This month's Gourmet highlights "French Bistro" cooking, a topic which they define broadly enough to take in classic dishes from many regions of France. The emphasis is on recipes and glamour shots of food, but there are a couple of "informational" articles, too. The most enjoyable is about a businessman in Normandy's Le Perche region who has created the baguette du Perche, a loaf using locally grown flour, and about his goal of having it labeled as a "produit du Parc naturel du Perche," something like an A.O.C. recognition. Another piece -- with the awful, punning title of "Jura the Obscure" -- tells of a few of the local specialties: vin jaune, absinthe, and a cows-milk cheese called "Mont d'Or," one of those marvelous, smelly, runny specimens that never make it to the U.S. because they're unpasteurized.
At the moment, those features are not on-line; they may appear in archives after the newsstand date. However, ten of the "bistro" recipes are available, including steak frites, a Provençal fish stew, and a vegetarian (!) cassoulet.






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