August 17, 2005

A French Odyssey

in the french kitchen at Camont


Cooks and their Kitchens marry in different ways just as basic ingredients do—sometimes with surprising results. Think of the magic combination of Prunes and Armagnac, Ripe Tomatoes and heady Red Wine Vinegar, Tart Lemons and Sweet Sweet Sugar. I am wed to my French Kitchen as a street puppeteer* is to her walking stage.

Last fall I invited England’s Rick Stein to step into my French Kitchen as he traveled down this Long Village of a canal. What started as a summer Gascon barbeque featuring enough Magret de Canard for a hungry group of Sur la Table travelers and friends turned into month-long cooking fest as Stein and Denham Productions put the finishing touches on their new fall series “Rick Stein’s French Odyssey.” This was more than a case of ménage-a-trois, it was an outright orgy as the 5-man/2-woman film crew moved into Camont’s 18th-century French Kitchen and I moved out. (The bistro-galley of the Julia Hoyt serves my daily needs anyway so no problem for morning coffee and I would spend the next three weeks eating leftovers, watching, learning and taking part in a real reality program I dubbed ‘TVdinners 101’) My cooking school setup magically transformed into the BBC TV set without moving as much as one confit pot out of place or changing the arrangement of whisks, graters and colanders that hang from the old iron butcher racks. I patted my back for having a theatrical eye and look for a new career as a set designer!

After three weeks of slicing, cooking, plating and filming, the crew celebrated a last evening’s dinner that I cooked over a glowing hearth as we toasted their success with a magnum of deep dark Madiran wine supplied by my wine expert friend, David Brown.
The next morning, the lights and equipment disappeared into the jam-packed Land Rover as my new TV buddies rode north to Normandy and awaiting ferries back home.

DuPont and I took an extra nap as the calm and quiet of Camont surfaced slowly and my French Kitchen returned to its usual cool and sturdy self. Just as DuPont marks his territory on every walk we take along the canal, I marked mine. I made a poule au pot, a pot of chicken soup, to reclaim the farmhouse cooktop, the battered cutting board, the brocante soup plates and scent the air with an authentic French perfume.

Tonight Rick Stein’s French Odyssey airs in the UK. I am sure there will be thousands of viewers watching as Rick helps them discover the secrets of good French cooking from the vantage point of our long and lovely canal while discussing the merits of vin ordinaire vs. Australian wines. Here at Camont, my friends and I will be filling our plates in the French Kitchen and discussing this years ripening vintage after a too hot summer, tasting lamb bought from a neighbor, eating tomatoes from the potager steeped in homemade vinegar and chin-dripping peaches plucked from the orchard for dessert. Reality or reality TV?

Camont- 1724- rental information

* My first metier was as a puppeteer and street performer!

7 comments:

"Diva" said...

WOW..fab. can you see the show?? can WE see the show??

Judy

Kate Hill said...

The show 'French Odyssey' airs Wednesdays at 8pm on BBC2- find a brit in chiantishire with a satellite dish and bring over a bottle of floc to watch next week's episode which features Vetou, Camont, my markets and me! Someone is taping them for me, I hope!

Anonymous said...

You go girl! Wish I could see the program. Will have to wait for the DVD's....

*fanny* said...

I love your farmhouse and i love what you do. I'm a 20 years old french student and my dream is to buy a nice old house like yours and teach cooking classes...
Good luck for the future
Fanny

Farmgirl Susan said...

Wow. What a wonderfully delicious life you lead! I just linked here for the first time from The Traveler's Lunchbox. Looking forward to reading more of your posts. Gorgeous photographs!

Rachel Hauser said...

Hey there you beautiful, doo-rag-wearing mama.
I love your blog and beautiful writing. Your description of day-to-day life and each culinary adventure leaves me hungry for the peace of the Julia Hoyt and southwest France's culinary opportunity.

Sending xs and os your way, Rachel

Kate Hill said...

thanx you all. These daily small gestures of food and friends are just a reminder of the good life we lead. enjoy! Kate