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Tamar SHILOH VIDON

From foie gras to bûche de Noël: The essentials of a French holiday feast

A homemade French Yule log cake (Bûche de Noël). © Mitantig, Wikimedia Commons

Every year in France as elsewhere, people excitedly prepare well in advance for the Christmas and New Year’s festivities. As early as November, the avenues get all dressed up in tinsel and garlands of lights, and the streets are packed with holiday shoppers.

The traiteurs (delicatessens) and butchers have been busy taking orders for delicacies that will soon be set out on dinner tables, with people ready to splurge on expensive treats that are usually reserved for the end-of-year holidays. France’s Christmas and New Year’s feasts are anything but lean.

Since the Middle Ages, midnight Mass was preceded by a meagre meal; it was customary to eat only a little bread, fish or vegetable broth and drink a glass of water.

Christmas dinner was the big traditional meal served to worshippers after a long nighttime church service. Though fewer people attend midnight Mass, the tradition of a big Christmas and New Year’s meal has survived.

Here are some of the delicacies you might find at a French holiday feast.

Foie gras

Throughout December, supermarket shelves are stacked to the ceiling with cans and jars of foie gras, a French specialty of fattened duck or goose liver, often served as a starter as pâté on warm toast with some jam – or chutney – generally of onion or fig.

Though many have stopped eating foie gras because of the way the birds’ livers are artificially fattened through gavage, or force-feeding, it remains one of the most popular food items for a French Christmas meal, and France today is its largest producer by far.

Foie gras is a staple of French Christmas and New Year's feasts. © Eric Risberg, AP (file photo)

Literally translated as “fat liver”, foie gras originated in ancient Egypt before it spread throughout the Mediterranean and was adopted by the Greeks and then the Romans. Later, in the Middle Ages, the tradition of gavage was carried on by the Jewish population, since goose meat was viewed as a good source of nutrition and its cooking fat conformed to Jewish dietary laws.

The popularity of foie gras grew during the Renaissance, when it became associated with the kings of France. The term “foyes gras” was coined during the reign of Louis XIV and it was served at royal banquets under Louis XV, but it was Louis XVI who declared it the “dish of kings".

Foie gras is also often served pan roasted, or sliced over a cut of meat, or as a sauce. It is produced in winter, and its high price makes it a luxurious holiday product that is perfect for the year-end festivities.

For those who do not eat foie gras, other common starters at a French Christmas or New Year’s dinner are smoked salmon, scallops (coquilles Saint-Jacques), shrimp or oysters.

Oysters

The French are among the largest consumers of oysters in the world, with more than 100,000 tonnes of oysters served in France each year, a large portion of which make it to the Christmas dinner table.

Oysters displayed at Île de Ré in France. © Regis Duvignau, Reuters

Oysters are easy to find in France, with its long coastline, and are relatively inexpensive for a holiday dish. They are most often served fresh on shaved ice with a red wine vinaigrette with shallots (sometimes known as a mignonette) or simply a wedge of lemon. 

It is a French custom to eat oysters only during months that have an "r" in their names – September through April. This is not only because they taste best during this period but due to habit – long before refrigerated transportation methods were invented, oysters could only be shipped inland from the sea during the cold winter months if they were to stay fresh and not spoil before being served.

Salmon, lobster, crayfish and other seafood are also traditionally eaten in the winter for the same reason. But unlike oysters, these are relatively expensive – and again, a perfect luxury to splurge on during the end-of-year holidays. 

Duck, duck, goose (or turkey, capon or any other stuffed bird)

Much like in the United States or Great Britain, a traditional staple of a French Christmas dinner is the stuffed turkey.

Before the turkey arrived in Europe from the Americas in the 17th century, the French ate stuffed goose. But the turkey has mostly replaced the goose as the holiday bird of choice because it is less expensive, yet larger and meatier than a plain old chicken.

The turkey’s main advantage is its size (one can weigh up to 18 kilogrammes) for big family feasts. 

A smaller, but at least as succulent fowl that is very popular in France during the winter holidays is the capon (chapon in French), a cockerel that was neutered to render its meat fattier and usually weighing 3-4 kilogrammes, or else the even smaller guinea fowl (pintade).

Whatever bird is chosen, it is generally roasted and served with a special Christmas stuffing that traditionally includes chestnuts and mushrooms.

Other holiday main dishes in France include roasted meats, such as lamb or beef, and also game meat such as doe, wild boar, venison or pheasant, not usually eaten year-round by French people who are not hunters.

Bûche de Noël

Perhaps it is not quite the light dessert your gut might be pleading for after a meal of foie gras and stuffed capon, but no Christmas meal in France is complete without a bûche de Noël, otherwise known as the Yule log cake.

The bûche is an elaborate creation made up of a rolled sponge cake filled with cream – or ice cream – and frosted to look like tree bark or a log. It is a reminder of an earlier tradition, dating back to the Iron Age, when people in Europe would gather to welcome the winter solstice on December 21, the longest night of the year. Families would burn large logs, usually from fruit trees, anointed with wine and salt and decorated with pine cones, holly or ivy. The log kept the house warm, and its ashes were said to have medicinal benefits and to guard against evil.

Other Christmas desserts in France include gingerbread (pain d’épices) and chocolate. Traditionally, well-behaved children were given chocolate and other sweets on December 6, the day of Saint Nicholas, the patron saint of children. Gradually, the tradition of Saint Nicholas disappeared in most French regions except for the east, and the ritual giving of chocolate and gingerbread was incorporated into Christmas.

A bûche de Noël, or Yule log cake, is a French Christmas tradition. © Mitantig via Wikimedia Commons

A small price to pay

After a meal of stuffed goose, capon or other roasted meat – not to mention champagne flowing like water, good wine and a wide variety of rich desserts and chocolates – it’s not surprising that the French speak of a crise de foie (translated literally as “liver crisis” but more accurately as indigestion) at the end of the winter holiday season.

But a little crise de foie is a small price to pay for a fantastic festive meal (or several) with family and friends to ward off the winter chill.

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