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Sunday, December 16, 2012

FRENCH FOOD 1975 - Part H - Savoy & The Dauphine

SAVOY AND THE DAUPHINE

Click on the scanned image below to see:
  • Information on Savoy & The Dauphine (near Switzerland)
  • Recipes from 1975

  

  

In 1975 Savoy & the Dauphine were categorized in one area which is in Eastern France & extend across the French Alps. Also, sometimes included in this are is Franche-Comte. If you are a skier then you will be familiar with Grenoble & Chamonix (First winter Olympics there in 1924).  In the summer walking on the slopes or relaxing around beautiful lakes is the way to go at Annecy & Evian les Bains.  You will see mountain meadows, mountain herbs and wild flowers. 

Savoy cabbage


(Note:  We grow savoy cabbage in our garden and it makes YUMMY stuffed cabbage!)

Potatoes, a major product,  are cooked in the dauphinois style & present different recipes with different cheeses in different areas of the Savoy, the Dauphine & Franche-Comte: 
  • International dish is Dauphine's "gratin dauphinois" which is cliced potatoes baked in cram and gruyere or beaufort cheese.
  • Franche-Compte's version uses nutty comte cheese & adds cubes or slices of smoked ham
  • In central Augergne the local blue d'Auvergne or bleu des Causses cheeses
  • In Lyon cafes prepare several choices:  
  • gratin
  • pommes a l'huile (warm potato salad)
  • gateau de pommes de terre (a thick, potato "cake")
  • galette lyonnaise (a fritter of waxy potatoes & onions)
  • pommes paillasson (straw potatoes emerging from the pan like a lacework pancake)
  • In Limousin:
  • pate de pommes terre (potato pie with with other vegetables, cream and sometimes cubes of meat
  • See photos of potato recipes below*
Fruit:  Variations of fruits and Liqueurs and candies:
Cassis (black currants) or creme de cassis, abricots (apricots), fraises (strawberries) framboises (raspberries), poires (pears), pommes (apples), groseilles (red currents)

  

 


Other products:  cardon (edible thistle), champignons sauvages (wild mushrooms) including morilles, girolles and cepes, chataigne (chestnuts) Noix de Grenoble (walnuts), Oignons rouges (red onions) so mild even eaten raw!!

  

  



POTATO PHOTOS*

  

  



Links for modern day recipes:

CREAM OF PUMPKIN SOUP




CHICKEN DAUPHINOISE

No modern day links for a comparable recipe. Recipes use potatoes, mustard, etc.

POTATOES SAVOYARDE

Both of the recipes below use Yukon Gold and/or russets.  I am a russet fan. 
The result was the Yukon Gold, the first Canadian-bred potato to be marketed and promoted by name. It received a Canadian license in 1980 and soon began exportation to the United States.



PEARS IN CREAM, SAVOYARDE

Couldn't find a modern day photo nor a recipe for Savoyarde Pears,
 but the recipe above is easy, elegant and yummy!!

  

  












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