To the hills hugging Beaune

There’s nothing like the warm embrace of every corner of France. And to no one’s surprise the vineyards of Burgundy were no less enchanting than those of the Languedoc, Bordeaux or Côtes-du-Rhône. After a slightly torturous (think Griswoldian if you’re familiar with the National Lampoons Vacation movies), Nat, Jake, Ree and I arrived to spend the New Year holiday with friends. It was a special five days of learning and seeing what made Pete and Laura fall in love with this corner of the world when they took their first vacation in the region as a couple a decade plus ago.

Driving into the valley that hugs the city of Beaune, you simply nod in contentment. Yes, you are in France. And, yes, some good wines await. Given that my days of Queen Wino are behind me, I spent more time taking in the atmosphere and enjoying the culinary craftspersonship for which France is famous. Idling down the streets of Beaune’s old city, I studied each shop; checking out what delights they had to offer. One store teased with dozens of homemade jams and marmalades; another with pâtés and rillettes of all sorts. I quickly filled my basket with some foie gras that had integrated chestnuts as a surprise. Then I went back to the first shop for some of those jams: who knew what a treat pêche de vigne preserves are? The peaches apparently grow on trees in orchards that are interspersed with the vineyards; hence “peach from the vine”. The taste = amazing.

Moving on from the shops, my entourage and I filed into the local Saturday market, where we marvelled at the endless possibilities put forward by local cheese-makers. Sharp goat cheeses or milder sheep cheese. The decor of special moulds or ash that just make French cheeses special. Alongside that you have the piles of veggies that the season delivers; mainly more root vegetables but still some quite tasty tomatoes and greens here and there.

Of course trapsing through Beaune is not complete without some time spent people watching. We met many of the locals taking a moment to get away from the holiday table and exercise their legs a bit. Then, there was that special lady all in gold: I couldn’t tell if she was just going home from last night’s soirée or perhaps she was early in heading out to her next one. As I wandered the city streets, some likely there since the Middle Ages, I ducked into the main church to make a quick prayer for continued good health and safe travels as we would soon drive home into the new year. The peaceful calm of that long-standing house of worship stood in stark contrast to the bustle of the markets outside and tourists and locals mingling to celebrate the close of 2022.

Of course my reminiscing wouldn’t be complete without some comments on the amazing meals: be it the home-cooked ones (Pete’s lasagne and wild board ragout, plus Laura’s sinfully delicious chocolate cake) or the culinary treats found in local restaurants. I got to enjoy some Burgundian escargots and also had a lovely veal dish in the local brasserie down the hill from our holiday home (Chez Baxter).

Yes, this retreat to the hills of Burgundy was just what the doctor ordered when in came to regrouping to have the strength to face 2023: socialising with friends in an inviting stone farm house; saying hello to Manilow (either a horse or donkey, I was never sure which animal bore that name) when out for walks; or just taking in some amazing sunsets. Good friends and good food are really all we need to get by.

Côtes du Rhône … where memories meet and happiness flows

Since I was a teenager, France has had a special power for me. It’s “meant to be-ness” has always made it feel safe. And celebrating a good friend’s birthday in Provence in September served as an important reminder of the need to cherish special certainties.

The givens of Pete fixing amazing food while tormenting me incessantly, or Jakub telling silly dad jokes, or Natalie being armed and ready with rosé, or Laura acting as the voice of reason. Not to mention Jean making sure we were all looked after and the house in order.

An insane route to the farmhouse we were staying at had me less than certain how our celebratory week in Provence would end up. But France, this time the southern part, did not disappoint. The smell of lavender, the rugged mountains hugging our local horizon, and the poplar or sycamore-lined roadways … they all told me that life was as it should be.

It’s funny that the French created the term je ne sais quoi. Because that’s how I often feel when describing why I am at home there. It’s an “I don’t know what” sentiment. I’m never 100% certain why but I always feel welcome when I move through the fruit and veggie markets, when I sit down for un crême, or when I escape inside a house of worship that dates back to the times of The Crusades. The beauty of the Rhone Valley immediately tells visitors, without their knowing why, that everything will be all right.

Our corner of Provence that we hid out in that week afforded us the best that France has to offer. Great wines from the ancient land of Popes (a Châteauneuf-du-Pape or a Gigondas) accompanied most of our meals. The shops welcomed us with the culinary artisanry that only the French can deliver: sumptuous sausages of the Camargue, excellent terrine de foie gras, or rillettes … food shopping in France is unique. Just brush off your French vocabulary from college days and enquire after which local farmers supply the shops and to what periods these agro-culinary traditions date back.

It’s in these moments that you slowly come to understand that the “I don’t know what” may just simply be a proud love or passion for traditions in food-making, animal-raising and store-owning that transcends time. Perhaps, it’s because the river lies nearby. But in the Rhone Valley and that area of France, there’s a fluidity: a phantom of centuries of trade routes that connected Ancient Rome to the Iberian peninsula. When you submit to the region of Provence, you feel these transitory moments. Of wine poured into glasses across the years, of floral scents being gathered for perfumes that would sweeten numerous decades, or of frankincense emanating from churches that would bring the religions of the Holy Land to the Empire’s marchlands.

There’s never a single, clear cause for the serenity and happiness flowing along the Rhone in Provence, but I’m certain it has something to do with the land always seeing to residents’ and visitors’ basic needs. You eat well. You drink well. And you relax as time nourishes you with the riches of the region’s traditions.

Laissez-vous en profiter de ce que la région vous offre.