“The French peasant cuisine is at the basis of the culinary art. By this I mean it is composed of honest elements that la grande cuisine only embellishes.”
~ Alexandre Dumaine
A succulent soup provides a glistening gem of daily nourishment during all the seasons of the year, but especially during autumn, that narrow doorway into winter and the dark days of the waning year. I really look forward to autumn for that reason, as well as for the visual symphony that hums outside my kitchen windows as the changing leaves fall.
The diversity of French soups, as Dumaine said, comes from the peasant’s pot, the hands and potager (which can be loosely translated as “garden for soup”) of the women of the house. La soupe, as well as potée and potage and pot-au feu, first saw the light from the inside of cauldrons stirred in the homes of people not of the nobility.
There’s le bouillon, or better said, “stock,” the liquid that remains after simmering herbs, meat and bones, aromatic vegetables like carrots, celery, and onions together, leaching out flavor.
A fifteenth-century French cookery manuscript, Le Vivendier, edited by Terence Scully, reveals some nuggets of information about the evolution of soup in France. One recipe, “Brouet d’allemaigne de char” (German Meat Broth) reads like this (Scully’s translation):
To make a German Meat Broth of rabbit, of chicken or of some other meat. It should be cut up into pieces and sauteed [sic] with finely chopped onions; get a lot of of almond milk and ginger, cinnamon, nutmeg, grains of paradise and saffron; boil everything together with good bouillon. Pour it over your meat.
(Scully suggests that perhaps an earlier copier made an error, possibly because the text was being read to him, and wrote the French word for almonds (modern word is “amande“) as “alemandes,” and that this recipe were at some point simply “Brouet d’alemandes.”)
Straining the remnants of the le bouillon through a fine-meshed sieve called a chinoise gives birth to le consommé, which is then clarified with a rack and embellished with shavings of truffles, fresh morels, crisp asparagus, or other delicately flavored vegetables, flavored with Port, Sherry, or another similar wine. (This was likely NOT a peasant invention.)
Smooth, creamy, le velouté also shares DNA with le bouillon, enriched with a purée of vegetables, like carrots, pumpkin or similar squash, mushrooms, tomatoes, leeks, or combinations of all of these. Cooks sometimes add cream, egg yolks, and butter to thicken and stabilize le velouté.
La bisque is a shellfish velouté made from lobster, crab, shrimp, scallops, or oysters, enriched with cream and blended until smooth, enlivened with a pinch of cayenne pepper and dashes of cognac or white wine. Other seafood soups (and stews) enliven the whole question of French soups and broths, too.
Le purée elevates vegetables to soup, thickened with the starch of the vegetables themselves or with floury potatoes. Finished with nuggets of butter, le purée — especially that made with turnips or rutabagas — became the nourishment of the many evenings of the endless days of toil, war, and perhaps gratitude and joy, too. Don’t forget the joy.
And ” joy” captures the essence of cooking French. France still produces profoundly delicious food that can be adapted to any number of cuisines, true. But the point here is that the French culinary tradition, with its vast repertoire of recipes, is every bit as much within the reach of home cooks as is Italian or other cuisines.
As food writer Naomi Barry once wrote, “Cooking is like music in that, once composed, it requires great interpreters to keep it alive.”***
(For awhile, we will be looking at some of these recipes, examining them in light of utility but also in context with the rural and agriculturally centered lives of the women who created the recipes in the first place. )
Cream of Bread Soup (Adapted from Françoise Bernard’s La Cuisine: Everyday French Home Cooking.)
Serves 4
Just to show you how easy French cooking can be …
1/4 pound leftover bread (the more flavorful the better! Try onion bread, herb bread, etc. Or heavy dark bread, like that eaten by peasants before white flour became cheap. )
2 cups whole milk
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
2 T. unsalted butter
1 to 2 T. crème fraîche, or to taste
Put the bread in heavy sauce pan with the milk and 3 cups of water. Add salt and pepper to taste. Bring to a boil, turn heat to low and simmer for 40 minutes. Stir often. Puree the soup in a food mill, blender, or food processor. Pour soup back into the pan and reheat slowly and gently. Stir in butter and crème fraîche. Serve with a garnish of chopped chives or other herbs.
To be continued …
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*Louis De Gouy, The Soup Book (1949)
**Soup of The Evening
Lewis Carroll
Beautiful Soup, so rich and green,
Waiting in a hot tureen!
Who for such dainties would not stoop?
Soup of the evening, beautiful Soup!
Soup of the evening, beautiful Soup!
Beau – ootiful Soo – oop!
Beau – ootiful Soo – oop!
Soo – oop of the e – e – evening,
Beautiful, beautiful Soup!
Beautiful Soup! Who cares for fish,
Game, or any other dish?
Who would not give all else for two
Pennyworth only of beautiful Soup?
Pennyworth only of beautiful Soup?
Beau – ootiful Soo – oop!
Beau – ootiful Soo – oop!
Soo – oop of the e – e – evening,
Beautiful, beautiful Soup!
***Gourmet magazine, February 1964.
© 2010 C. Bertelsen