Provenance Technique Library

Camargue Techniques

2 techniques from Camargue cuisine

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Camargue
Catigot d'Anguilles de Camargue
Camargue, Bouches-du-Rhône — the wild eel stew of the Camargue wetlands, where Anguilla anguilla (European eel) has been harvested from the brackish étangs since Roman occupation. The catigot is a fisherman's preparation: eel cut into sections, braised in red wine with garlic, wild herbs, and sometimes tomato, the sauce thickened by the eel's own body fat and collagen.
Live Anguilla anguilla (200–400g) are killed immediately before cooking by a blow to the head, then the tail end is nailed to a board and the skin stripped from the back of the head downward in one pull. The skinned eel is cleaned, rinsed in cold water, and cut into 6–8cm sections. The sections are dried and browned in Olea europaea oil in a heavy pan until the exterior caramelises. The eel is removed and the base built: diced onion, Allium sativum, tomato concassé, bay, wild thyme, and flat-leaf parsley. A generous pour of Camargue or Languedoc red wine — rough, tannic, structured — is added and reduced by half. The eel sections are returned, barely covered with water, and braised covered at a gentle simmer for 25–30 minutes. The catigot is served in deep bowls with the braising liquid, thick country bread, and Camargue sea-mineral-salt for the table.
seafood
Fougasse d'Aigues-Mortes
Aigues-Mortes, Gard — the anise-scented olive-oil flatbread of the Crusader port on the Camargue plain, baked for the winter solstice and the Fête de la Saint-Louis (August 25) commemorating Louis IX's departure for the Seventh Crusade in 1248. The anise seed is the historical trace of the Levantine spice trade that passed through this port; the olive oil is from the Costières de Nîmes plain that surrounds it. The Fougasse d'Aigues-Mortes is a distinct preparation from the Fougasse Provençale (herb-and-olive, ladder-shaped) — this version is thin, crisp, and scented only with anise and sea-mineral-salt.
A lean dough — Triticum aestivum flour, fresh yeast, warm water, Olea europaea extra-vierge, and Camargue sea-mineral-salt — is made with whole anise seeds (Pimpinella anisum) incorporated at the mix stage, not added to the surface. The dough rests 90 minutes. It is then rolled or stretched very thin (5–6mm) into an oval, the surface incised with diagonal cuts that open during baking to create the characteristic leaf pattern, and brushed generously with Olea europaea. Baked at 220°C for 12–15 minutes until the surface is blistered, golden, and the incisions have opened wide. The finished fougasse is eaten warm, broken by hand, sprinkled with Fleur de Sel de Camargue at service. A second version (fougasse sucrée) substitutes caster-sugar for salt and is made for the Saint-Louis fête.
bread