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- From: thomas@MANITOU.ENSMP.FR (Gregory NOWAK)
- Newsgroups: talk.bizarre
- Subject: GETTING FED IN FRANCE
- Message-ID: <9208211339.AA22681@ensmp.fr>
- Date: 21 Aug 92 13:39:47 GMT
- Sender: usenet@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU
- Lines: 82
-
-
- Welcome to French Chef School! I am your instructor, Pierre
- Chaiselounge! It's now time for Lesson One, Buying Food in France!
- Food shopping in France is unlike what you may be used to in the
- inferior countries you come from. There is a wide variety of food
- available, from the ridiculously expensive to the unbelievably putrid.
-
- The average French housewife who is too busy making l'amour with the
- mailman to buy fresh food has several options: she can go to a
- frozen-food store, where ONLY frozen foods are sold -- pastries,
- blueberries, stew -- incroyable, n'est ce pas? There is also the
- "hypermarche'", a French technological victory over the Americans, who
- were only able to create the "supermarket". At the hypermarche', you
- can buy everything from pate' de foie gras to raw timber, and wheel it
- all up to the same checkout lane...
-
- But REAL French food shopping is done in the street markets. Having
- grown up on posters of grandfatherly old French men wearing berets and
- moustaches, riding bicycles with baguettes strapped to the back, you
- may suspect that the street market is a thing of the past, an act put
- on for tourists, much like the entire city of Amsterdam. Not so! For,
- while berets are worn only by french men over eighty and american
- tourists thinking they are cool, the street markets do exist and are
- the main source of sustenance for the urban French person.
-
- To go shopping in a french street market, you will need:
-
- -- one or more containers: canvas bags, or a grocery trolley
- -- a shilea-- shillae-- one of those Irish club things
- -- money (means FRENCH FRANCS; trying to buy something using dollars,
- credit cards, or travelers checks will meet with as much luck as
- trying to pay for a cup of coffee with francs in Des Moines)
-
- Upon entering the market, pause briefly to inhale the heady aroma.
- What you are smelling is the crowd of other shoppers. When you emerge,
- you will smell like them -- proof that you have been accepted. Now,
- push on, clearing a path for yourself with the shill -- with the Irish
- club thing, and inspect the individual stalls...
-
- The Fruit and Vegetable Stand
- Notice first the beautiful patterns: carrots arranged in fans,
- tomatoes and oranges stacked in pyramids, string beans aligned so
- perfectly they look like a box of matches, and --
-
- WHAT ARE YOU DOING??? DON'T TOUCH THAT PEACH!!!
-
- Clueless student chef: whaa?
- Arab fruitseller: 'Zecoute; 'zetservi! 'ZECOUTE, 'ZETSERVI !!!
- Clueless (fumbling through phrasebook): comment?
- Arab fruitseller: Merde alors! (followed by a stream of arabic
- meaning, roughly, 'you deserve to be the 'bottom' in a gooley story')
-
- Now, Clueless, you have just learned the first lesson in French market
- shopping -- you can look, you can smell, but you CAN'T touch. If you
- ask for a kilo of tomatoes and he hands you a kilo of bruises, that's
- your tough luck. All you can do is resolve not to go back there in the
- future.
-
- You will also remark on the great variety of products available at a
- single stand. It is not uncommon for one stand to have three varieties
- of tomatoes or string beans, four of peaches, and five of lettuce
- (although the compost mistakenly called Iceberg 'lettuce' is unknown
- here). This allows us to play another game: each variety is
- identified and priced by a small blackboard hanging over the pile,
- e.g., 'Franciscan peaches', or 'Kenyan string beans'. Once you've made
- your selection, try to catch the attention of one of the fruitsellers,
- and tell him what you want. Now, since the blackboards face the
- public, he has no idea what is written on them, and knows his products
- only by a special set of code words which are never written down. You
- are reduced to pointing to what you want, and of course he goes to the
- wrong pile. Once the fruit is in the paper bag, it is too late; you
- have to pay for it -- you lose. Fun, non?
-
-
- (this is getting far too long. Stay tuned to this channel for other
- episodes:
- Buying meat in France
- Buying Cheese in France
- Buying bread in France
- Entertainment in France...)
-
- greg, yes, this stuff all really happened at one time or another...
-