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FOOD AND DRINK

Discover France’s new €250m ‘temple of gastronomy and wine’

Devotees of French food and wine can flock to a new temple following the opening of a gastronomy and wine complex in the capital of France's central Burgundy region, Dijon.

Discover France's new €250m 'temple of gastronomy and wine'
A man prepares his butcher’s shop in the culinary village of the new Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie et du Vin in Dijon. Photo by JEFF PACHOUD / AFP

“It’s astounding. It’s a marriage of gastronomy, wine, culture and education,” said former French president Francois Hollande during whose tenure the project was launched.

“It’s not unique in France. It’s unique in the world,” he added at the inauguration.

The city famed for its mustard and rolling vineyards hopes to lure one million visitors a year to the site resembling a village with expositions, a culinary school, shops, restaurants and even a cinema.

“I have no doubt that one million is a completely attainable objective,” Socialist Dijon mayor Francois Rebsamen told AFP, adding that Dijon boasted 3.5 million annual visitors before the Covid-19 pandemic hit.

The project began after UNESCO added the “French gastronomic meal” to its intangible cultural heritage list in 2010.

The inclusion on the prestigious list sparked the launch of sites in Paris, Lyon, Tours and Dijon designed to showcase different aspects of the country’s rich food and wine culture.

A professor leads a cooking lesson to students of the Ferrandi culinary school of the new Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie et du Vin. Photo by JEFF PACHOUD / AFP

Meals are a big deal in France, where 2,000 books on wine or cooking are published every year.

The French will typically sit down together to tuck in unlike Americans “who often eat standing next to the kitchen counter” and alone, says Tours University sociologist Jean-Pierre Corbeau.

The gastronomic meal is “this ritual good food that brings together the French to celebrate the good life together”, said European Institute for the History and Cultures of Food founder Francois Chevrier in his book on the Dijon complex.

The massive Dijon site spreads across 6.5 hectares and combines modern structures with buildings with glazed tiles from the mediaeval times.

“We wanted to enhance the existing heritage while adding contemporary architectural touches to it,” architect Anthony Bechu said.

The overall project cost €250 million with the private sector financing 90 percent.

Visitors can meander through four sections on the history of French meals, baking, Burgundy’s vineyards and the art of cooking.

The Cave de la Cité. Photo by JEFF PACHOUD / AFP

Once an appetite is worked up, tourists can eat to their heart’s content in two restaurants run by triple-starred chef Eric Pras.

And they can wash the meal down with wine from a cellar that offers “one of the widest selections in the world, with 250 wines by the glass among more than 3,000 references,” according to its director Anthony Valla.

The site also includes a butcher’s shop and a bakery, an “experimental kitchen” offering demonstrations and workshops, and a branch of the world-renowned Ferrandi culinary school.

Such a huge project has raised some eyebrows, especially after the Lyon site closed down only nine months after its inauguration.

“We learned our lesson from the failure of Lyon, which offered something a little down-market and very expensive,” Dijon mayor Rebsamen said.

The Dijon site includes “a whole cultural and heritage section that is free”, he added.

The French-style meal is in danger because “people think cooking is a waste of time”, according to Paris-Sorbonne professor Jean-Robert Pitte.

Pitte is one of the architects of the campaign that led to the UNESCO inscription, designed to restore “the taste for cooking”.

He believes “eating well is not superfluous, but necessary for health, sociability, the economy and culture”.

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FOOD AND DRINK

Did Austria really invent France’s iconic croissant?

It's often said that Austria in fact invented the croissant - and some even claim that Marie Antoinette brought it to France - but the real story is a little more complicated than that.

Did Austria really invent France's iconic croissant?

The croissant is probably the food product most closely associated with France (tied with the baguette) but is it even French? Well, it depends on how you look at it.

The French croissant is usually credited to a couple of Austrian migrants – August Zang and Ernest Schwartzer, who opened a bakery in Paris in the 1830s. They specialised in the pastries and cakes of their homeland and are generally agreed to have popularised the kipferl in France.

Listen to the team from The Local discussing croissants in the latest episode of the Talking France podcast. Listen here or on the link below

The kipferl shows up in records in Austria at least as early as the 13th century, so it definitely pre-dates the croissant.

In the 1800s the French went crazy for Austrian pastries, which is why we talk about viennoiseries (referencing Austrian capital Vienna) to refer to breakfast pastries such as croissants, pain au chocolat and pain au raisin.

But is a kipferl a croissant? The original recipe called for the roll to be made of bread, not pastry, and modern recipes call for a light yeast dough, often scented with vanilla.

Delicious, undoubtedly, but a croissaint . . .

It wasn’t until the early 20th century that the French baker Sylvain Claudius Goy created a recipe using puff pastry instead.

His instructions specified that the croissant be made of rolled puff pastry, laminated with butter to create layers – and this is how modern day croissants are made.

The pastry layers are what creates the distinctive crumb-scattering deliciousness that is a croissant.

So did the Austrians invent the croissant or did they just invent a curved bread roll? Or should France and Austria share the credit and chalk this one up to another great success from international cooperation?

One thing that is certainly French is the name – croissant in French simply means ‘crescent’ and refers to the shape of the breakfast pastry.

It’s used in other contexts too – for example Le Mouvement international de la Croix-Rouge et du Croissant-Rouge – is how the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement is referred to in French.

And Marie Antoinette?

This historical rumour is almost certainly rubbish.

Although Marie Antoinette was indeed Austrian, the first record of the croissant does not appear in Paris until at least 40 years after her death and the two Austrian bakers credited with introducing the croissant weren’t even born when she met her end on the guillotine in 1793.

Also, she never said ‘let them eat cake’.

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