A Market, Duck Liver Pâté, and Bastides

 October 20, 2021

A Market, Duck Liver Pâté, and Bastides

The medieval city of Sarlat is beautifully preserved.  The Sarlat market occurs twice weekly, when vendors erect stands and sell all kinds of products, from fresh fruit and vegetables to fresh fish, to processed meats.  This morning we walked to the center of the old city where the market was underway:

 


Many vendors had stands set up, such as the sausage maker and the olive store:

 



A decommissioned church held many more shops:

 


But the product which had more vendors than any other is duck liver pâté.  Yes, there is lots of goose liver pâté too, but it is the duck livers which take prominence here.  I had a couple of questions: first, are the ducks force-fed as the geese are?  The answer was no, but I’m suspicious.  Second, I asked if there is any feeling/sensitivity/shame in France at the widespread use of pâté, especially that from force-fed geese, and the answer again was no.  It is an integral part of the diet, and there are many shops dedicated only to the selling of pâté:

 


We have a wine route in the Finger Lakes (and some elsewhere, too); they have a duck foie gras route here:


In addition, they sell enormous quantities of cutesy duck things as if those loveable ducks are just as happy as can be to sacrifice their livers to pâté:

 



We did not buy any pâté, although we do eat it when (often) we are served it.  After the market we left to visit the medieval village of La Roque-Gageal, built in and under the cliffs alongside the Dordogne River.  It has been included in the prestigious “Les Plus Beaux Villages de France” and it justifies the inclusion.  It is best seen from the river, so we took a small boat, called a gabare, a reproduction of the boats used in the river trade to and from Bordeaux:

 


We first went upstream a bit and had a wonderful view:

 

Further upstream was the medieval Castel-Fortress Castelnau:

 


Our last stop of the day was the village of Domme, one of the bastides.  These are early 13th century towns organized by the Philip the Bold, King of France, as settlements for populations from the north of France with both a religious and a political purpose.  There were almost 100 bastides built in a relatively short amount of time; Domme was founded in 1280.  The function was both to stamp out heretics and to occupy the land.  Although Domme is on a high place, not all of the bastides were located with defense in mind.  Here’s the gate to Domme:


And the commanding view from within the city:

 


Back to the hotel for washing up and dinner; an early start tomorrow for a visit to the Lascaux IV cave and the National Museum of Prehistory.

Comments

  1. A really good documentary on prehistory cave art is "Cave of forgotten dreams". You can download an watch from several sites including prime video.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It never occurred to me: for every goose or duck liver that gets turned into pate, a goose or duck is killed. This doesn't bother me, particularly. I'm just wondering: are goose and duck meat generally on the menu there, or for sale as sausages?
    So much history on display there--never knew about bastides.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Milan

Left Bank Wines and Chateaux