We went to the outdoor food market in Saint-Aignan on Saturday for the first time since late December. We had a lot of either very cold or very rainy Saturdays in January, so we did our grocery shopping at Intermarché or SuperU instead of outdoors.
I stopped to talk to "Mme Doudouille" (my name for her — I don't know her real name) and buy a few things from her. Even though it is already February, I wanted to wish her a happy new year. The name Doudouille is pronounced [doo-DOO-yuh] with stress on that second syllable. Here's an old post with a lot of pictures of Mme Doudouille's market display.
So what did she tell me? She said, « Je voulais vous dire que bientôt je ne serai plus là le samedi matin. » Pretty soon I won't be coming here on Saturday mornings any more. My first thought was that she and her husband might be changing "shifts" — I know, for example, that he goes to the Friday market in Amboise to sell their products, and she does Saint-Aignan on Saturdays.
They live in or near Blois, she has told me, and they are present for markets in Blois several days out of the week. On Sundays, I believe, they are at the market in Meung-sur-Loire, between Blois and Orléans.
But no, she won't be working a different market on Saturdays, she said: « On déménage. On quitte la région. » They are moving to the area called the Auvergne. They will be about 75 miles south of the city called Clermont-Ferrand, and just a few miles north of the town called Aurillac. That's at least a four-hour drive from Saint-Aignan.
And they are in the process of buying a hôtel-restaurant down there. She gave me a brochure that shows pictures of the hotel. She said the sale is not absolutely final yet, but it seems it is going to happen.
I told her I was happy for them, but I was sad for us and for Saint-Aignan. I really enjoyed talking to her on Saturday mornings and eating the good sausages, pâtés, hams, slab bacon, half-salted pork, and rillons she sells.
I guess I'll be getting better acquainted with the other charcutier who works the Saint-Aignan market. His name is Mr Hentry, and his stand (it's a truck, actually) is just a few steps from Doudouille's at the Saint-Aignan market on Saturdays.
And maybe Walt and I will take a trip down to the Aurillac area later this year or next. We now know some people who will be running a nice hotel down there. It's the part of Auvergne called Le Cantal, and they make a cheese there also called le cantal that is one of our favorites.
It's not easy to lose a good boucher. I'll bet they'd love a visit from you!
ReplyDeleteMeilleurs voeux!!
Bonsoir Ken,
ReplyDeletePour sûr que vous allez regretter cette charmante dame et ses produits de qualité... Mais un p'tit tour à Aurillac, c'est sympa, on y a des cousins et quand j'étais jeune fille, j'y ai passé des vacances l'hiver, on a skié à Super Lioran et Super Besse. L'auvergne est aussi très belle en été...
http://www.auvergne-centrefrance.com/accueil.htm
Bises. Marie
Oh, how sad! We enjoyed reading about Madame, seeing her, and eating the fine meal you made out of what she sells.
ReplyDeleteKen, speaking of Cantal:I wonder if you can get the three types that we have in the Dordogne doux, vieux ,et entre les deux. I find the doux too sweet for my taste and I love the aged Cantal. Too bad though about losing such a valued merchant.
ReplyDeleteDennis
Alas Mme. Doudouille, we hardly knew ya.
ReplyDeleteCandy and John
Dennis, I'll have to ask the cheese ladies at the Saint-Aignan market about those three different cantal cheeses. So far, I just get one kind, though it is AOC.
ReplyDeleteWe get those different stages of maturity in our goat cheeses here. An ash-covered cheese in the Selles-sur-Cher style is called "un bleu", I've learned, and you can get it frais, demi-sec, and sec. When you ask for demi-sec, they ask you "plutôt sec, ou plutôt moelleux?" So there are very fine gradations.