Saturday, November 11, 2017

Eating Sensibly on your Camping Vacation in Burgundy.

I am getting up to look out the open porthole window and am met with an amicable squawk. After a shower in the tiled rest room and rub-down with a thick nautical blue towel, I head upstairs. On an antique oak sideboard in the key salon hostesses Fanny and Barbara have laid out a breakfast of granolas, yogurt, and fresh fruit. A two hour journey by minivan through rolling French country had brought us to the medieval city of Auxerre, where La Belle poque and her crew awaited. We enjoyed a champers welcome accompanied by freshly-baked popovers. After meeting the crew and getting settled into our cabins, we explored the cobblestone streets and trendy shops of Auxerre. At the junction of the Canal du Nivernais and the Stream Yonne, Auxerre was a crucial city on the traditional north-south road through France. It is an enormous market city for lumber and wine as well as a vital non secular center. Its a unpleasant image, but happily something that is at present an out of date thing as man y of Europes quality campsites boasts all sort of hotel style features from bistros to bakeries to quality shops on site. These are some of the appetising treats you may expect while camping in Burgundy. Regularly this is mingled with quality wines, like in the eponymous boeuf bourguignon, a normal recipe of the area mixing these 2 fine elements with baby onions, bacon and carrots. Eventually naturally, there are the snails, and though many of us will turn their noses up at them, the standard escargots are delightful, served as they happen to be stewed with Chablis, carrots, onions and shallots, then crammed with garlic and parsley butter. La Belle poque slides into a chamber to rest while a collection of gates at every end closes so the water level can be lowered or raised.

In France there are more than 2,700 miles of inland waterways including a 750-mile network of connecting canals. This wood trade was the key revenue stream for this area till the 1920s. The canal saw the last of its merchant traffic in the 1970s. There are 2 types of cheese with exotic namesDelice de Bourgogne and St.