Melon de Cavaillon
Cavaillon, Vaucluse — the charentais-type muskmelon cultivated in the alluvial plain of the Durance and Luberon foothills since at least the 15th century, when Pope Clement V's court at Avignon introduced the Italian cultivation technique. The melon's status as the defining fruit of Provençal summer is inseparable from its soil: the sandy-loam terroir of Cavaillon absorbs the Durance warmth and produces a sugar concentration unmatched elsewhere.
Melon de Cavaillon is not a recipe in the transformative sense — the preparation is a study in restraint. The ripe melon (harvested 0–24 hours prior, at the moment the peduncle shows a natural separation crack) is served at ambient temperature, cut in half, seeds scooped, with Banyuls natural sweet wine poured into the hollow at table. The classic accompaniment is jambon de Bayonne: the dry-cured ham's salt against the melon's sugar. No dressing, no garnish, no acid. The melon must be served at room temperature (18–20°C) — refrigeration suppresses the volatile aromatics entirely.