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The windswept marsh lands of the northern French coastline are home to
some of the France's most sought after culinary products, both from the
sea and the land. Scallops, oyster, mussels and lobster for partaking
of the sea and potatoes, apples, butter and the exquisite pré salé lamb,
"pre-salted" from grazing on salty sea-brush around Mont Saint-Michel
during low tide. But don't go looking outside of Brittany or
Normandy for this delicate, tasty lamb raised on salt sprayed grasses,
since the majority of the production is ony shared with locals.
Pré salé or salt marsh lamb is hot right now. Thanks to its status as a terroir
product, it has become as sought after as oysters from Cancale. For
many, a visit to Mont Saint-Michel is not complete without a taste of
this mythic meat. But outside of the windswept Normandy and Brittany
regions, where sheep graze freely on marsh grass that is regularly
sprayed with salt and iodine and sometimes completely covered by tidal
waters, it is next to impossible to come by.
Although there are 4 areas on the northern coast of France where pré salé
lamb is produced, Mont Saint-Michel, one of the top visited monuments
in France, with its “Grévin” labelled lamb, is the most well
known. With a total of only 45 producers, the Mont produces a
mere 2,500 carcasses per year, the large majority of which are sold
directly to local restaurants and butchers. In fact the total French
production of pré salé lamb, including the Baie of Somme, Ille
et Villain and Havres du Cotentin, hovers around just 10,000
lambs. As one of the top 10 lamb eating nations at 10 pounds per person
(compared to 1 pound per person in the US), France already imports
almost 50% of its lamb and with the number of breeders holding steady
there is probably no chance that current French production will meet
demand in the near future. So, don’t expect to find much pré salé
anytime soon outside of France. There are however a few other
countries that produce salt marsh lamb including Wales, Germany and Canada.
France is well aware of the terroir status of this meat and recently, pré salé
lamb from the Baie de Somme was the first lamb variety to receive the
coveted French AOC label officially setting conditions and rules that
producers are required to follow to sell under the AOC label. As
opposed to milk fed lamb that is slaughtered at 30-40 days when it is
still fully fed on its mother’s milk, salt marsh lamb, after 4-5 weeks sous la mère,
grazes on saltwater marshes and meadows for the next 4-6 months. This
type of diet gives the meat a distinctive iodine flavor. The
sea sprayed grasses also impart a much more tender flesh resembling that of
a younger animal. So, whereas some people feel that milk fed lamb lacks
flavor but is vastly more tender compared to older animals, pré salé carries a true lamb flavour and is also extremely tender.
Procuring pré salé
lamb can be equated to the luck of the draw if you do not live in one
of the producer areas. If you live in Paris, you may luck out in living
not too far from one of the few butchers who carry the lamb. Sovia, a
meat provider at Rungis, the largest wholesale food market in the world
located just south of Paris, sells only about ten carcasses per year.
And when I called to inquire they wouldn’t even admit to selling the
lamb at all. In other words, they can barely provide for their current
clients and aren’t looking for new ones.
The tasting
Thanks
to a few American blogs and websites I was able to come up with 4
addresses of butchers who carry this rarefied meat in Paris. I’m sure
that there are more but I was unable to find a complete listing.
Thierry Michaud, named meilleur ouvrier de France, of the exquisite Boucherie Nouvelle in the 15th arrondisement, sells his rack of pré salé lamb for 34€/kilo($11/lb) whereas
regular rack goes for 27€/kilo($9/lb). It is a price difference but not
wholly unexpected or inexplicable considering the current demand for pré salé.
The lamb I had pre-ordered was lovingly prepared with a design carved
into the fat that looked stunning when roasted. There was a noticeable
hush in the shop when the butcher announced that I was buying pré salé; or perhaps his customers were merely drooling.
In looking around for original pairings for pré salé
lamb, I started with Olivier Roellinger, at his 3 stars Maisons de
Bricourt in Cancale, who has been known to mix cardamom, sesame and
nigella seeds into bread crumbs to create a lightly seasoned crust on a
rack for 2. On his web site, he also proposes a recipe in which a rack
of pré salé is simply roasted with nothing more that salt and
pepper, a clove of garlic and served with a ragout of local spring
vegetables. I decided to go with a simple roast recipe accompanied by a
sorrel sauce that I had previously tasted on a leg of lamb. The tart
citrus flavour of the sorrel seemed strong enough to enhance the lamb
yet was light enough to allow the iodine flavour to come through.
The
result was a truly spectacular dish. The lamb was perfect – the true
taste of lamb without the pungent aftertaste. And the meat cut like
butter, but still had sufficient texture, making it pleasing to the
palette. One caveat, the meat loses most of its appeal if even slightly
overcooked – keep the flesh pink. A hot oven, good meat thermometer and
adequate rest time should eliminate any risk.
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