Saturday, November 24, 2012

Some Last Thoughts

RANDOM NOTES
We got to see, in action, how French parents raise their children.  We were speaking with Isabelle when 6 1/2 year old Emily interrupted.  Rather than succumb to her daughter's interruption, we watched an interesting exchange:

Isabelle: "What was I doing when you interrupted?"

Emily: "Talking to Tom and Maxine"

Isabelle: "Donc" (means 'therefore')

Emily: "I should wait until you're finished.
Refreshing...

 There's always a lot of press about how the French are lazy.  35 hour work weeks.  6 weeks of vacation.  Retirement at 50.  Turns out that that really only applies to union workers and public servants.  The farmers in the area are up and on the fields by 6am and stay out till 10pm.  Quite a different life.  Donc, French in general aren't lazy, but like in other places, organized labor tends in that direction.

At the end of the day, there's a big difference between what is touristically cute and what everyone wants.  What I mean by that is that we, as tourists, like charming buildings, small streets, stone buildings, all of the "quaint Europe stuff".  But, people are people.  And in reality, what they do is buy suburban houses with yards, drywall walls, and maybe a touch or two of difference. 

 Our French language skills are good enough to get by!  After years of lessons, many, many trips to France, tapes, tutors, and educational language shows, we understand roughly 50% of what goes on in a conversation.  No, we can't discuss life the way we can in English.  But, we can get a whole lot further than our previous bar, "where is the toilet".  Hard to imagine ever getting to this level, as low as it is, in another language.

 Parking meters are free for lunch (2 hours).  If you put sufficient money in a parking meter for 2 hours at, say, 11am, it will give you free parking till 3pm.  And, Monday is a day off for just about all the retailers and museums.  So, planning a day's adventures can sometimes be tricky.  Or frustrating.
 

LESSONS LEARNED
 Internet access is a great help in planning, not just before the trip, but operationally how to go about each day.  In London we had 15 gb service and we could, in just a second, look up the best way to get someplace or what time a restaurant opened.  In addition, our next iPads will have cellular capability.  With it, we really won't even need city maps when we're out and about.  And with SIM cards cheap enough, we can easily check what's nearby as we walk down the street.

Staying in rural France was a reality check.  We've been fascinated for years with the possibility of living a Peter Mayle lifestyle, among the vineyards, with French farmers as neighbors and, for that matter, not many neighbors at all.  That's what we had in Broze.  And while it was a great experience, at this stage in life, it's not our life.

Being gone an entire month disrupts your home life in ways that taking a two week vacation does not.  It literally takes a month to get home life back in order.  That's everything from dealing with emails that you dodged (despite reading them) while away, to going through mail, to restocking the refrigerator.  It's worth it, but there are implications.

Spend the money or miles to upgrade to business class for the flight over.  While it's not great, it is OK to be frugal on the way back.

France is about small vignettes.  A place captured not with videos, but with well composed pictures.  Take lots of pictures.

Not all chocolate croissants are worth it.

There's always one more cute village or other sight to check out.  At some point, the tour guides get it right.  A 3 star sight is almost always better than a 1 star one.  And, if you skip some of the cute villages, there's more time to adapt to the life you're emulating.

I'm running out of things to buy.  I came home with a great pocket knife.  And, I've been carrying it in my pocket.  But, I live a pretty urban life and I'm much more afraid of losing it than I am finding opportunities to use it.

Try to speak to people.  It works.  The distillery, for example.  And plenty of other places where people who spoke no English were patient and we really could communicate.

We really don't need *that* much space.  700 square feet, well laid out, is sufficient for months.  We liked having 2 “desk” areas, outdoor living space for good weather, a dishwasher, and a washing machine. 

While we did a better job of packing for France than our London trip, we still had more clothes than we really needed since we could wash clothes as necessary.

2005 is a great year for Bordeaux.  Also 2009.  Avoid years ending in 7.
 

TOM'S TOP NINE
1. The LL about rural France lifestyle.
2. The jet lagged shock of seeing Bill at Blagnac airport the morning we arrived.
3. Bordeaux wines -- there is a difference.
4. Albi -- a great city for tourists.
5. Having the vendage literally going on around us.
6. Tatou (the vineyard dog) following us as we walked through the vines various times.
7. Le Romuald for lunch on a rainy day, especially getting their last table.
8. Breakfasts in Bordeaux with the Graysons
9. Le Gourmet Quercynois for foie gras.

