Match of the week

Normandy cider and creamy sauces

Normandy cider and creamy sauces

Our final port of call on our recent French trip was a modest family run restaurant at Bourneville called Risle-Seine, a few minutes off the autoroute between Le Havre and Rouen (and therefore ideally placed for a last minute lunch before catching the ferry). It has no great pretensions but does what it does really well: simple classic country food served with decent, well-priced wines - and cider, we discovered this time.

As an aperitif I had a glass of gentle semi-sparkling cidre fermier from a local producer M. Lambert of St Thurien. French farmhouse cider has that classic cider apple flavour but tends to be rounder, sweeter and slightly less bitter than English cider and it was really delicious served with a feuilleté of asparagus with a rich cream and chive sauce.

We tend to be so paranoid about cream these days that one forgets just how delicious unpasteurised cream and a good creamy sauce can be. As with other sauces it becomes the most important part of the dish so far as choosing an accompanying drink is concerned, leading you towards a cider or a full-bodied white such as Chardonnay rather than a more aromatic white or a red. The combination would work equally well whether the sauce accompanies asparagus, chicken or salmon or indeed contains cider as an ingredient as in a creamy chicken and cider casserole or pie.

And for value for money you just can’t beat cider: my glass cost an extraordinary 2.10€ - just £1.42 ($2.79)!

Savoury pancakes and sparkling cider

Savoury pancakes and sparkling cider

The English - and very delicious - way with pancakes is to serve them with granulated sugar and lemon (a dessert that pairs well with gently sparkling, sweet Asti or Moscato d’Asti). But an even better match is the French - or more specifically Breton - tradition of serving savoury pancakes with sparkling cider, a vastly underrated drink.

In Brittany savoury pancakes or crèpes tend to be made with a proportion of buckwheat flour which gives them a nutty, savoury, faintly bitter flavour that picks up on the bitter apple notes in genuine farmhouse cider. Fillings such as cheese, ham and tricky-to-match spinach all work well.

When I was in France recently I was amazed at the range of artisanal ciders in the supermarkets, and at the ridiculously cheap prices they were charging - in some cases as little as 2 or 3 euros (£1.35-£2 or $2.60-$4) for a 75 cl bottle.

In the UK I’d recommend Duché de Longueville from Normandy (available from Sainsbury’s) or a home grown sparkling cider from Gospel Green, near Haselmere in Surrey (+44(0)1428 654120) which sells in local off-licences and farm shops and also from Partridges in London. It is also quite widely stocked in Brighton, they say.

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