In a French cookbook it says "Palate cleansers, by nature, are used in the middle of a meal to remove lingering flavors from the mouth so that the next course may be enjoyed with a fresh perspective. They also use them as an all-important digestive, to avoid heartburn, indigestion, and to stimulate the appetite.There is not much written instruction on the art of palate cleansing during a sumptuous, multi-course French meal. "
Alors, sounds just the ticket. Time to digest, avoid the indigestion of rewrite for awhile then a stimulation to new ideas. A fresh perspective.
Further on it says "It has become something of a prized tradition, passed from generation to generation in the local enclaves of France. Each region has a special ingredient, usually a locally produced product that the locals swear by."
Several listed are lemon and grapefruit sorbet
Or another is listed: Le Trou Normand.
There is a film with Bouvril and a young Brigitte Bardot of that title but not that.
"In Normandy, locals rely on apple brandy as a digestive. Le trou Normand, or the Norman break, is a fiery shot of Calvados right in the middle of the meal.
And it comes from apple country
And goes through a distilling process
It’s yet to be determined whether it has as successful an astringent property on one’s palate as it does one’s wits – but either way, it does work."
I like the hitting hard and fast and could use an astringent on my wits - if I have any left.
What about you - any palate cleansers you use?
Cara - Tuesday
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