MAXINE’S ADDITIONS
1. Walking in the area around our house – vineyards, interesting stone houses, small country lanes, wineries.  Just beautiful!
2. Fabulous lunch at Esprit du Vin in Albi.
3. Relaxing with a glass of rose on our patio overlooking the vines.
4. Pech Merle cave with 25,000 year old cave paintings.
5. Dinner at Le Jardin des Quatre Saisons in Albi.  It was great to be able to communicate completely in French and the food was good too!

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Last Day of Vacation -- Wednesday, Oct 31


Last Day of Vacation -- Wednesday, Oct 31

One last trip to our bakery for croissants and fresh-baked bread.  Packed.  Walked the vines one last time.  Sat outside in the cold and enjoyed the views.  Had a glass of wine with our landlord.  Set the alarm for 5:30 and were asleep by 9:30
 
Here are a bunch of pictures of our "neighborhood" which we've come to really appreciate.  And, as well, a couple more pictures from inside the house looking out:






 

Thursday, November 1st

Left Broze by 6:45 am.  A holiday, so no traffic on the way to Toulouse-Blagnac airport.  Turned the car back in at Hertz.  Got lectured by the Lufthansa person about taking too much luggage on the plane (but she relented and gave us gate check passes).  Flew to Frankfurt.  Changed planes and flew to Houston, Texas on a very, very full flight.  It took 11 hours and I had the route map up on my screen tediously waiting through each minute.  Punch drunk from lack of sleep in Houston, but we eat some dinner at La Salsa.  Flight is 2 hours delayed.  Finally in LA.  As is all our luggage.  Home by 1 am and asleep soon after.

 

Friday, November 2nd.

We wake up in LA, in our own home.  All is back to normal!

Cordes and Other Winding Down -- Tues, Oct 30


We really are winding down at this stage.  Initially we had planned to spend the day in Figeac, another pretty hill town.  But, we're tired of driving, especially since that day would promise to be nearly 4 hours in the car and yet another pretty town.  So, we decide to take another walk through the vines near our house.  Eventually we come to Chateau Rhodes and realize that this is another back road into town.  I'm delighted that Tatoo, the Chateau Gayssou winery dog, has chosen to take the walk with us.  Over two hours of his companionship.  It makes things feel more like home, it fulfills some of our need to have a dog, and it turns sightseeing into "just a walk" which is what we'd really wanted.  The weather is great and it's a wonderful way to wind things down.

Lunch at home, then one last visit to the official second prettiest village in the area, Cordes sur Ciel.  (And when I mean "the area" I really mean the lower half of the country France).  On our last visit we tried to find the "secret" way to drive most of the way up -- it's a hill town.  But, after a half hour, we couldn't find it, gave up, and hiked.  Arrived at the town sweating...  This time we did a better job finding it, and since it was cool out, arrived comfortably.  We spent our last couple sightseeing hours in France there, enjoying the views and looking in the shops. 

 

Then, home for dinner and the beginning of the end of our trip.  It was a crisp, clear, cold night with a beautiful full moon and a sky full of stars.  In the middle of the night I couldn't help thinking that it felt sad to be leaving a place where we'd become so comfortable.

Monday, Oct 29th -- Last Real Sightseeing


Sunday we went through all the information we gathered and everything we brought with us.  The trip is winding down and we want to make sure that in the few days we have left, we see anything that seems important.  However, I have to admit that we've become jaded with the very cute hillside villages, the flowers people put out to make their small piece of France pretty, the rolling hills and vines, and all of it.  So, we're not too interested in seeing "one last hill town".  Plus, the weather has really turned to cold.  Frost on the car windows in the morning.

