Saturday, November 21, 2009

le Beaujolais Nouveau est arrivé!

We arrived at the bar last night to find dozens of people packed into the small heaving space beneath fluttering banners proclaiming le Beaujolais Nouveau est arrivé!

The third Thursday of November is, of course, when the barely-weeks-old Beaujolais Nouveau arrives, when bars and restaurants compete to cash in on this brilliant marketing coup by serving the new wine with local delicacies such as (here in Savoie) tête de veau, cochonnaille (pork by-products such as ears and feet - egads!) and potée (a hotpot of pork and cabbage). Framboise, my dieting friend and owner of the bar, thankfully opted for platters of garlic and herb saucisson and cornichons, salty goats' cheese with walnuts and slices of fresh baguette.

Many of our friends were there, including Mini-B, Nainbo, Papou (who was playing the accordion), Roquin, Top Modèl and the Swivel Chair, M. Boule De Billard - and old man Marcel (kleenex alert!) with his crocus-yellow teeth and slobbery basset chops.

As we jostled for space, two glasses of wine were passed to us with a: "That's from Thierry over there". Thierry is a man we've met maybe four times and on three of those occasions he's bought us a drink. This isn't an isolated incident; the generosity of the people here is overwhelming and it can be almost impossible to buy a round of drinks sometimes. But we tried and before we knew it, the last accordion note had died out, the bar was closing and we'd missed our pizzas. Instead, we stood in the kitchen when we got home eating cold vegetable curry straight out of the saucepan making farmyard noises of contentment. Yum.

Meanwhile, over in England, a musical event of an entirely different kind was taking place:

Biannual event in our small village hall is a spectacle to behold.

A Musical Evening: fiddlers, pipers, whistlers, piddlers. All hopelessly out of tune. Morris Dancers - twelve of - all thumping round the hall with their bells jangling and their sticks cracking. Two of them performed a rather inelegant dance BLINDFOLDED around 12 freshly-laid hens' eggs strategically placed 60cms apart on the floor. Yes they used a tape measure and no they didn't break one.

The best is yet to come: three morbidly obese lady clog dancers. No music. Rictus grins. Arms by their sides but feet and ample bosoms going like the clappers.

Five hours later I staggered home full of gin to find the cat had been sick on my bed. I do so look forward to these Musical Evenings.


Guest blogeuse, Miss Took, England

9 comments:

Kathie said...

Uh, shouldn't that be "blogueuse"? (Yeah, there's a copy editor in every crowd!).

BTW, did the heavy rains/flooding in Cumbria also affect Scotland?

Sarah said...

Hi Kathie - yes you are correct and I have gone back and corrected it. Hate to see poor spelling!

Cumbernauld in Scotland was pretty badly affected by the rain I heard. Sad business.

Anonymous said...

Cumberland was pretty bad too I hear!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Sarah said...

Sorry folks. It was Cumberland (England), not Cumbernauld in Scotland. Need glasses!

Anonymous said...

blogista, pois não?

Hils said...

Interpret poi nao please Sarah!
Bye bye beloved crane!

Porkchop said...

Cranefly!

Kathie said...

"Bloguista", pois!

Dumela said...

The food looks good, might have to try some. http://wisperloud.blogspot.com/