Showing posts with label Château de Chenonceau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Château de Chenonceau. Show all posts
Tuesday, 17 March 2020
A few notices relating to the lockdown in Indre-et-Loire
From midday today France has been in lockdown. You have to have good reason to leave your home – essential shopping, medical assistance, exercise etc. You have to carry a self-signed document explaining why you have left your home temporarily.
Cycling for exercise but not as an organised group is one permissible activity. This afternoon I went for a ride both for exercise and to see what was open in Bléré, our nearest significant town in Indre-et-Loire. The roads were incredibly quiet, so cycling was even more of a pleasure than normal in comparison to London. Bléré was close to being a ghost town.
Notice @L'Empad (home for the elderly in Bléré) banning visitors
Quite a large range of shops can be open – including garden centres.
Here Vive Le Jardin but limiting the number of
people in the store to 15 at anyone time.
This morning the Intermarche were limiting the number
of people allowed in.
Announcement: Château de Chenonceau
closed – a rare occurence!
Closing cafés and restaurants undoubtedly
causes them cash flow problems
especially those like the Le Relais de Francueil
that has just changed ownership.
Fortunately they can still offer takeaways
Details on 02.47.23.87.71
Tuesday, 11 July 2017
Château de Chenonceau – patrimoine mondial
Views of Château de Chenonceau
I have to say that I had assumed that the Château de Chenonceau was covered by the the UNESCO World Heritage zone and was part of the heritage site established in 2000 and running from Sully-sur-Loire to Challones on the western edge of Anjou.
It appears that I was mistaken as Chenonceau being on the River Cher wasn't included. A gross error as IMHO Chenonceau is the loveliest of all of the Loire châteaux.
I am grateful to Hervé, one of my colleagues on Les Cinq du Vin, for having brought this change to my attention.
'Lors
de sa 41e session qui se tient à Cracovie, le comité du patrimoine
mondial de l'Humanité a élargi le périmètre classé du Val de Loire pour y
intégrer l'emblématique château des Dames qui enjambe le Cher.
Depuis l'an 2000, les paysages culturels du Val de Loire sont inscrits au patrimoine mondial de l'Humanité sur près de 280 km entre Sully-sur-Loire dans le Loiret et Chalonnes en Anjou.
Jusqu'à présent, ce classement établi par l'Unesco englobait de très
nombreux sites remarquables de la Touraine, à l'exception toutefois du
château de Chenonceau situé légèrement en retrait sur le Cher. Aujourd'hui,
cette lacune regrettable est réparée. Dimanche, les instances
internationales de l'Unesco ont en effet décidé d'élargir le périmètre
classé pour y intégrer le célèbre Château des Dames, joyau de la Renaissance en Val de Loire qui accueille chaque année près de 900.000 visiteurs dont 40 % d'étrangers.'
Tuesday, 7 March 2017
Lunch in the footsteps of Henry James
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Le Bon Laboureur – long established and easily
the best restaurant and hotel
in the popular village of Chenonceaux
On our last Monday at the end of our recent stay in the Loire we spoiled ourselves by lunching at Le Bon Laboureur in Chenonceaux. Here we were following in the footsteps of the writer Henry James, who was born in America but who spent much of the latter part of his life in Europe. In his Little Tour in France James describes a very comfortable and congenial meal, in his case dinner, he and his companions enjoyed at Le Bon Laboureur:
A Little Tour in France by Henry James
(originally published as a serial in 1883-1884)
Chapter 7
Chenonceaux
Here are two extracts that feature Le Bon Laboureur as it was towards the end of the 19th Century
Extract 1:
'In going from Tours you leave the valley of the Loire and enter that of the Cher, and at the end of about an hour you see the turrets of the castle on your right, among the trees, down in the meadows, beside the quiet little river. The station and the village are about ten minutes’ walk from the château, and the village contains a very tidy inn, where, if you are not in too great a hurry to commune with the shades of the royal favourite and the jealous queen, you will perhaps stop and order a dinner to be ready for you in the evening.'
'In going from Tours you leave the valley of the Loire and enter that of the Cher, and at the end of about an hour you see the turrets of the castle on your right, among the trees, down in the meadows, beside the quiet little river. The station and the village are about ten minutes’ walk from the château, and the village contains a very tidy inn, where, if you are not in too great a hurry to commune with the shades of the royal favourite and the jealous queen, you will perhaps stop and order a dinner to be ready for you in the evening.'
In between this extract and the one below Henry James describes his visit the Château de Chenonceaux. He spells both the village and the château ending in an x. Today the château is written without an x. Although one might be inclined to think that James made an error in adding an x to the château this may not be the case as some of the pictures showing the château in the past use an x in the spelling.