OK, having said all of that, we do spend the morning checking out those last hill towns.  We have a map which covers the "route of the wineries" and also the "route of the hill towns" and using it we take a 3 1/2 hour drive through the pretty countryside, looking at our last bastide towns.  We passed through Lisle-sur-Tarn, Giroussens, Rabastens, Salvagnac, and ended up in Puycelsi (another of the officially-designated most beautiful villages of France and much deserved).  Here are a bunch of pictures of Pulcelsi:




 

We're home for a late (and light) lunch.  Then we take a 1 1/2 hour walk from our house through the vines.  Shower, then drive to Toulouse one last time for dinner.

I hadn't yet gotten a Toulouse souvenir.  In fact, I had yet to buy any permanent Toulouse souvenirs in 6 visits over the last 20 years (*that number in fact resolves for us that we're spending too much time in the south of France and not enough in Paris).  So, we plan our evening to get to town by 5 pm so we can do a little shopping.

First stop is the souvenir shop for the local rugby team, Stade Toulousain.  They're one of the most successful teams in Europe (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stade_Toulousain).  They also charge pretty high prices for their souvenirs!  Maxine notices a note on the wall about their outlet store with last season's merchandise and we leave in search of it.  And it turns out to be next door.  And the sign on the door says they're closed.  This despite someone inside at the register and the fact that it's 5:50 and closing isn't till 6pm.  I bang on the door and he opens it, lectures me, tells me to go next store to buy, and closes it on me.  It's one of those times that France can be frustrating.  I do go next door and buy a too expensive red t-shirt.

We then take an hour long last walk through Toulouse.  Maxine remains unimpressed with Place Capitole, the grand square of the city.  She's right though that she's never seen it when it was anything other than a big open paved square with construction equipment all over the place.  But, having seen it at Christmas years ago, I know it can be better.

Eventually we make it over to Le Colombier.  Maxine's been in charge of our restaurants and to accommodate my interests, she'd found the "best" cassoulet restaurant in the city.  Food is good, but expensive.  And relatively rapid (i.e. non-French) service.  We're done in 1 1/2 hours.  Full.  But, it really isn't one of our dining highlights of the trip.  We take some solace from the fact that this really is *the* place to get cassoulet.  But, candidly, Maxine has a better recipe at home that she occasionally makes in the winter.

Robin's Birthday Party - Sunday, Oct 28


We're back in Toulouse today for Robin's 15th birthday party.  It's another of those experiences we feel lucky to have, where we can be a part of normal life in France, not tourists but friends.  Our continued visits, and their presence in our trip, is an anchor for us.

Our friends’ friends treat us as good friends of their friends.  Which is intimidating in a way.  They arrive at the door, recognize our "bonjour" as coming in an American accent, and switch to English to talk to us.  People are courteous all day, accomodating our limited language skills.  The conversation over lunch is in English so we can join in.  We talk politics a little, with the US election coming up next week.  They ask what we've most enjoyed during our visit and we tell them that our favorite southern city is Albi.  Which is true, but also diplomatic.  It's not Toulouse, but it does stand on its own merits.

We have burgers and fries for lunch.  That, and wine, of course.
 
 

Eventually the guests leave and Maxine and I finish out our last evening with Bill's family.  I'm particularly pleased that after a month of spending time together, Emily is comfortable with me.  She helps me with my French pronunciation (seriously), correcting me when I don't roll my "r's" sufficiently.  Later, we're at the point when we're all saying our goodbye's at the end of the evening.  She's grabbing my leg to keep me from leaving.  It feels poignant -- her parents have told me that she gets sad that while her siblings see their godparents with some regularity, Emily only rarely sees me.  My experience with godparents has been this.  My mother's sister is my godmother.  And, with my mother dead, my Aunt has been one of my strongest links to childhood, to my mother's family, and I guess to a sense of being looked out for.

I tell Emily that we can Facetime, but I know it isn't the same and I feel bad for her disappointment.  When we'd seen them in LA a year prior we didn't expect to see them so soon, but we did.  However, we leave tonight pretty certain that it will be years, as many as four years, until we see them again...

 

We Host Lunch -- Sat, Oct 27th


We invite Bill and family to come out to Gaillac for lunch.  We've been to their house a bunch of times on this trip, we're pretty pleased with our place (the house itself, and the location among the vines) and want to show it off.  So, it's scheduled for today.

