The Fox and the Truffles

While staying in a Provencal village near Mirabel aux Baronnies, our good friend Adrienne Jones sent us the following email a few days ago. Adrienne and her husband Cecil have owned a house near Mirabel for about 10 years and, although they can and do visit Provence throughout the year, they always schedule a visit in January and February. It’s one of their favorite times of year in Provence.

“Nothing says lovin’like somethin’ from the oven….”
Sarrians, January 24, 2012

Mes chers amis,

In a display of courage worthy of the Great Generation, I am proud to report that my Silver Fox signed up for a cooking course Monday night offered by a local master chef!

Pascal Poulin is au piano (manning the stove) every night at Le Dolium (http://www.dolium-restaurant.com/Restaurant-Le-Dolium.html), his distinguished restaurant around the corner in Beaumes-de-Venise – every night, that is, except Mondays in the winter when he invites up to five students into his kitchen at 6 p.m. to learn to prepare a three-course seasonal menu. Spouses or lovers are invited to arrive around eight to enjoy the meal along with a table for four guinea pigs seated separately (we guess at a reduced price….something like agreeing to get your hair cut by a student at a beauty school).

Cecil and his classmates

Cecil had only two other students in his class: Jean-Paul, a fifth-generation vigneron (wine grower) who single-handedly cultivates, manicures, and harvests his 22 acres; and Timothy, a 10-year old going on 30, who is serious about cooking and was given the class as his first choice of a Christmas present. His charming, young, formerly Parisian parents own the ultra-romantic Beaumes-de-Venise B&B, “Le Clos Saint Saourde” (http://www.leclossaintsaourde.com) and joined us for dinner. It was somewhat amazing to be in the company of basically a child who was able to stay happily at the table until midnight (on a school night, no less) without drawing, playing video games, wandering about the restaurant, requiring a television, or importuning his parents to leave. And lest you get the idea he was some sort of pampered Fauntleroy, he is actually the second of four children and shares a room with his brother. Cecil claims Timothy wished to brook no special consideration, despite his young age and the fact that his apron came down to his ankles. He participated in boning the sea bass, but Pascal stopped at letting him wield the chalumeau (the special blow torch required to caramelize the foie gras crème brulee).

Monday night was the “Truffles Menu” in honor of truffles season, at its peak here from mid-January to mid-February. The Vaucluse, where we are, and the Dordogne, in the southwest, are the two main sources in France for what they reverentially call “black diamonds.”

Here is the menu Cecil learned to make:

  • Crème caramélisée au foie gras, truffes et bouquet de mache – an ingenious recipe like the crème brulée dessert we all know but made instead with foie gras dusted with sugar so you can caramelize the top with the special blow torch, enhanced with a green salad of mache and sliced truffles dressed with truffle-flavored olive oil – Out of this world!
  • Loup de Mediterranée, fèves et truffles noires – European sea bass, lima-like beans but better, and (more) black truffles – Super!
  • Tarte fine aux pommes et aux truffles– literally, an apple tarte with

    Tarte fine aux pommes et aux truffles

    shaved truffles, but what the description leaves out is the crème fraiche that makes it Oh So Good.  N.B. There were two differences between Pascal’s tarte and the one Cecil made two summers ago: (1) Pascal requires the apples be sliced razor thin, which my Fox discovered when he was required to scrap his first effort and start over: “Non non Cécil, pas comme ca,” (not so fast there, Buster); and (2) he uses less than half the sugar of the summer recipe.

It was graceful feat on the part of Pascal to balance the menu after the sweet first course. The wines were all from Baumes-de-Venise – a white for the first course and a redwith the fish!, and after the espresso, a fortified, florally fragrant Baumes-de-Venise muscat (the kind that makes your eyes roll around in your head after two sips, like cherries in a slot machine).

So there you have it – a bit of news from the rolling hills of Sarrians. We miss you lots already and hope you will send us your news too.