Wikipedia, as opposed to Wikileaks, suggests that it was Louise Dupin de Francueil, the château's owner during the French Revolution, who dropped the x in order to show that the château was royal. Apparently there are no official papers to confirm this story. However, James was writing years after the Revolution.
Anyway it strikes me as rather strange that in revolutionary times you would want to stress a building's royal pedigree. Instead it seems to me much more logical and more prudent not to draw attention to your splendid château spanning the Cher in case marauding revolutionaries either set up camp there or razed the building to the ground. Anyway what do I know for Chenonceau, however it was spelled, survived the Revolution unscathed.
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The church in neighbouring Francueil
Extract 2:
'Venice a year and a half before. We took our way back to the Bon Laboureur, and waited in the little inn-parlour for a late train to Tours. We were not impatient, for we had an excellent dinner to occupy us; and even after we had dined we were still content to sit awhile and exchange remarks upon the superior civilisation of France. Where else, at a village inn, should we have fared so well? Where else should we have sat down to our refreshment without condescension? There were a couple of countries in which it would not have been happy for us to arrive hungry, on a Sunday evening, at so modest an hostelry. At the little inn at Chenonceaux the cuisine was not only excellent, but the service was graceful. We were waited on by mademoiselle and her mamma; it was so that mademoiselle alluded to the elder lady as she uncorked for us a bottle of Vouvray mousseux. We were very comfortable, very genial; we even went so far as to say to each other that Vouvray mousseux was a delightful wine. From this opinion indeed one of our trio differed; but this member of the party had already exposed herself to the charge of being too fastidious by declining to descend from the carriage at Chaumont and take that back-stairs view of the castle.'
'Venice a year and a half before. We took our way back to the Bon Laboureur, and waited in the little inn-parlour for a late train to Tours. We were not impatient, for we had an excellent dinner to occupy us; and even after we had dined we were still content to sit awhile and exchange remarks upon the superior civilisation of France. Where else, at a village inn, should we have fared so well? Where else should we have sat down to our refreshment without condescension? There were a couple of countries in which it would not have been happy for us to arrive hungry, on a Sunday evening, at so modest an hostelry. At the little inn at Chenonceaux the cuisine was not only excellent, but the service was graceful. We were waited on by mademoiselle and her mamma; it was so that mademoiselle alluded to the elder lady as she uncorked for us a bottle of Vouvray mousseux. We were very comfortable, very genial; we even went so far as to say to each other that Vouvray mousseux was a delightful wine. From this opinion indeed one of our trio differed; but this member of the party had already exposed herself to the charge of being too fastidious by declining to descend from the carriage at Chaumont and take that back-stairs view of the castle.'
•••
Back in February we three were certainly 'very comfortable', 'very genial' and 'the cuisine was not only excellent, but the service (led by Fabrice and his team) was graceful'. I'm not sure that James' 'so modest an hostelry' is still apt. The 21st century Le Bon Laboureur is very comfortable with an airy and light dining room. There was a time was it was a little dark and gloomy but that has long gone. It is true, however, the building is modest in comparison to Touraine's grand châteaux hotels like Artigny and La Rochecotte but Le Laboureur has a Michelin star and they don't.
We chose the Menu du Marché, which is available only at lunchtime and not on Sunday. At 32€ for three fine listed courses it is excellent value, especially by the time you add in all the extra treats – canapés, mise en bouche, pre-dessert et mignardises – it is more like eight or nine courses!
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from Domaine de la Chapinière, AC Touraine
First courses:
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Tartine de légumes, magret fumé, faisselle de chèvre
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Velouté de lentilles, champignons & lardons
Main course:
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Epaule d'agneau confite 72 heures, jus d'agneau et crème d'ail
Desserts:
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Gratin aux agrumes & ananas, sorbet orange sanguine
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Thursday, 18 June 2015
Saturday 18th July tasting of Touraine Chenonceaux@Château de Chenonceau
Samedi 18 Juillet – dégustation sous les Étoiles au Château de Chenonceau des vins de Touraine-Chenonceaux – ouverture exceptionelle de la galerie sur Le Cher. 21.30 – 23.30. Entrée euros.
'La nuit nenue, le temps d'une dégustation sous les Étoiles, venez flâner, un verre à la main, dans les jardins illuminés, accompanés par la musique d'Arcangelo Corelli."
Friday, 3 October 2014
Château de Chenonceau and amazing reflections in the Cher
Yesterday late mid-afternoon when we rode along the Cher past Château de Chenonceau, the reflections in the very calm water were wonderful, so we decided to cut short our ride, head back to Epeigné and return with our cameras. Here are some of the photos we took on our return:
Balloons rising to the east of the château
... and just behind
...up, up and away on a perfect evening
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