We've stopped at the Leclerc and picked up pizzas.  No groaning, we've tried them before and they're a)fresh, b)interesting flavors, and c)much better than we can buy in a US grocery store.  Plus, with a 3 year old, a 6 year old, and a 15 year old coming over for lunch, it seems like an option everyone will like.  Maxine insists on making a salad and slicing up a melon to round out the meal.

Pate's are something of a novelty to me.  But, there are a million recipes.  Some involve ingredients I'm not too interested in, like blood, or fat, or well, or rabbit or other animals/animal parts I'm not the least bit curious about.  Thinking it would be relatively "safe" over the course of the trip we buy (I select pate) 3-4 times.  I don't make a single good pick.  Oh well...

For dessert, we stop by our new favorite bakery and pick up a pear tart.  We've also got a bottle of Gaillac sparkling wine.  We're ready for guests!

Lunch works great.  They're late getting here, but it's a good visit. 

It is a cold day though and our planned walk through the vines ends up being a quick trip over to see the neighbor's goats and then inside within 15 minutes.  We think about lighting the fireplace but are reluctant since our earlier experiment with it smoked us out of the first floor for days. 
 

 

Eventually our friends leave and we head out to Albi for dinner at Le Jardin des Quatre Saisons, recommended by our landlord.  It was a great choice – filled with locals, good food, convivial staff.  To cap off the meal, we end with something we never do, an digestif.  Since we're only a couple hours drive from Armagnac, we order glasses of it.  Two, from the same producer, but different years.  The difference that age makes is striking.  And as our waitress pours the first (and older) one, Maxine asks if "all of that!" was only 2 centiliters (what we'd ordered).  She says "tant pis" in a welcoming way and only charges us for the smaller amount.  It was a great end to a very fun day.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

The Start of the End, Friday, October 26th


We can feel it, our trip is winding down.  And after nearly 6 hours in the car yesterday, we decide to take it easy.  We spent the morning doing errands.  In to the Gaillac open air market to pick up some things -- it's much smaller than it was three weeks ago.  Leclerc for diesel and other groceries.  The ATM.  And now home for the day. 

With rain expected mid- afternoon, we have lunch from our market purchases then an hour long walk through the vines.  It was interesting to see the changes in the fields since we’ve been here.  The grapes are all harvested and many of the vines have been pruned back.  The sunflowers have been chopped down and plowed under (although Maxine did find some 2nd growth sunflowers in a field the other day and they look nice on our outdoor table). Tom took a nap, and is now catching up on blogs.  Our evening?  Reading and movies…like home, the building below:





Rocamadour, Saint Cirque, and Pech Merle – Thur, Oct 25th


We set the alarm to get up early, 7:00 -- I know to most people, this doesn’t sound that early but it is pitch black -- the sun doesn’t come up until after 8 am.  We want to be on the road and at Rocamadour by 9 am.  We are, however, thwarted when we get to a bridge about 20 minutes outside of Sarlat and see that the workmen have just closed it for the next 2 days.  Turns out it’s the only bridge for quite a distance and we have to make a small revision to our plans, cutting out a trip to an underground lake. And no, I’m not kidding about this – the wonders of rural France!

We make it Rocamadour, which really is a sight.  We do wimp out and pay for the elevator to take us to the top.  But, we do walk back down…




 
 

From Rocamadour, since we’re no longer going to the lake, we head towards our very viable plan B, lunch.  We’ve largely become French, or at least the version of it we’ve learned from books and from Bill, we plan around our meals.  And we go back to Saint-Cirq-Lapopie, where we went earlier in the trip and where I had the best foie gras of the trip.  It’s called Le Gourmet Quercynois.  I tell our waiter of our loyalty and he smiles.  But, he doesn’t bring me any extra foie gras.

Maxine has an omelet populated with bits of local truffle, the other regional delicacy.  Truffle omlets aren't what they're cracked up to be, but it's qualitatively different than the cepes omlet the dsy before.  (Leaving Sarlat we considered visiting a truffle farm and going “in search of”, but during the off season that was only scheduled for afternoons, so reluctantly we passed).  Here the omelet is earthy and fluffy and tastes of truffles.  Since we have the foie gras as a quality baseline for the level of this restaurant, we eat the omelet in the belief that this is how it’s supposed to be!

