The
cuisine
of
Burgundy
is known
for its
richness,
due in
large
part to
two
factors:
the
region's
heavy
red
wines
and its
possession
of one
of the
world's
finest
breeds
of beef
cattle,
the
Charollais.
The
wines
are used
in the
preparation
of the
sauces
which
earn a
dish the
designation
of
à
la
bourguignonne
.
Essentially,
this
means
cooked
in a red
wine
sauce to
which
baby
onions,
mushrooms
and
lardons
(pieces
of bacon)
are
added.
The
classic
Burgundy
dishes
cooked
in this
manner
are
bSuf
bourguignon
and
coq au
vin
.
Another
term
which
frequently
appears
on menus
is
meurette,
also a
red wine
sauce
but made
without
mushrooms
and
flambéed
with a
touch of
marc
brandy.
It is
used
with
eggs,
fish and
poultry
as well
as red
meat.
Snails
(
escargots
) are
hard to
avoid in
Burgundy,
and the
local
style of
cooking
them
involves
stewing
them for
several
hours in
the
white
wine of
Chablis
with
shallots,
carrots
and
onions,
then
stuffing
them
with a
butter
of
garlic
and
parsley
and
finishing
them off
in the
oven.
Other
specialities
include
the
parsley-flavoured
ham (
jambon
persillé
); hams
from the
Morvan
hills
cooked
in a
cream
saupiquet
sauce;
calf's
head (
tête
de veau
, or
sansiot
); a
pauchouse
of river
fish (that
is,
poached
in white
wine
with
onions,
butter,
garlic
and
lardons
); a
poussin
from
Bresse;
a saddle
of hare
(
rable de
lièvre à
la Piron
); and a
potée
bourguignonne
, or
soup of
vegetables
cooked
in the
juices
of long-simmered
bacon
and pork
bits.
Like
other
regions
of
France,
Burgundy
produces
a
variety
of
cheeses
. The
best-known
are the
creamy
white
Chaource,
the soft
St-Florentin
from the
Yonne
valley,
the
orange-skinned
Époisses
and the
delicious
goat's
cheeses
from the
Morvan.
And then
there is
gougère
, a kind
of
cheesecake,
best
eaten
warm
with a
glass of
Chablis.