Cacasse à cul nu (transl. bare ass) is a dish originating from the Ardennes department of France. It is made in a Dutch oven with potatoes and onions, and is often served with bacon or smoked sausage. The dish was originally flavoured by rubbing the Dutch oven with bacon before cooking, but was not served with meat, hence the term "nu" (transl. nude). The terms culottée (transl. with underwear) or habillée (transl. dressed) are often included to indicate that the dish contains meat.[1]
Course | Main course |
---|---|
Place of origin | France |
Region or state | Ardennes |
Associated cuisine | France |
Main ingredients | potatoes, bacon, onions |
Similar dishes | Tartiflette, Bauernfrühstück |
History
editThere have not been any documents found that describe the exact place and date of origin of the dish, but it likely comes from the Meuse valley. It was a dish linked to a self-sufficient economy, where the villagers lived off their own agricultural resources.[2]
The dish is mentioned in the work of Gérard Gayot, La Révolution en Ardenne, de l'Argonne au Namurois, during the years 1789–1792.[3] In his work on the Ardennaise countryside in the 19th and 20th century, Jacques Lambert discusses "potée roussie", "roussade", or "potée à cul nu", also called "cacasse" or "frigousse":[4] potatoes cooked with onions and lard.
Agnès Paris discusses the "cacasse" of the habitants of Bogny-sur-Meuse, reserved for days of opulence during the German occupation of France during the Second World War.[5] Françoise Branget also mentions the dish in her book La Cuisine de la République.[6]
Description
editThe dish is a symbol of Ardennaise cuisine. It was originally a fricassee of potatoes and a roux, cooked in a cast-iron Dutch oven, that the most modest people consumed when meat was unaffordable.[7]
"À cul nu" indicates the absence of meat, with bacon fat traditionally only being used to add flavour, while the bacon itself was not added to the dish.[8]
Since 2001, the "Confrérie de la Cacasse à cul nu" updated the recipe by adding meat. The dish is now usually served with smoked sausage or slices of bacon.[1][7]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Seppia; AC (10 May 2019). "Connaissez-vous la cacasse à cul nu, plat typique et symbolique de la cuisine ardennaise?". France 3 (in French). Retrieved 12 August 2019.
- ^ Clerc 1985, p. 46
- ^ Gayot, Gérard (1989). Révolution en Ardenne, de l'Argonne au Namurois (in French). Terres Ardennaises. p. 19.
- ^ Lambert 1988, p. 321
- ^ Paris, Agnès (1992). La Grosse Boutique de Bogny. Une boulonnerie et ses cités à travers les témoignages oraux (in French). Vol. XXVII. p. 134.
- ^ Branget 2011
- ^ a b Claeys-Pergament 2008
- ^ Rédaction FR3 2012.
Bibliography
edit- Clerc, Jean (October 1985). Cuisine pauvre, pauvres nourritures (in French). pp. 46–53. ISSN 0758-3028.
- Lambert, Jacques (1988). "L'alimentation". Campagnes et paysans des Ardennes : 1830-1914 (in French). Éditions Terres Ardennaises. pp. 307–352.
- Claeys-Pergament, Sophie (12 March 2008). Terroir, la cacasse à cul nu se culotte (in French). lunion2008.
- Coutant, Catherine; Schmidt, François (2010). Atlas du patrimoine gastronomique de Champagne-Ardenne (in French). Éditions de l'Effervescence. ISBN 9782952538657.
- G.-M., G. (8 February 2011). Toute la confrérie au labo pour mitonner la cacasse (in French). lunion2011.
- Branget, Françoise (2011). La Cuisine de la République : cuisinez avec vos députés ! (in French). Le Cherche midi. ISBN 978-2-7491-1613-6.
- Rédaction FR3 (13 November 2012). La cacasse à cul nu des Ardennes ou le ragout à la bonne femme (in French). fr32012.
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External links
edit- La véritable recette de la Cacasse à cul nu ardennaise (in French)
- La cacasse à cul nu des Ardennes (in French)
- Festival of Brotherhoods
- Festival des confréries Archived 24 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine (in French)
- Media related to Cacasse à cul nu at Wikimedia Commons