Newsletter October 2007
October 2nd, 2007 at 3:54 amFrom www.americansinfrance.net
What type of cheese is this?
Local Produce
One of the weekly routines my family and I have developed is
buying cheese, milk and sometimes eggs from a local farm. This is
one experience I never had growing up in Los Angeles! The farm is
called Les Chenevifs. The name comes from the hamlet
where the farm is located.
Les Chenevifs has about 80 or so milk cows, mostly the
race Abundance. From the milk cheese is made. The farm keeps some
of the milk. With this milk it produces and makes Abundance
cheese; a slice of which you can see above. The name Abundance
comes from a mountain village of the same name in the region
where Les Chenevifs is located and I live.
Abundance is a semi-hard cheese made from raw-milk. The milk is
not pasteurized, just filtered. Les Chenevifs sells milk
directly to the public, as long as you bring your own container!
On a few occasions we bought warm milk, just milked from the
cow.
Cheese is made daily and sold directly from the farm. The cheese
is kept in the ageing room adjacent to the farm store. We buy the
aged cheese. The rest is sold to affineurs (cheese
agers) who as their title suggest, age cheese and sell when
ready. Abundance is usually ready to eat after three months
ageing.
The rest of the milk not kept by the farm is sold to cheese
makers who make Reblochon. Reblochon is much
different than Abundance. It is soft; colored white, sold in
small cheese rounds and is very smelly. Reblochon is
also often used for cooking. Abundance is harder (but not hard
like Comté), yellowish and pressed into
much bigger cheese rounds. Note: Here
is the Wikipedia entry on Reblochon. The name has an
interesting history.
Abundance is easy to spot at any cheese shop as it has a
distinctly indented round edge that can't be missed once you have
seen it.
You can see photos of the Les Chenevifs farm here.
Trip to Paris (continued)
Not only was I able to visit Paris' Chinatown during my recent trip to the city of light (see newsletter September 2007) I was also able to visit the grave of Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir. Who interestingly enough are buried together. They are buried in Cimetière du Montparnasse. This cemetery is not as famous as Père Lachaise but it is still worth a visit if you are nearby.
Working in France
One major difference I've found between France and the United
States is how work is viewed. The way I put it is: Americans live
to work, the French work to live. Now of course I'm making a bit
of a stereotype here but in my time in France this statement
seems to hold true.
For example the French minimum for paid vacation time is five
weeks per year for a full time worker. No matter the job or pay.
In America this is no minimum. That's not to say people in
America don't take vacations just that there is no law spelling
out vacation rights.
In America having minimum vacation time isn't very important. In
France it is. It's a cultural difference between the two
countries. In my opinion Americans tend to see time as a chance
to earn money where as the French see time as something to be
enjoyed.
B & B
WEBB'S OF GLOMEL: Why not stay at Clifford and Mary-Ellen's home, a Bed & Breakfast in Glomel, Brittany. We have converted our village house into a very comfortable home with five rooms to choose from. All bedrooms are en-suite and also have small refrigerators, tea/coffee trays, CD radios, heaters and hairdryers. Well behaved dogs are welcome, Garden with BBQ available. Four mountain bikes for free loan. Game room. We are set in a typical Breton village, with shops, bars and restaurant, Brest to Nantes canal skirts the edge of the village, ideal area for walking and cycling also centrally located to explore Brittany.
Resources for living or traveling in France:
If you would like to improve your French, I suggest
Fluent French or Champs-Elysées.
Looking to rent a car in France? Try car rental partner AutoEurope.
Need a hotel for your travels? Venere.com.
Looking to stay in a B&B or Château? Then please take a look
at B
& B's/Rental page.
How about sightseeing tours? Try -
Sightseeing Tours France
Thinking of having a wedding or other event in France? Have a
look at my Wedding
in France page.
Looking to make new Friends? Then what about Americans in France
Friends?
Would you like to find classified ads for France but in English?
Then a good place to start is Franglo.
Do you need to find health insurance for France? Then I suggest
either Global
Insurance or Medibroker.
Searching for a book about living in France? One you might read
is The
Insider Paris Guide for Living in France.
The number one travel gudie to central and historical Paris:
Paris Marais.
If there is something I've missed or you would like more
resources, please contact
me.
Thanks for reading my newsletter. Help spread the word - forward this email to a friend!
Jeff SteinerCopyright
Americans in France
Resource for people that would like to live or travel in France.