Now all of us but Carol are at some stage of a cold. Jake and I in the early to mid-stages, John,
Margaret and Paul in the recovery stages.
Nevertheless, we had reservations today for lunch at a Michelin starred
restaurant, Michel Sarran, in Toulouse and wanted to do some sightseeing before
lunch. We drove into the city pretty
easily and parked in one of the many underground parking garages. Downtown seems pretty compact, and the older
parts of town had little traffic. Of
course on Monday all of the tourist attractions with an admission fee are
closed. But we took in the Basilica
built in 1096 that contains the remains of the locally martyred St. Saturnin. Around 250 he was condemned to death by being
dragged by a bull through the streets of Toulouse. Many saints have reliquaries
there, including St. Sylve!
The bell tower of the basilica in Toulouse |
Hanging model of the church I think |
St. Sylve's reliquary |
We walked past the Benedictine convent, the Ecole de Beaux
Arts, across the Pont Neuf (a misnomer now), past an old hospital and through a
little section of African shops, then back past the Hospital de la Grave
(doesn’t sound like a hospital you’d want to go to!) and back over the
river. Then up through part of the
University whose campus paths were not marked on our map, miraculously arriving
in front of our restaurant at the appointed hour of 12:30.
Everyone was seated in an outdoor covered patio behind the
restaurant. We were first presented with
a trio of amuse bouches – tiny little pastries with different fillings – while
we perused the menu. Once we had ordered a second amuse bouche arrived of a
tiny portion of creamy scrambled eggs with a madeira sauce in an egg cup, a
little crispy cigar of cheese, and a soft boiled egg that was somehow coated in
crispy thin bits of pasta. Five of us ordered a fixed menu and Jake ordered off
the a la carte menu. My entrée consisted
of sautéed mushrooms and onions served over buttery phyllo layers, a small
poached egg and some greens dressed with a tangy vinaigrette. I also find it amusing to identify the weeds
in ones gourmet salad, in this case oxalis.
This was accompanied by a very nice viognier wine.
Jake’s entrée was foie gras soup with an oyster. The soup was like foamed foie gras. It was accompanied by an arrangement of
little leaves and flowers and squares of foie gras. I tasted the “oyster leaf”, which really did
taste much like an oyster. The waiter
did not know the Latin name but apparently it is grown in gardens around
Toulouse. (Mertensia maritima)
My main course was a fairly simple cylinder of rosy trout
coated in crisp panko served over zucchini noodles with some other finely diced
vegetables and a warm vinaigrette. For
the main course we switched to a robust red wine that I think was a blend but
had the amusing name of Bur l’ es que?
Dessert was a triple layer concoction of cake and gelled passion
fruit topped with chestnut ice cream and served in a pool of passion fruit
puree. Jake got a delicious looking
chocolate confection but as it was pretty much gone by the time I had finished
ooing and ahhing over my first bites of passion fruit I can’t tell you much
about it. Two people got a cheese course
with an ample selection of very tasty cheeses from France, Italy and
Switzerland. With our expressos the waiter brought out an amuse bouche of three
dime size tarts. One was orange, another
fig, and the third caramelized banana with a tiny piece of gold leaf on top.
With the able help of Jacqueline, our car’s GPS, we were
able to get out of the city and back home for a much needed rest with only one
wrong turn, one odd detour, and one
operator error.
1 comment:
St. Saturnin is an interesting name for a Christian saint. I think we have to assume he kept the Greek name he was born with. (Saturn, of course, engaged in the very un-Christian act of eating his children.
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