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Tartiflette

A tartiflette is a gratin with potatoes, lardons and onions topped with melted savoyard cheese called Reblochon. It is a traditional mountain recipe and a perfect dish for cold weather !

It is particularly nice served with an Apremont, savoie wine.

Ingredients :

  • 1kg potatoes
  • 250g smoked lardons
  • 2 large onions
  • 150g crème fraîche
  • 1 whole reblochon cheese
  • 1 clove of garlic

Method :

  1. Preheat the oven to 200°C
  2. Pre-cook the potatoes in a saucepan of salted water (traditionally the potatoes are sautéed but this dish is rich enough so I prefer to boil them)
  3. In a frying pan gently fry the onions until they are soft and translucent and then add the lardons and continue frying
  4. Remove from heat and add the creme fraîche or liquid cream and mix well
  5. Chop the potatoes and mix in with the onion and lardons
  6. Salt and pepper as necessary
  7. Cut the garlic clove in half and rub the cut sides around an oven dish
  8. Place the potato, lardon and onion mix in the oven dish
  9. Slice the cheese down the middle and place the two round halves crust up on top of the dish
  10. Bake for 20 minutes until golden brown and nice and crispy
  11. Serve with a green salad

 




Pot-Au-Feu or French Beef Stew

Potaufeu1

A pot-au-feu is a french beef stew, which uses mostly inexpensive cuts of beef that need to be cooked for quite a long time in a bouillon seasoned with root vegetables and a bouquet garni.

According to the french chef Raymond Blanc, pot-au-feu is “the quintessence of French family cuisine, it is the most celebrated dish in France. It honours the tables of the rich and poor alike.”

It is a perfect dish for a cold January day and even when the meat and vegetables are gone you can get another meal out of it by using the broth as a soup. In France this broth is usually served with special soup pasta called cheveux d’ange (or angel hair in english) added to it.

I make this using my pressure cooker as do most french people. So I am estimating that it will take 2 to 3 hours in a regular saucepan.  If using a pressure cooker, you’ll need to cook the dish at first for 30 minutes and then remove the carrots, leeks and turnips before continuing to cook the meat and seasoning for another 45 minutes.

Ingredients :

  • 1.2kg stewing beef (I usually use cheek and tail)
  • 2 marrow bones (optional!)
  • 1 onion studded with 3 cloves
  • 3 cloves of garlic
  • 3 leeks
  • 1 kilo carrots
  • 3-4 small turnips
  • I branch of celery
  • Bouquet Garni
  • Salt and Pepper
  • Potatoes to serve

Method :

  1. Peel and wash the leeks, carrots and slice in half
  2. Peel and wash turnips and chop in large chunks
  3. Fill a large saucepan with 2 litres of water and add the clove studded onion, the carrots, the leeks, the turnips, the garlic cloves, the celery branch and the bouquet garni.
  4. Season with salt and pepper and bring to the boil, then add the meat
  5. Cook over a gentle heat for 10 minutes, removing  the foam the comes to the surface (this is called “écumer” in french!)
  6. Put the lid on the saucepan and cook for approximately 3 hours until the meat is really well cooked
  7. Wash and peel potatoes and cook them separately in a saucepan of salted water
  8. When your pot-au-feu is ready you can serve the broth as a starter or enjoy it the following day – its a meal in itself, really tasty and full of goodness 🙂
  9. Serve with potatoes, gherkins and strong mustard
  10. If you are having the marrow bones serve with toasted bread

 

 

Pot-au-Feu Ingredients (Image from Wikipedia)

 

 




Pea and Lardon Velouté

peas

This is a really tasty soup and with peas, lardons and potatoes it really is a meal in itself. The only little hitch is that it is preferable to pass the soup through a mouli before serving to remove any pea skins and bits of lardon and to make sure you get a nice creamy smooth texture.

So it does add a little but of extra work but it is worth it 🙂 And a mouli is a handy kitchen utensil for making really nice purées

Ingredients :

  • 500g frozen peas
  • 6 potatoes
  • 2 onions
  • 250g smoked lardons
  • 50g butter
  • Salt
  • Pepper
  • Chicken Stock

Method :

  1. Measure out peas and allow to defrost
  2. Peel and chop potatoes and onions
  3. In a large saucepan melt the butter and add the onions, peas, chopped potatoes and lardons and cook over a medium heat for 5 minutes stirring all the time
  4. Season with salt and pepper and add chicken stock until all ingredients are covered
  5. Cook for 25 minutes and then blend the soup to remove as many bits as possible and then pass it through a mouli to get a smooth velouté

 

mouli

A Mouli

 

 

 

 




Gratin Dauphinois

GratinDauphinois

Gratin dauphinois is a traditional french dish that may be eaten as a side dish or as a meal in itself.  It originates in the south-east of France, in a region that used to be called the Dauphinois – which today is in and around Grenoble.

This is the traditional recipe, lots of variants exist, namely that of adding grated cheese (gruyere or emmenthal etc) but once you have added cheese it is no longer a gratin dauphinois! It becomes a simple ‘gratin de pomme de terre’ or ‘potato gratin’!