After lunch we retrace our steps by 20 minutes drive and get to Pech Merle.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pech_Merle   It’s a cave painting location.  For some reason, France is one of the places that people settled a really long time ago.  And places like this limit themselves to some finite number of guests per day, in this case, 700 people in total. 

We’d been to Les Eyzies over 15 years ago and seen cave paintings done 15,000 years ago.  Pech Merle wasn’t, to us anyway, as well known.  But, it’s better!  They’ve dated the paintings as 25,000 years old.  And they’re more extensive.  The guide tries to explain how the various ‘brush stokes’ represent deer, bison, bear, etc.  It works, sort of.  But, to me the simple fact that people were down here 25,000 years ago and left their mark is sufficient.  I don’t care if it’s art.  I don’t care if they painted fish or what they had for dinner last night, or if it was in some way acknowledgement of their gods.  I am curious what would have motivated people to go to all this trouble.  But, mostly I am appreciative of the fact that they’ve done it.  And I’ve seen it!

It’s now 5 PM and we head home.  Our drive takes us 2 hours and through another major wine city, Cahor.  But we’re too spent to take the time to stop.  We've become suspect of our GPS's analytic skills since it assumes we can actually go the posted speed limits on narrow mountain roads -- often we can't come close.  We get home and have a light dinner (after truffles and foie gras for lunch – of course!).

Onward to Sarlat, Oct 24th



 
 
Our only other, and thus final, overnight excursion from the Gaillac area begins today.  We’ve got our eyes on a loop that begins about two hours from our house.  Three sites that the Michelin Guide gives 3 stars, the old town of Sarlat (technically called Sarlat-la-Caneda), the old hill town of Rocamadour, and the prehistoric caves at Pech Merle.  We’d made reservations to overnight in Sarlat so we pack and head on the road.

We’re less than an hour outside of Gaillac, on the highway, and we see a road sign with distances to other French cities.  Paris is less than 4 hours away.  Both Maxine and I contemplate.  We love Paris, yet haven’t been there since 2006 despite three trips to Europe in the intervening years…

We head onwards, reminding ourselves that this trip is about southern France.

Personally, I’m a bit apprehensive as we pull into town.  I’d been here in 2000 with Bill, but had only arrived in time for dinner and didn’t remember much.  But, what I remembered was favorable and we had the Michelin recommendation.  The outskirts aren’t charming, big box retail, car dealerships, etc.  And further into town, the roads are all torn up.  Our hotel, the Sarlat Ibis is cheap but extremely stripped down (the beds are the narrowest I’ve ever seen).  Across from the hotel is a florist specializing in funerals.  And it’s a 10 minute walk to the old town.  So, I’m worried…

But, when we get to the old town, it does live up to its very favorable press.  Charming. curious old streets.  We head for our lunch, a place specializing in foie gras, but get there to find out that their kitchen isn’t working and we move on.  We find another restaurant, have a decent meal in a pretty courtyard, then set out to explore the city.
 

 

If you get the chance, do it, Sarlat is worth an afternoon.  But of course, it is well known and we see a number of tour busses parked in the area.  In St. Emilion two out of three shops specialized in wine.  Here that same proportion specializes in foie gras and related products including containers of duck fat (seriously).  Mid afternoon, we’re lagging and stop for a coffee.  And a second coffee.  Then we wrap up with a search for souvenirs.  We pick up a small, black truffle (a specialty of this Perigord region) which we plan to use in an omelet which we intend to eat after our return to LA, and with it to toast a month in the south of France.
 

 

Then I set myself onto the most unrealistic souvenir possible.  A Laguoile knife.  It’s irrational because I have no need of a pocket knife.  None at all.  But, it’s certainly a French souvenir.  I’ve seen a number of shops on our various excursions displaying them.  And this shop in Sarlat has the largest collection of them all.  I tell myself that if I am going to buy one, here’s the place.  And, I do. 

The sales guy speaks no English.  And the descriptions that I need are all about technical words.  Most of the knives (there are several thousand) are in a display case in the front window and he has to push other cases, the size of small bookshelves, out of the way to get to them.  But, eventually, I find a knife I want, with a cork handle, and we conclude.  He gives me a stamped certificate of authenticity (unlike with the word champagne, which the French have managed to restrict, they have not succeeded with laguoile) and carefully wraps my purchase in an intricate paper bag with ribbon.

