Table of Contents
FRENCH PROVINCIAL COOKING
Elizabeth David discovered her taste for good food and wine when she lived with a French family while studying history and literature at the Sorbonne. A few years after her return to England she made up her mind to learn to cook so that she could reproduce for herself and her friends some of the food that she had come to appreciate in France. Subsequently, Mrs David lived and kept house in France, Italy, Greece, Egypt and India, as well as in England. She found not only the practical side but also the literature of cookery of absorbing interest and studied it throughout her life.
Her first book,
Mediterranean Food
, appeared in 1950.
French Country Cooking
followed in 1951,
Italian Food
, after a year of research in Italy, in 1954,
Summer Cooking
in 1955 and
French Provincial Cooking
in 1960. These books and a stream of often provocative articles in magazines and newspapers changed the outlook of English cooks forever.
In her later works she explored the traditions of English cooking (
Spices, Salt and Aromatics in the English Kitchen,
1970) and with
English Bread and Yeast Cookery
(1977) became the champion of a long overdue movement for good bread.
An Omelette and a Glass of Wine
(1984) is a selection of articles first written for the
Spectator
,
Vogue, Nova
and a range of other journals. The posthumously published
Harvest of the Cold Months
(1994) is a fascinating historical account of aspects of food preservation, the world-wide ice-trade and the early days of refrigeration.
South Wind Through the Kitchen
, an anthology of recipes and articles from Mrs David’s nine books, selected by her family and friends and by the chefs and writers she inspired, was published in 1997, and acts as a reminder of what made Elizabeth David one of the most influential and loved of English food writers.
In 1973 her contribution to the gastronomic arts was recognized with the award of the first André Simon memorial prize. An OBE followed in 1976, and in 1977 she was made a Chevalier de l’Ordre du Mérite Agricole.
English Bread and Yeast Cookery
won Elizabeth David the 1977 Glenfiddich Writer of the Year award. The universities of Essex and Bristol conferred honorary doctorates on her in 1979 and 1988 respectively. In 1982 she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and in 1986 was awarded a CBE. Elizabeth David died in 1992.
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First published in Great Britain by Michael Joseph 1960
First published in the United States of America by
Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc. 1962
Published in Penguin Books (U.K.) 1964
Published in Penguin Books (U.S.A.) 1964
Published with revisions 1967, 1970
This edition with a new foreword by Julia Child
published in Penguin Books (U.S.A.) 1999
10
Copyright ⓒ Elizabeth David, 1960, 1962, 1967, 1970 Foreword copyright ⓒ Julia Child, 1999 All rights reserved
eISBN : 978-1-101-50123-8
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To
P. H.
with love
Acknowledgements
So many people have helped me in so many ways with the compiling and the production of this book—some with advice and material, others with technical assistance, typing, indexing, proof-reading—that the acknowledgements which I should like to make to all these friends would fill a number of pages.
But I have only a limited space, so I must restrict myself, first of all, to thanking Miss Audrey Withers, for so many years editor of
Vogue
, for making it possible for me to go to France on several journeys to collect material for cookery articles subsequently published in the magazine. It is these articles, with a number published in
House and Garden
between 1956 and 1959, which form the nucleus of this book.
Other material and recipes republished here first appeared in
The Sunday Times
,
Harper’s Bazaar
,
The Wine and Food Society Quarterly
, Harrods
Food News
and
Wine
, edited by T. A. Layton.
M. André Simon very kindly gave me permission to reprint an article by Mrs. Belloc Lowndes which first appeared in
The Wine and Food Society Quarterly
, and Messrs. A. D. Peters to include an extract from Marcel Boulestin’s
Myself, My Two Countries
, published by Cassell & Co. Messrs. Martin Secker & Warburg have also kindly allowed me to reprint a passage from Maurice Goudeket’s
Close to Colette
, and Mr. Vivian Rowe has generously permitted me to reproduce an excerpt from
Return to Normandy
, published by Messrs. Evans Brothers.
Lastly, it would be ungrateful of me to miss this opportunity of thanking my friend Doreen Thornton for driving me, with much patience and care, on many rather arduous journeys around and across France in search of good food and interesting regional recipes.
