shewhomust: (bibendum)
[personal profile] shewhomust
We stayed a couple of nights at the Cheval Blanc, Chamouilley, a pleasant village beside the canal. The hotel is also the bar-café on the square, and the lady who I assume to be the proprietress was behind the bar when we arrived, showed us into the restaurant in the evening, and was back in the café the following morning at breakfast. I don't know if she ever sleeps, but she was smiling and helpful despite the long hours.

Dinner on our first night was:
Aperitif maison
kir pétillant, made with sparkling wine and a discreet quantity of mirabelle liqueur - subtle and delicious

Foie gras maison
served with pain d'épices grillé and compôte de mirabelles - yes, more mirabelles. I like mirabelles (and besides, we were almost in Lorraine). Foie gras with gingerbread toast was a new one to me, but worked extremely well.

Pavé de boeuf aux morilles
steak in a dark, rich mushroom sauce, with a little bundle of green beans tied round with bacon, half a tomatoe with some sort of herb topping, and mousseline potatoes - all very tasty, but the least interesting course of the meal

Cheeseboard
from which we were served with quite alarmingly generous quantities of cheese: I chose Munster, Chaource, Reblochon and the most local selection, a Troyes persillée - a cream cheese with parsley, (and garlic too, so that the end result was not unlike Boursin

Chocolate indecipherable
You may all mock me now, but I can't read my note of the name. It was, however, a fine chocolate mousse on a crunchy base, with something syrupy at its centre, which I know from the menu to have been apricot liqueur, but could not have identified by taste. This was served with one of the many ices of the trip, a mandarin sorbet.

And there was a delicious bottle of Madiran 1998 to drink - I know ten years is not an exceptional age for a wine, but it's exceptional for us, and it had matured well.

ETA: For the purposes of the "Which wine with which food?" game, I note that I drank the last of the apéritif with the foie gras, as you would a dessert wine, and it worked beautifully. I don't thinbk it would have been as happy with the Madiran, which had softened somewhat from the levels of tannin I'm used to in younger Madiran, but not that much!

Date: 2008-11-26 10:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] artistatlarge.livejournal.com
That sounds like a died-and-gone-to-gastro-heaven kind of meal.

Thank you very much indeed for sharing. :-)

Date: 2008-11-27 10:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] durham-rambler.livejournal.com
Indeed it was, except we are still here and I have the credit card bill in front of me. Two nights, room for two, breakfast for two, dinner for two, came to €250.60 which at the exchange rate I got at the time (rather better than now) was £198.56. That would be $402 (Canadian) or $337.50 (US). The two dinners with wine probably came to about two-thirds of that.

Date: 2008-12-01 11:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] artistatlarge.livejournal.com
Absolutely worth it, in my biased opinion.

Now I really wish I'd blogged our anniversary dinner at l'Auberge du Pommier here in Toronto: my very first experience with proper foie gras, one bite of which caused me to swoon, "now I get it..."

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