Ingredients :

  • 1.5kg waxy potatoes
  • Butter
  • 1 clove of garlic
  • 50cl double cream
  • 50cl milk
  • Salt & Pepper
  • Nutmeg
  • 1 laurel leaf and 1 sprig of thyme (or a bouquet garnie)

Method :

  1. Pre-heat oven at 160°C
  2. Peel and rinse potatoes.
  3. Slice potatoes finely – a mandoline is great for this, just be careful of your fingers 😉
  4. Do not wash potatoes after slicing – otherwise you’ll wash off the starch!
  5. Heat the milk in a saucepan with the laurel leaf and thyme (or bouquet garnie) and season with salt and pepper
  6. Bring to the boil and add sliced potatoes, lower the heat and cook for 10 minutes mixing regularly (to avoid the potatoes sticking to the bottom of the pan)
  7. Halve the clove of garlic and rub it round the inside of an oven dish and then rub the dish with a little butter
  8. Remove the laurel & thyme from the pan and pour the milk and potatoes into the oven dish
  9. Pour the cream over the potatoes
  10. Put a few knobs of butter on top of the dish
  11. Bake in the oven at 160°C for 1h30

 

 

 

 




Vichyssoise

leek&potatoeSoup

Vichyssoise – otherwise known as leek and potato soup! The autumn evenings are perfect for soup and this particular one is an all time favourite in this house. Home-made soup is cheap, easy and really tasty!

It is sometimes called vichyssoise here in France but to the best of my knowledge that refers to potato and leek soup served chilled – I’ve never tried it cold and am not about to 🙂

Some other soups on MyFrenchTable : Courgette Soup ; Mushroom Velouté

Ingredients :

  • 300g leeks
  • 600g potatoes
  • 1.5 litres of chicken stock
  • 30g butter
  • 10cl crème fraîche (optional)

Method :

  1. Peel and chop the potatoes and wash and chop leeks
  2. Melt the butter in saucepan and add chopped leeks and cook over a medium heat until the soften
  3. Add the chopped potato, mix well and continue cooking for another 5 minutes
  4. Add the stock and pepper
  5. Bring to the boil and then lower the heat and leave to simmer for about 30 minutes
  6. Strain the vegetables but keep the stock
  7. Purée the vegetables and put the back in the saucepan with the crème fraîche (if using) and a ladle full of the stock
  8. Put back over a gentle heat and mix well. Slowly add the stock back in mixing all the time until you get the consistency you like (as thick or as liquid depending on your preference)
  9. If you are going to follow the french tradition of a vichyssoise once the soup has cooled down place in the fridge for at least 2 hours before serving or just enjoy in hot!

 

*Of course you can simply mix the stock and veg together without going through the process of straining and adding the stock back in. Doing it the way outlined above just means that you only add in as much stock as you need to get the consistency required.

 

 




Leek and Potato Tart

PotatoLeek
Leeks are in season! And this leek and potato tart makes a lovely evening meal or lunch with a green salad. I made it with lardons but it is also lovely with smoked salmon.

See the following for some similar recipes : Quiche or Courgette Tart

Ingredients :

  • A short-cut pastry (recipe here) or a puff pastry
  • 5 medium sized potatoes
  • 3 leeks
  • 3 eggs
  • 150ml of milk or creme fraîche
  • 200g bacon lardons or 4 slices of smoked salmon
  • 100g grated cheese (I use gruyere but any hard cheese works)
  • Salt & Pepper

Method :

  1. Wash and peel potatoes
  2. Wash leeks, remove any withered outer leaves and trim off then end of the roots and the green leaves (leave a little green as this will have more colour to your dish)
  3. Chop potatoes and leeks and cook in salted boiling water for approx 20 minutes (until cooked)
  4. Roll out pastry and press into a quiche tin, prick the base with a fork
  5. If using lardons fry in a pan, when cooked spread on the pastry base, if using smoked salmon cut into strips and do as for lardons
  6. Beat the 3 eggs with the milk or creme fraiche, salt, pepper and grated cheese
  7. Strain potatoes and leeks and add to the lardons
  8. Cover with the milk and egg mixture
  9. Cook in oven for approx 35 minutes at 180°C until nice and golden

 

 




Tarte Auvergnate

TarteAuvergnate1

Auvergne is a region in south central France, home to the city of Clermont-Ferrand. This recipe is from the region, hence the name,  and uses the local Cantal cheese.

Ingredients :

  • 400g potatoes
  • 4 ripe tomatoes
  • 10cl olive oil
  • 25g butter
  • 1 pate brisée or short cut pastry, see here
  • 150g Cantal cheese
  • 100g lardons
  • Salt

Method :

  1. Wash the potatoes and cook them for 15 minutes in salted boiling water, then strain
  2. Pre-heat oven to 210°C
  3. Place the tomatoes for at least 30 seconds in boiling water, then immediately put them in cold water, this will make it possible to peel them
  4. Once peeled, slice the tomatoes and place them in a dish, add salt and pepper, then pour the olive oil over them
  5. Roll out your pastry and then transfer it to your tin (24cm round tin) and prick the base with a fork
  6. Remove the rind off the cheese and slice and slice it in fine strips
  7. Put the lardons in boiling water for a few minutes until they are cooked, then strain
  8. Spread the lardons with 1/2 of the cheese evenly on the pastry base
  9. Peel and slice the potatoes and place them on the cheese and lardons
  10. Cover the potatoes with the tomato slices  and then pour the tomato marinade over them
  11. Use the rest of your cheese on top of your dish
  12. Cook for 30 minutes at 210°C
  13. Allow to cool for 10 minutes before eating and serve with a green salad

 

*  Depending on where you are it may be difficult to source cantal cheese but you can replace it with a different hard cheese – cheddar would work really well with this recipe!