With love and hugs from Cecil and me,
xo Adrienne

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Photos of Mirabel aux Baronnies & Cairanne

Well, we’ve been back for almost a month and I have finally been able to carefully go through the photos I brought back. As a result, I have published two new photo galleries on my photography website — one of Mirabel aux Baronnies and the another of the village of Cairanne. Many of these photos were posted in this blog earlier, but they were of low quality since they were processed quickly on a computer with an inferior monitor.

– Rick

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Au revoir, Mirabel…until next time

View of dining room (in foreground) and kitchen (in background). They are ready for Francois and Christophe to work on while we are gone.

It’s hard to leave Chez Mirabel but its time for us to return home, and let François and Christophe work on the next stage of renovations. Martha and I covered the bedroom, terrace and living room furniture with protective plastic tarps while Rick patched the kitchen/dining room floor with mortar in preparation for the new tile floor that François will lay (the same tile as we used in the bedrooms).  Martha and Rick will return in March to the lovely new tile floor in kitchen and dining room, and a completely new bathroom on the lower level. They will supervise the installation of the new kitchen when they next come.

Thank you, Laura and Dick, for a fine bon voyage!

That evening, Dick and Laura surprised us with a bottle of Champagne and Laura’s delicious savory pinwheel pastries. A fine bon voyage! We continued the celebration by “dining in the Drôme” that evening. (Mirabel is located in the department called La Drôme Provençale.) We had earlier discovered that the nearby town of Nyons is full of charm and character, and we made a reservation at Le Petit Caveau.  Here is a video evocative of our fun, delicious evening: Le Petit Caveau video

Bathroom update: After considering many other options, we all decided we preferred cream-colored tumbled Travertine stone in both bathrooms. We ordered it from Jerome at our favorite tile store in Vaison la Romaine.  They come from Turkey and will arrive by boat. Jerome will be in touch with François to let him know the tiles are read for pick up.

–Dory

Tumbled travertine stone will be used in the bathrooms.

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We get to know our next door neighbors

In Nat and Valle's dining room for apertifs and conversation

We had the good fortune to meet the folks who live in the big house directly across from us.  We often admired the beautiful persimmon tree in their garden from our terrace level sitting room window.  Martha met Nat one morning as he was entering his garden through the gate on our lane.  We wanted their permission to prune their large rose bush growing into one of the windows of the bedroom facing the impasse between our two houses.  One morning, after Martha talked with Nat, we arrived to find that the bush was pruned. We discovered that Nat (89) and his wife, Valle, had pruned it for us!  When we found out, we knocked on their door, with a bottle of Rasteau wine in hand, to thank them.  They invited us in for drinks – what a joy it was to see their beautiful home, filled with art and antiques, and engage in conversation with these two gracious and fascinating people.  The evening warmed our hearts. Nat told us of his work as a French resistance fighter during WWII and his capture and internment at Dachau.  His daughter, an accomplished artist, created a book of drawings in response to her father’s experience. Her images are deeply moving and powerful. Nat and Valle gave us a copy of her book – we treasure both it, and their friendship, greatly.

Valle and Dory - I love her glasses!

–Dory

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Renovation marathon

The village aglow with early morning sunlight.

As our days in Mirabel dwindled down to the last few, we stepped up our efforts. One morning Rick arrived at 6 am in order to finish the tiling two of the bedrooms! On our last day of work, we were greeted with beautiful golden early morning light in Mirabel.

Our wonderful craftsmen: Christophe (on the left), is our electrician/plumber, and Francois (on the right) is our mason.

To prepare for the work of our electrician and plumber, Christophe Lopez, and mason, François Zamora, we had alot to do. They will be working on the house after we leave. We hope to have one bathroom fully remodeled by François and Christophe before Rick and Martha return in March, and all the electrical changes completed throughout the house. We have enjoyed working with François and Christophe as together we problem-solved how to make the improvements, updates and renovations we wanted. We feel very lucky to have them work for us. We’re happy that François lives close by in Mirabel with his family.

