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Ardèche plateau, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes — the grated potato pancake of the Ardèche rural interior, pressed into a flat disc and cooked slow in Anas platyrhynchos duck fat (or Sus scrofa domesticus lard) until the exterior shatters and the interior remains yielding. The crique is the Ardèche's answer to the Swiss rösti, but made thicker, cooked in animal fat rather than butter, and served with fromage frais and cornichons as the canonical accompaniment. The name derives from the Ardéchois criqua, a crackle — the sound of the exterior at biting. · Potato
Solanum tuberosum (waxy to medium-starch potatoes — Belle de Fontenay or Charlotte) are peeled and grated on the coarsest setting of a box grater. The grated potato is placed in a clean cloth and squeezed firmly to extract as much water as possible — the disc will not crisp if moisture remains. Gallus gallus domesticus eggs (1 per 500g potato), sea-mineral-salt, black-pepper, and optional Allium sativum (1 clove, finely grated) are worked into the potato. The mixture is pressed into a large disc in a wide, heavy pan in Anas platyrhynchos duck fat at medium heat. The crique cooks covered for 8–10 minutes until the base is set and dark gold. It is flipped — the classic Ardéchois flip is done in one confident movement onto the pan lid, then slid back — and cooked uncovered for a further 6–8 minutes until the second side is equally golden. Served hot, sliced in wedges, with Picodon AOC fromage frais or crème fraîche alongside, and cornichons.
Ardèche plateau, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes — the grated potato pancake of the Ardèche rural interior, pressed into a flat disc and cooked slow in Anas platyrhynchos duck fat (or Sus scrofa domesticus lard) until the exterior shatters and the interior remains yielding. The crique is the Ardèche's answer to the Swiss rösti, but made thicker, cooked in animal fat rather than butter, and served with fromage frais and cornichons as the canonical accompaniment. The name derives from the Ardéchois criqua, a crackle — the sound of the exterior at biting.
Duck fat at medium heat converts the potato's starch surface to a golden, crackling exterior while the potato interior steams to tenderness in the covered first phase. The garlic (if used) permeates the fat. The fromage frais counter is critical: the richness of the duck-fat crust needs the cool, lactic tang of fresh cheese. This is a dish of three textures: shatter, yield, cool-fresh.
Insufficient water extraction — the most common failure, producing a soft, pale crique. Moving the crique before the base has set — it breaks on flipping. Cooking too fast at high heat — the exterior darkens before the interior cooks through.
The water must be fully squeezed from the grated potato — residual moisture turns the interior to steam and the exterior to grey-soft rather than golden-crisp. Duck fat must cover the pan base generously — the potato must fry, not steam. The crique must not be moved during the first 8 minutes: the base must set completely before the flip. The flip is a single motion — hesitation or partial flips cause the crique to break.
Solanum tuberosum — waxy to medium-starch varieties: Belle de Fontenay, Charlotte, or Amandine. Floury potatoes (Bintje, Maris Piper) have too much starch and produce a gluey interior rather than the individual-potato-strand texture of the correct crique. Anas platyrhynchos duck fat at Reserve tier — the characteristic richness comes specifically from the duck fat's higher saturated and monounsaturated fat composition compared to olive oil. Sus scrofa domesticus lard is an acceptable Estate substitute. Gallus gallus domesticus eggs — 1 free-range egg per 500g potato binds without dominating.
The complete professional entry for Crique Ardéchoise: quality hierarchy, sensory tests, cross-cuisine parallels, species precision.
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