The end of a great french culinary institution | thearticle
The end of a great french culinary institution | thearticle"
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Of course I had been aware of the rot, but maybe not of the extent to which it had set in. These days, when I am in France I am in Provence and I shop chiefly in the local markets.
Sometimes, when I go to a big supermarket in Carpentras and peer into the baskets of my fellow shoppers, I am horrified by what they contain. The French have changed shape: they are no
longer slender or stylish, and many are actually obese. It is not hard to see a correlation between their physical appearance and the industrially produced food they so willingly consume. It
was not always thus. Before the Americanisation of their lives, many French people shopped on an ad hoc basis. The streets were filled with food shops, and there were regular markets. One
great boon to people returning to an empty fridge was the local _charcutier_. The translation “pork butcher” hardly does it justice. All _charcutiers _were different, but the core range
remained the same: fresh or cooked pork or ham, pâté, sausages both fresh and dried, prepared salads and cooked dishes that could be simply reheated. The selection had remained much the same
for a century or more and is admirably described in the pages of Zola’s _Le ventre de Paris_. The larger, grander _charcutiers_ added a selection of wine and spirits, cheeses, _pâtisserie_
— you name it. Remaining open until 7.30 at night, you could pop in on your way home. There was at least one in every main road. When I lived in Montparnasse in Paris there was a reasonable
one in the boulevard, but up in the rue Delambre there was a great chap who sold _onglets _and_ bavettes_. I can still see the infinite care with which he prepared my _onglet_, opening it
like a book with his knife and trimming off the fat. He was also open on Monday, when all but the neighbourhood horse butcher was closed. French people claim they use supermarkets because
they are convenient: they can park their car, get everything in the same place, fill up the boot… but nothing was ever as convenient as the _charcutier_, and to be honest, the butcher, the
_pâtissier_, the baker and the candlestick maker were all next door to the_ charcutier_ anyway. You didn’t need to dig out the car and go for a long drive. This year my French itinerary has
been slightly different. I was in Reims in April and Arras in September. In Reims there were bakers and _pâtissiers_, but apart from a cheesemonger and a shop near the cathedral selling the
famous local ham there was little else of interest; just tatty clothes. Only on the last day did I find a clutch of specialised shops around the covered market in Boulingrin. I had less time
in Arras, and I located nothing on the arcades around the city’s three big squares. I am sure in the past there were half a dozen _charcutiers_ in and around the centre. Then, at the time
of the July heatwave I was in Paris with my family. I thought we might pick up a few things for a picnic near the Marché St Honoré: formerly the gastronomic island at the centre of the 1st
_arrondissement_, but the best we could find was a small supermarket. Later by the church of St Roch I pointed out a building where I had once lived in a squat. It was six floors above one
of the largest and grandest _charcutiers _in Paris. That _charcutier_ had been replaced by a clothes shop. Of course the _grandissime_ Fauchon is still there on the place de la Madeleine but
its rival Hédiard closed for renovation a few years back and shows no sign of reopening. In the eighties the Soviet press published a picture of the Christmas queue outside Fauchon to prove
the French had food shortages just like them; but they were lining up for foie gras and truffles, not potatoes. At my favourite _charcutier_, Coesnon in the rue Dauphine, they would bring
out little _pâtés en croûte_ to feed customers in the queue waiting for their famous _boudins blancs truffés_. Coesnon was one of the first to go: it pulled down its shutters some time in
the nineties. I spoke to Jean-François Mitanchey from the Association des Chevaliers de Saint Antoine, the body that represents artisan _charcutiers_ throughout France. He pointed out that
the process of industrialising the food chain had claimed many victims, not just _charcutiers_, but butchers, bakers and _pâtissiers_. He might have added restaurants too, for more and more
of those have become chains profiting from modern technology to cut costs. His members continued to maintain quality, but he had to admit that in many parts of France the _charcutier _was no
more. In the wealthy Côte d’Azur, for example, he could name but two artisan _charcutiers_. The _charcutier_ was still represented in Paris and in France’s gastronomic capital of Lyon and
remained a cultural entity in Touraine, the Franche-Comté, Alsace-Lorraine and the Landes. He was based in Dijon where there were eight. Twenty years ago there were 47 or 48, and forty years
ago, 67. In the meantime, France has forfeited a good deal of what it meant to be France. For readers travelling to Paris who would like to see a proper _charcutier_ and experience its
range of products, there are the several branches of the Maison Vérot.
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