 

You’re free to wonder why you’d want to carefully wrap a very sharp knife with a 3 inch blade in a ribboned bag, but eh….

Dinner is my choice.  And, I’ve wanted to, just once, go to McDonalds on this trip.  So, we do.

Albi Again – Tuesday, Oct 23rd


The best city in the area, the one that gets our vote anyway, is Albi.  It’s big enough to have interesting retail.  Also big in the sense of having a good number of touristic sites.  Cute winding little roads (or streets) through the old part of town.  And, enough of a population density to have good restaurants.  It’s less than 30 minutes from our house in Gaillac, which is another benefit. 

So, we decide to head back over, to try out our second Michelin starred restaurant experience of the trip.  We’ve chosen to go to l'Esprit du Vin.  I call to ask for a reservation, they propose 1pm, but I counter at 12.  We want to do some walking around before lunch, and enough places close at noon that otherwise we’ll just be looking through windows.

We time our arrival in the city to around 11 and take our walk.  From there, we end up at the restaurant where we are the second couple to be seated (by the end of the meal there are perhaps 20 people having lunch, probably because it’s a weekday and off season).  Our first choice is the menu.  Like everywhere else, there is a menu of the day.  It’s less expensive, but it also restricts our choices.  And here we’re willing to place ourselves in the chef’s hands.  This restaurant especially invites that with a "menu" that proposes you tell your waiter what you don’t like and the chef will create dishes especially for you.  Nothing to choose.  No specifics, only your preferences (you pick which 'menu' you want simply by the price you want to pay).  Intriguing, so, we do it.  And as I discuss my list of dislikes with the waiter, which I think of as simple (nothing that lived in the water), provokes a laugh from the couple at the other table.

After ordering, I go to the rest room.  Just outside, our waiter introduces me to the chef.  I’m not sure what to do, to shake hands or to apologize for being a picky eater.  So I say hello, thanks, and then move on.

The meal is great.  Without doubt, the best of our trip.  Maxine will describe our meal but will tell you in advance that she can’t do justice to the accompanying sauces, not sure how to describe them!:

  • 3 amuse bouche – parmesan-crusted fried olives, guacamole with salmon caviar, goat cheese dusted with chocolate.  Note:  everyone received these.
  • Additional amuse bouche -- Poached quail egg on bed of watercress sauce (our table only)
  • Cream of cepe soup with walnut foam.  MP note – I don’t even like mushroom soup and this was amazing!  Maybe the key is find really good mushrooms/cepes.
  • Foie gras with grilled mushrooms (2 different kinds) and artichoke hearts.  Very earthy and fall-like.
  • Grilled beef with accompanying vegetables – baby zucchini, carrots, mushrooms, snow peas, fennel, edible flowers – and apple compote with floregano (a green flower that tastes like herb/oregano).  The beef and veggies were delicious but the apple was a strange taste with it.  I guess we’re more accustomed to apple with pork rather than beef.
  • Chocolate mousse on a stick with chocolate coating and pear sauce,  also walnut cake with chocolate sauce
  • Pear ice cream on a bed of Armagnac granite (Maxine’s favorite and something she plans to try to recreate at home)
  • Coffee with assorted homemade chocolates

We stop one last time at the Gaillac wine producers place, the Maison des Vins.  This is our 4th visit, and second visit to the woman who's now working the counter.  In all that time, there've only been 2 other people who stop in.  We get the sense that she isn't getting many customers and especially not many enthusiastic, repeat, Californians.  She speaks very very little English but is actively interested in being helpful, looking words up in her dictionary at one point to explain something to us.  We taste the last of our wines, and after buying a bottle of wine, she presents us with a souvenir corkscrew.  I'd seen them in their case for 5E.  We're touched at the gesture and once more grateful for the small experiences.
Later on Tuesday, we have drinks with our landlord on her terrace.  She made a lovely selection of hors d’oeuvres and we shared a bottle of wine together.  We’ve been here for three weeks but haven’t had a chance to really visit together since the night we arrived (and we don’t remember much about that night given our jet-lagged state).  It was very nice to get to know each other better.  She is British and has lived here full-time for three years now.  Her house was originally a farm building.  She showed us pictures of its original condition – what a renovation.  We’re impressed that she could visualize the potential in the house.

