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Recipe: Butter bean, Brie & crispy caper salad
A quick, flavour-packed salad recipe for a light lunch or summer meal
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The Périgord dish that some find hard to swallow
Salade Périgourdine is a classic Dordogne salad made with duck gizzards, foie gras and magret
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‘Village of cats’ in southern France is inspired by an old legend
Story of a young girl and her kittens has influenced the architecture of La Romieu, classified one of the Plus Beaux Villages de France
Can camembert be made in other places or only Normandy?
A reader question, answered in The Connexion September print edition. Can camembert be made in other places in France, or only Normandy?
Question
Can camembert cheese only be made in Normandy? B.W.
Answer
No… it can be made anywhere since production of camembert-style cheeses was widespread long before France created its appellation d’origine contrôlée (AOC) protection label, or the EU its equivalent appellation d’origine protégée.
As long ago as 1909, a syndicate of Norman cheesemakers complained about “those who dare to sell under the name of “camembert” pale imitations made outside Normandy”, especially in the centre and east of France. Today there is, for example, Tunworth camembert made in Hertfordshire, England, or Italian buffalo milk camembert.
However, there has been an AOC label since 1982 for camembert de Normandie, and an AOP since 1996, specifically protecting this name. Like other existing EU food-quality and origin labels, this will continue to be respected in the UK after Brexit, meaning a British maker cannot produce “Normandy camembert”.
Watch out, however: some cheese described as fabriqué en Normandie (made in Normandy), is not camembert de Normandie. Camembert cheese originated in the village of Camembert (Orne), where it is said to have been perfected in the 18th century by a farmer, Marie Harel, with help from a priest. It is still made there, including by the last maker of AOP camembert fermier – made from the farm’s own milk – Fromagerie Durand.
Camembert de Normandie must be made traditionally from lait cru – unpasteurised milk, unlike most other camemberts. It must, of course, be made only in Normandy, from Norman milk.