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NATIONAL FRENCH WEEK: 

LA SEMAINE DU FRANÇAIS

NOVEMBER 5-11, 2007 & 2008


CUISINE

French version

Food and food-related activities are the mainstay of any French classroom.  French cuisine represents the epitome of fine dining all over the world.  Food is also one of the most basic elements necessary to human life and is charged with all sorts of personal, familial, and cultural symbolism.  Food can signify love, sharing, celebration, pleasure, as well as mere nutrition.  Americans do not often reflect on this metaphorical aspect of food which is often seen as mere fuel.  The French, however, are much more cognizant of the social and symbolic value of food.  Despite the rise of fast food and the increased popularity of convenience foods in France, Paris, in particular, remains the gastronomic capital of the world.  In France, chefs give presentations to school children and participate in programs to "awaken their palates."

Given the less-than-ideal eating habits of many American children and young adults, National French Week offers an opportunity not only to educate them about nutrition, food preparation, dégustation, and appreciation of food but to allow them to share this new-found knowledge with others.  It also provides an opportunity to collaborate with home economics teachers to prepare dishes, evaluate nutritional value, or present culinary creations to the public.

Below are some suggestions for food-related activities that can be organized during National French Week:

ORGANIZING A FRENCH MEAL

For twelve years I organized an annual French dinner for my university students, the last one consisting of  a nine-course meal for 32 people.  Every year at the beginning of second semester, students voted on a menu and date for the dinner during the month of March.  I then tabulated the results, assembled the recipes, and determined the cost of the meal per person.  Students paid usually $6-$8, and we invited other French faculty and Francophone foreign students to attend as well.   Students signed up to help shop, prepare the dishes, and clean up.

On Friday afternoon, one or two students accompanied me to do the shopping.  Depending on the dishes chosen, students came to my home on Saturday throughout the day (and sometimes on Friday if a dish required overnight refrigeration) to prepare the various plats.  We even tried making our own baguettes one year, but oven space was too limited to allow us to bake enough loaves and prepare the other dishes which required oven time.  Dishes like soups and stews could simmer away in crock pots or electric roasters, freeing the stove top and oven for dishes that had to be prepared just prior to serving.

Individual menus were printed, and each student received a copy of all the recipes.  The table setting was as authentic as possible, with tablecloths, cloth napkins, real dishes and silverware.  Students were responsible for serving the dish they had prepared.  We served Évian or Vittel rather than wine since all students were not of legal drinking age, although we cooked with wine.  Fresh ingredients were used whenever possible, and all dishes were made from scratch.  The meal lasted at least two hours, and, for some reason, there were never many leftovers.

The last two years, we were featured in the local newspaper as "Cooks of the Week" with the menu of our dinner and recipes printed as well as photos of the cooks at work.  Although the logistics, particularly for seating and cooking time, were often complicated, this was one of the most popular events to which students looked forward from one year to the next.  It is often one they reminisce about when we meet years later, and they still use the recipes.

A typical menu included: French onion soup, crab-stuffed avocadoes or bouchées à la reine, chicken breasts with white wine and cream sauce, stuffed mushrooms or carottes à la crème, aligot or pommes dauphines, salad, cheese, mousse or éclairs au chocolat, Konakry (a jelly-roll cake with raspberry jam filled with crème pâtissière and pineapple and with an apricot glaze) or cherry clafoutis, and, of course, café after the meal.

Jayne Abrate
 

Reprinted from the AATF National Bulletin, Special Issue, Vol. 24 No. 5 (May 1999)

For more information contact AATF National Headquarters, Mailcode 4510, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901; Tel: (618) 453-5731; Fax: (618) 453-5733; E-mail:
abrate@siu.edu


Created: April 25, 1999
Last update: December 6, 2007

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