Our day ends quietly.  A light meal, some reading, then sleep in this old stone building that we’ve been calling home for over three weeks now.
 
Some pictures from Albi:



 

Friday, October 26, 2012

Back in Broze/Gaillac We Find A New Bakery – Mon, Oct 22

Monday is a day for errands -- a French approximation of normal life.

It may not seem like finding a bakery should be a big deal, but trust me, it is.  Mostly we’d been going to a more corporate/chain bakery in Gaillac on the road to the grocery store, Leclerc.  But, today we were in search of a regional products store whose ad I’d found in a local magazine last week.  After we find it, Maxine notices the bakery a block away.  It’s fantastic.  The couple who own it are working the store.  Damian is putting loaves of bread onto the big spatula so he can put them in the oven and he looks up when his two American customers come in.  We suspect that they don’t get too many customers in that they don’t recognize at all, and we’re it.  His wife suffers through our French sentence fragments.  And we buy the best bread products we’ve had since we got to Gaillac nearly 3 weeks ago.

Breakfast on the terrace of our house, courtesy of our new bakery:


 

Maxine promises to go back tomorrow morning to buy us more…

Lunch at home then a 2 hour walk on a country road, through the vines.  The weather is great and it’s very pleasant.

When we get home it’s nearly 5pm, cocktail hour.  But, of course we’re drinking wine.  So we open the bottle of sweet Gaillac wine we’d purchased a couple weeks ago and enjoy the sun setting, and the vines changing colors as the light fades.

That’s our day.  Dinner at home and we recreate an Aveyron-ish dinner of lentils and mashed potatoes.  We’d had a similar, and more authentic version of this on a rainy night in Paris six years earlier.  We’ve gotten this version from Leclerc, but it works to complete the evening.  That and some red wine from last week’s visit to Gaillac’s Maison des Vin.

Sunday We Drink Sauternes in Sauternes, Oct 21


Breakfast is again a long affair.  We toy with the idea of heading a half hour further west (and away from both ours and Bill’s homes) to the actual city of Bordeaux.  But, we decide that stores are probably closed on Sunday, so we’re back to Bill’s original plan.  We’ll drive south an hour to Sauternes, which has the benefit of roughly taking us back towards home.  Once more breakfast ends with us planning lunch. 

Maxine’s also done research on which Sauternes wineries are likely to be open on Sunday so that we can get in a tasting before we head home.

We’re not confident that they are open so Isabelle calls.  She’s French.  She’s a native French speaker.  But, even she has problems understanding the accent of the guy who answers at the first winery.  But yes, he is open and happy to invite us to taste.

Maxine reminded me earlier that this weekend away wasn’t really about wine tasting, but more about enjoying a trip away with Bill and Isabelle and their family.  So, when Bill mentions a restaurant that they’d previously been to and enjoyed, we all agree that should be our first stop when we get to Sauternes.  Here are some sauterne grapes -- notice the mold...
 

Lunch – we drink Sauternes in Sauternes.  Three different ones.  With foie gras. The flavors burst in my mouth.  Delicious.   I’m delighted…  Lunch, the food, was good too…  We’re there from 1pm till 3:30 (normal timing for Bill, but somewhat extraordinary for Maxine and me).  And here we are with Bill's family at one of the many meals we had together.
 
 

We show up at the winery and an older man, hunched over, greets us outside the building.  Maxine and I get to him well before our language crutches Bill & Isabelle show up.  I’m not feeling competent in my French (plus, I knew my language crutches were going to come round the corner of the building in a minute), so all I say to M’sieur is “bonjour”.  This is their entrance:



When Bill arrives, he explains that he and Isabelle live in Toulouse, but that we were visiting from America.  Seems to work.  The old man begins his explanation of the vineyard and one of the first things he does is to point out towards the vines.  Here, as well as everywhere in Bordeaux, the landscape is more groomed than Gaillac.  Our host outlines with his arm the extent of his vines and points out the house beyond, on the hill.  It’s Chateau d’Yquem, the most famous Sauternes.  He is adjacent to them, which can’t help but be a good thing.  This picture is looking towards their field and the chateau.
 