Introduction
STAYING in Toulouse a few years ago, I bought a little cookery book on a stall in the
marché aux puces
held every Sunday morning in the Cathedral Square. It was a tattered little volume, and its cover, attracted me. In faded pinks and blues, it depicts an enormously fat and contented-looking cook in white muslin cap, spotted blouse and blue apron, smiling smugly to herself as she scatters herbs on a
gigot
of mutton. Beside her are a great loaf of butter, a head of garlic and a wooden salt box, and in the foreground is a table laid with a white cloth and four places, a basket of bread, a cruet and two carafes of wine.
The promise of the cover was, indeed, fulfilled in the pages of this delightful little book, called
Secrets de la Bonne Table, 120 Recettes inédites recueillies dans les provinces de France
. The author, Benjamin Renaudet (date of publication not disclosed, but probably about 1900), had collected genuine recipes from country housewives, gourmet doctors, lawyers and senators, from gamekeepers and their wives, from landladies of seaside
pensions
, from the notebooks of family and friends. The dishes described are not spectacular, rich or highly flavoured, the materials are the modest ingredients you would expect to find in a country garden, a small farm, or in the market of a quiet provincial town. But it is not rustic or peasant cooking, for the directions for the blending of different vegetables in a soup, the quantity of wine in a stew, or the seasoning of the sauce for a chicken reflect great care and regard for the harmony of the finished dish. This is sober, well-balanced, middle-class French cookery, carried out with care and skill, with due regard to the quality of the materials, but without extravagance or pretension.
The book exudes an atmosphere of provincial life which appears orderly and calm whatever ferocious dramas may be seething below the surface. Here you find the lawyer’s wife at work preparing her special
noisettes d’agneau
for a dinner party; a great-aunt of one of the author’s friends serves the same soup her mother served to Madame Récamier when she came to dinner; the farmer’s wife gathers mushrooms to garnish the chicken she is cooking for her husband when he comes in with friends from a day’s shooting; a senator’s cook proves to a sceptical company that an old hen can be made into a dish fit for a gourmet; the author’s great-uncle at last discloses his recipe for the liqueur he makes every year and keeps locked in his linen-cupboard.
The ravages of two world wars, the astronomical rises in the cost of living, and the great changes brought about by modern methods of transport and food preservation have not destroyed those traditions of French provincial cookery. In one way indeed these circumstances have oddly combined to preserve them. After the 1914 war patriotic Frenchmen began to feel that the unprecedented influx of foreign tourists hurrying through the country in fast cars, Riviera or Biarritz bound, not caring what they ate or drank so long as they were not delayed on their way, was threatening the character of their cookery far more than had the shortages and privations of war. Soon, they felt, the old inns and country restaurants would disappear and there would be only modern hotels serving mass-produced, impersonal food which could be put before the customers at a moment’s notice, devoured, paid for, and instantly forgotten. It was at this time that a number of gourmets and gastronomically-minded men of letters set about collecting and publicising the local recipes of each province in France.
At the Paris Salon d’Automne of 1924 there was, for the first time, a culinary section devoted to regional cookery. Under the direction of Edouard Rouzier, proprietor of the celebrated Rôtisserie Périgourdine, a series of regional dinners were organised and proved an immense success. Subsequently Marcel Rouff and Maurice-Edmond Sailland (who, under the pen-name of Curnonsky, came to be known throughout France as the ‘Prince of Gastronomes’) together published a series of guides to regional eating and drinking, not hesitating to criticise the pretentious, the dull, or the over-expensive meal when they encountered it. About the same time Count Austin de Croze compiled a book listing the products, the dishes, the cheeses and wines of every province, followed in 1929 by a closely-packed volume of recipes called
Les Plats Régionaux de France
. Before long regional cookery became fashionable. There had, of course, previously been a few restaurants in Paris specialising in the food and wines of the native province of the proprietors, but they were little known except to the habitués of the quarter and to provincials exiled in Paris. These regional restaurants now began to multiply and become smart. Today one could eat some different provincial speciality in Paris restaurants every day for weeks on end.
Country and seaside restaurateurs also began to realise the possibilities of attracting tourists by advertising some famous local dish on their menus. Often such dishes derive from peasant and farmhouse cookery and depend rather upon some typical product of the region such as a cheese or ham, mountain mutton or river fish, chestnuts, walnuts, lentils, dairy produce, rather than upon important sauces or the skill of professional chefs. But the restaurateurs do not despise them on this account. They are encouraged to serve them by the local Syndicat d’Initiative, some member of which hardworking body has probably searched the municipal archives for cookery manuscripts and persuaded members of old local families and the librarians of the great religious houses to contribute recipes.