Archives for the ‘France’ Category

Paris: the Marais or more? Delicious days

While Uncorked and Cultivated Tours of France are in full swing there is no way to not be effected by the food, vista and people of Paris. That’s where my tour begins!

This time around the Marais, a very cosmopolitan and easy part of the big city in the 3rd arr.

After all this country of 64 million endures more tourists than any other, about 83 million, and most come from Europe!

For a huge city I find the locals very accommodating, increasingly English-speaking and appreciative that they may not gain a table in their local brasserie too often while tourists descend, and have to wait until winter.

However I struggle with aspects of the food scene; and certainly with the cuisines. My informant this year was Christian Holthausen, writing his insider’s guide to the best wine spots in the city on a luxury website.

You can easily enjoy yourself but two words Christian uses describes a good bit of the eating experience; timeless and stagnant. Where is the new which an Australian inhabitant like me expects and receives weekly? It’s here and difficult to locate unless assisted.

And that is not very easy when the Paris Office of Tourisme et des Congres publishes a booklet clearly deficient in what exists in its Paris Gourmand Good Food Guide. It should be 50 mm thick, bulging like Sydney, to be credible. Not so.

A better read was South Australian Jane Paech’s clever little book: Delicious Days in Paris which gives more than a food experience, moreso an easy find travellers’ interest and must sees that go beyond the obvious. It’s terrific and hard to put down; in my case to read and use the more interesting parts of the Marais.

Like the understated Bob’s Kitchen in rue 74 Rue des Gravilliers, 75003; +33 9 52 55 11 66 ; quite bohemian but delicious, hearty (read nutritious) and warming; such as veggie soup which is a plate of vegetables bereft of liquid, but correctly cooked so the carrots and beans are not soft (the French habit is to overcook regularly).

The understated Bob's Kitchen-sole sign

The understated Bob’s Kitchen-sole sign

And then to be served an amazing short black which was correctly made (uses artisan roaster Lomi), not the usual short long black without any texture and flavour (read low quality imported coffee beans).

The barista was Brisbane-born lady – Natalie who has a French husband and a new baby; but importantly is plugged in to the international and Asia-Pacific skills that come with serving modern coffee drinkers.

Life is fun in this city, it just has to be lived and given the direction you choose; using guidance or exploration time.

And by the way, I discovered that a good Parisian short black might come my way if  I used the Italian word “ristretto”, not petite, and I am going to give it a go.

It might mitigate the ugly compounds of lesser standard green beans too; probably from Vietnam instead of the delicious Brazilians now abundantly available.

Buying Bordeaux wine: not easy in Oz

Now that Uncorked and Cultivated is an ambassador for the newly-created Bordeaux negociant and maker Domaine Serisier (first harvest 2012), there are deals to be done selling you Serisier wine.

But first why Bordeaux? Well it is the largest expanse of grapevines grown under one Appellation (regional boundary) in France. About 220,000 hectares.

Then you’d think that such a big part of that wine country would find its way onto Australian wine shelves and restaurants. Well no, not really and the sales have fallen further as the only the occasional importer does indent wine.

Uncorked is selling Domaine Serisier wines in Australia because its owner Richard Serisier is Australian.

In fact until Richard departed Brisbane to begin restoring Chateau Cadillac-en-Fronsandais (2004-2008) he was a Brisbane businessman, still owns property in the River City as well as a sheep run west of Cunnamulla.

Vines; merlot, then cabernet franc and a little cabernet sauvignon were planted. The local law says these are the grapes to be used in making red wine of the region, so he could not use his common sense to plant the grape Aussies love-shiraz.

The French wine bureaucracy control much of what you do. Domaine Serisier cannot use the name Chateau Cadillac on its wine bottle even though this chateau has been called that since circa 1530.

Chateau rear view

Chateau rear view

Uncorked is selling the wine under the invented name Le Bout du Monde (wine from the end of the world or better explained, made by a man from the other side of the world!) The first vintage is 2012.

If you live in Brisbane or the surrounds, a good time to try Le Bout du Monde will be on Thursday April 16 at The Wine Emporium or Tuesday April 21 while Richard Serisier is in town.

Domaine Serisier: old family, new Bordeaux

Jean-Emile Serisier set out from the Aquitane city of Bordeaux in 1850, then a very civilised place, to the wilds of Sydney in the Great Southern Land (Australia). One does not really know what was in his head at the time.

Fast forward 138 years later and great, great grandson Richard Serisier had completed the return to Bordeaux. Not exactly to the family firm of Serisier et Lafitte who were shipping agents directing all the Claret exports to the thirsty British drinkers from the Quai des Chartrons, but to a property in the Canton of Fronsac.

Richard did not set out to buy gold plated vineyards in Pauillac or Pomerol (millions of euros per hectare). He sought a derelict chateau with a lovely view, not over hundreds of rows of glistening-green vines but one across plane tree plantations down to the statuesque Dordogne River. The rebuilding period took four years (2004-2008) where Richard moved his family from Brisbane in Queensland to Chateau Cadillac-en-Fronsandais built © 1530 after the end of the Hundred Years War and the British departed.

Following the building restoration, it became a logical step for an investigation into the history of the property; and through the 1800s while Jean-Emile Serisier was planting vines around Dubbo in central western New South Wales, Chateau Cadillac-en-Fronsandais was a horse breeding facility, though vines have been grown around the property for the past four hundred years.

Since 2008 Richard has replanted the industry-expected merlot and cabernet sauvignon grafted vines on 9 hectares on the rich loamy terraces behind the Chateau, adding also some cabernet sauvignon and malbec to complete the historical Bordeaux mix.

First harvest was 2012 and this author is now the Queensland and New South Wales ambassador for two Domaine Serisier wines, a rose and a merlot red.

 

France Wine tour 2015: Bubbles, Burgundy & Boudin

Australians really like champagne, in fact we drink buckets of it despite being challenged by the popularity of Prosecco. Where better to start Uncorked’s 2015 France Wine tour this May than in Reims, the largest city in Champagne. This historic place complete with a myriad of underground “crayeres” or cellars dug into the chalk, is the site of the wonderful Reims Cathedral which once crowned French kings during the Middle Ages.

Nowhere has the growth of contemporary French wines been greater, as small grower brands packed full of innovation both challenged and shaken the older conservative house styles of the big negociants. Our grower visit is to Charles and Emmanuel Fourny of Veuve-Fourny, right down the bottom of the Cotes des Blancs in the quaint little village of Vertus.

Now armed with greater motivation and indeed resources, some modern-thinking brands are to host our two tour groups on this hilly land of chalk soil and cold climate. Thank goodness we visit in spring when the vines are booming in greenery and spring vegetables grace our collective dining tables.

Cellar Veuve-Fourny

Cellar Veuve-Fourny

Tastings include below ground, in cellars and in remote vineyard press houses to give Australians a slice of Champenois life, at all times hosted by this author. We will taste the latest: the natural, single vineyard, oak-aged, large blends, single grape and more.

Just this month it has been revealed that Australians are the sixth largest drinkers of champagne outside France (6.5 million bottles). More than Italy (but they love their Prosecco, and for posher occasions, Franciacorta)! Uncorked (a previous Champagne Award winner) absolutely delights in taking Australians to this source of the greatest bubbles one can ever drink. Think non-vintage, vintage, rose, signature, specialty, light foods, poached dishes (veal sausages like boudin), elegant flavours, vibrant acidity, balance, poise, and memorable tastes set around all those tiny bubbles.

The tour then moves on to Burgundy.

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