 

Six cars of Chinese tourists, who all seem to speak good French, arrive a few minutes after he starts.  They join in with us and our host proceeds to give us a 1 ½ hour talk and tour of the property.  About the only thing we don’t see is the cave.  It’s a great experience, and we head back to our temporary home in Broze knowing a lot more about how to taste Sauternes than we’d ever expected. 

Saint Emilion Bordeaux Tasting – Sat Oct 20


Breakfast goes on for an hour and a half.  We catch up with Bill and his family.  We plan the day.  We get on the road for the 12 minute drive from the Chateau/hotel back in to Saint Emilion. When we get there, Bill wants to plan what we’re going to do for lunch.  OK, he does have little kids with him.  But, I don’t even usually eat breakfast, so planning out lunch almost immediately after finishing breakfast just wasn’t on my radar.  But, we find a simple place to eat.

We walk through Saint Emilion, again.  Maxine buys the macarons, which Isabelle had told us were a specialty.  We discover that a)they're just the shells, no filling, b)they're in a row on waxed paper, and c) their half's.  They taste fine, but I guess some specialties aren't worth pursuing.

At lunch Bill’s 15 year old flirts with our 20 year old waitress.  She’s very good and Bill offers her a job as a nanny after she tells him that her contract is over at the end of the month.  We’ll see where this goes…

Our first tasting is a disappointment.  Chateau Ferrand.  Bill and Isabelle are customers.  They’ve been there before.  And bought wine.  We do find out that 2005 and 2009 were good years, and that you shouldn't buy wine from a "7" year.  OK, but we’re given a very short talk by the sommelier, who pours us two wines than ushers us out the door.  He does explain something that we'd been curious about for the last month.  Some farmers have been busily picking grapes and their vines were bare.  Other fields, possibly belonging to other farmers, had remained unpicked.  And we got the idea that leaving the grapes on the vines lets them mature further and pick up more sugars and more flavors.  But, what had the last couple days rain done to that strategy.  Our guide tells us that the farmers who've waited have pretty much screwed themselves.  Their grapes will have picked up water, so the wine will be less impressive.

As to Chateau Ferrand, because of the limited visit, we'd have to say NOT RECOMMENDED!  But, a very nice tasting room...  And tastefully illuminated barrel room...
 

 

We do luck out with our second tasting.  Bill’s 15 year old is named Robin, and we pass a sign for a wine maker, Chateau Robin.  (If I understood properly at the tourist office, there are 200 wineries in the immediate area).  It looks like someone’s house, not a Chateau.  And a regular house, not a grand one.  But, we stop so we can get some pictures of Robin in front of the sign.  Isabelle looks up the phone number for Chateau Robin and calls while we all sit in the car.  Someone answers and says “come on in”.  A sixty year old man ushers us into his kitchen…  This is feeling just a bit weird to me.  There are three other people at the table and for a while I assume that they’re friends of his over for a visit and that we’ve interrupted.  But, it becomes clear that they’re just other tourists.  I mention all of this to Bill and his reply is that of course the guy would welcome us in, it’s a Saturday afternoon and it’s his business.  Good point!



Midway through the tasting our host’s wife as well as his mother come in.  The mother takes over our tasting as the other guests head outside to the ‘cave’ with the man who’d let us in.  It actually works to have mom there.  She’s focused on us, which makes it easier to understand.  And when Robin comes in and she’s told the story that we’d wound up here because of his name, she pulls out a special wine glass and offers him a taste!  This is NOT the sort of experience Maxine and I would have had on our own.  And, once more we’re grateful that we can share France with Bill and Isabelle to help us.

We go back to the hotel and have a pre-dinner glass of Chateau Robin wine in Bill’s room.  Then a great dinner!  The hotel actually surprised us in this regard.  It’s off season and there aren’t all that many people visiting the area, perhaps 9 of the hotel rooms are occupied.  So, we didn’t expect much from the restaurant.  But, it was great.  Good food, a nice time visiting with our friends and a bottle of the Bordeaux wine produced on the grounds of the hotel.