum

-Archaeology Museum

Lyon is an ancient Roman town.

-Les Halles de Lyon

Covered marketplace with 48 different shops.

-Colline de la Croix-Rousse

Lyon’s “traboules,” or covered passageways between courtyards of buildings around several blocks are located here.

-Fabric Museum

Lyon had a large silk industry during the Renaissance Period that is dealt with here.

-Museum of Decorative Arts

-Resistance and Deportation Museum

Lyon was known as the Capital of the Resistance during the Second World War.

-Printing Press Museum

Lyon was an important bookmaking center in the 15th and 16th centuries.

Typical Foods of the City of Lyon

-Tripe sausages
-Blood sausages
-Chicken Liver Salad
-Langoustines (crayfish) dumplings - quénelles

All of those dishes above come with huge salads from local markets or gardens owned by the city’s bouchons - local cafes.  Beaujolais Nouveau is the drink of choice with a lunch like this.

I think “high-on-the-hog” body parts go to Collonges outside the city Lyon for the Michelin-starred restaurants to use while Lyon still has some of the world’s best butchers and clean-up crews.

Fortunately, Bocuse did begin to make frozen gourmet dinners under his name for the Japanese markets in the 1990s that the locals in Lyon also got to make for dinner at night.


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

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books




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Monday, August 27, 2018

William the Conqueror: The Normandy Touring Game Created by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

William the Conqueror: The Normandy Touring Game Created by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Introduction

I chose the name William the Conqueror for this game, because he was the French noble who invaded today’s UK in 1066 and made himself King of England.

The French language became the language of:

-the royal family

-the local nobility, who displaced local Anglo-Saxon nobility (There are vestiges of the problems this caused in the tale of Robin Hood.)

-the tax collectors

-the courts

-all trade officials, including customs

-high culture creators (the wealthy art patrons spoke, read, and wrote in French)

Even Shakespeare sprinkled French here and there as in the play Julius Caesar when the assassinated Julius Caesar asks his dear friend with his last breath, “Et tu, Brutus?”

William the Conqueror launched the invasion on the UK from Normandy.  I have listed the two most famous Norman sites below as well as the two most famous American D-Day Invasion sites for Americans.

Sites in Western Normandy to Visit

Bayeux

The Reine Mathilda Museum (Wife of William the Conqueror) houses the 11th century Bayeux Tapestry that depicts the Norman Invasion of England in 1066 by William the Conqueror, who would become the King of England.

Omaha Beach Museum

The new, private Omaha Beach Museum in Vierville-sur-Mer documents the entire D-Day invasion for the American contingent of troops.

(There are other museums throughout Normandy that document the Canadian and English contributions to the liberation of Europe during World War II.

I will write about the Canadian Monument to the D-Day Liberation in a later blog on Savvy Mom Ruth Paget.)

Arromanches-les-Bains

Arromanches should be on every engineer’s “to visit” list in France.

The Mulberry Harbours were developed by the British as artificial ports that allowed the allies to move 9,000 tons of materials per day from ship-to-shore to win the war – World War II.

Caen

Caen is the home of William the Conqueror’s tomb at the Abbaye-aux-Hommes.  Queen Mathilda is buried across town at the Abbaye-aux-Dames

The Château de Caen dates from about 1060.  It is a good spot to take photos. Many restaurants surround the Château.

Caen’s Food Specialty

The food specialty of Caen is tripes à la Caen – stewed beef tripe with carrots, onions, leeks, peppercorns, and cider.

Apples grow in Normandy, so I would drink apple cider with the tripe and a Calvados apple brandy after the meal.

These are all interesting places to visit outside of Mont Saint Michel.  Hotel concierges can arrange bus tours to Mont Saint Michel as well as for lunches of the famous omelets served there.


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

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books




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