Two days before D-day (departure day), Martha and I were finally able to move a little of the furniture into two of the bedrooms. We were very excited to have gotten to this point. It was fun imagining the next time we come when we’ll actually be able to sleep at Chez Mirabel. We put the wrought iron queen bed frame in the master bedroom, along with a large wooden bureau and reading chair.  The wooden sleigh bed fit perfectly in the middle bedroom, and we found a chest of drawers just the right size to fill the niche we created just for this purpose. The Italian floor tiles create a beautiful setting for the furniture.

–Dory

Master bedroom with wrought iron bed frame, ready to be assembled next time we come.

Bureau and chair in master bedroom

Master bedroom

Middle bedroom with sleigh bed frame.

Landing at the top of the stairs on bedroom level with day bed and desk and chair by the window.

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Progress Update

Rick takes out the kitchen sink and solders water line to prepare for our new kitchen installation.

We made big progress today!  Dory and Martha cleaned the tiles in the master and middle bedrooms after Rick finished laying the grout. They look beautiful. Rick then demolished the old kitchen sink cabinet and prepared the walls and floors for the installation of the new kitchen in March.  Martha and Dory took the plastic tarps off the living room furniture after painting the windows, ceiling and walls. We are starting to see the fruits of our labors!

–Dory

Martha cleans the tiles in master bedroom. We'll be ready to move in furniture soon!

The living room after painting walls, ceiling and windows.

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Dinner at Peter and Margaret’s

Fun dinner at Peter and Margaret's

Last night, we were all invited to dinner at Peter and Margaret Pigeon’s house. They live across the lane from Lynda and Jim in Cairanne.  Peter has been a wonderfully supportive mentor to us in our efforts to remodel the house in Mirabel. He has beautifully restored their historic home in Cairanne – all done with his own hands.  He has been most helpful to us as we figure out how to restore our home in nearby Mirabel. Dinner guests included the charming Danielle and Gerard, who live down the lane.  Gerard, after retiring as an engineer and physicist, researches and documents 18th century French handmade paper watermarks from the Limousin region. Here is his website: http://www.papetiers-filigranes.eu/  After a spirited evening, we walked home and exclaimed about the beautiful bright stars in the dark night sky. After a long day of painting woodwork and tiling floors, it was wonderful to enjoy a evening in such a delightful home with such convivial friends.

Danielle sent us this photo of our evening together.

–Dory


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Martha “hangs out” in Mirabel

Mar.tha paints the outside window sills

Martha, never to shirk a challenge, manages to paint the living room window casing by standing on the windowsill on the second story of our house on the Rue de Charles de Gaulle. She received a thumbs up sign for her efforts from many villagers passing by. Bravo to Martha – the fresh white paint on the windowsills looks wonderful!

–Dory

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Harvesting Olives

Netting is placed under the trees to catch the olives.

Dick Gregory, our neighbor in nearby Piégon, sent us this photo of harvesting olives from the grove of trees at his home.  The green netting is spread out under the trees. When the branches are shaken, the olives are collected onto the netting.  From our rooftop terrace in Mirabel we can see olive groves on the hillside with the green netting in place for the November olive harvest.

Dick also sent us a photo of the delivery of his olives to the mill for pressing – 400 kilos which should give between 88 and 100 litres of oil.  He says it was a very poor year for the olives this year, too much rain (which we witnessed) followed by too much warm weather according to the farmers.  More than half of the olives fell off the trees.

–Dory

Dick's olive harvest

 

 


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Remodeling Progress Report

Coving on tile floor in master bedroom.

Our floor tiles are terracotta (the large one here). The others we are thinking of using in the upstairs bathroom. 

Rick finished installing the coving on the floor of the master bedroom today – hurray! We brought home some Italian tile samples from our favorite tile store in Vaison-la-Romaine, Couleur Carreaux. We are considering using these tiles in the upstairs bathroom. We set them on the painted bench in front of the house next door and voila! they are the same soft Provençal blue-green color.

–Dory

 

Marthe paints the dining room walls with "sable blanc" (white sand) paint.

Living room painted in Sable Blanc - the next step is to paint the windows in satin white paint.

 

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