Quai de la Joliette
Thursday, December 28, 2017
Deja Vu: Rencontres Photos in Marseille
Every year, the city of Arles
hosts the sprawling Rencontres de
la Photographie, an international photo festival which lasts all summer and
takes over many of the city's historic buildings, galleries and other public
and private spaces. (My story about the
2017 Rencontres is here.) And this year some of the very best work from
the 2017 Rencontres is being shown again, in Marseille.
Called
Le Monde Tel Qu'il Va! (The World
As it Is!), the Marseille exhibit is comprised of eight separate Rencontres shows
in their entirety, plus one new show by local photographer Monique
Deregibus. Altogether 40 photographers
are featured. Admission is free but the show ends on January 7 so carpe diem!
According to the press materials:
"The more we think countries are closed off and mired in
political or economic crises, the more photographers are there. They reveal,
tell, attest, invent, repair and rebuild with their own language, that of the
image. They decode the early signs of social change. The World as It Is! offers a journey
from the shores of the Bosporus to sub-Saharan border areas, from the divided
island of Cyprus to a Libya torn between war and refugees. Come and share this
taste for other places at major exhibitions that marked the Rencontres d’Arles
this summer with 40 photographers who are wondering about the state of the
world."
Le Monde Tel Qu'il Va! is at
the just-reopened J1 (also called MJ1) terminal building on a long pier near
the ferry port in the Joliette district of the city. The building was entirely refurbished in 2013
as part of the Marseille-Provence
Capital of Culture celebrations but according to my blogger friend Sheila at Marvellous-Provence, it's been
closed ever since, the victim of local politics and squabbling. "With its
huge spaces and spectacular views," Sheila says, "it was easily one
of the most popular and most visited venues of that year. So the fact that it has now reopened--now called
the MJ1--is excellent news."
If you miss this exhibit, the
next show at the MJ1 will be part of the Marseille-Provence 2018
festival, featuring six months of events with love as the theme. Officially
called MP2018: Quel Amour!, it launches on Valentines Day, runs through the end
of August and features 200 cultural events (music, dance, art, etc.) across the
region.
Le Monde Tel
Qu'il Va!
Eight
exhibits on view until January 7, 2018
Tuesday to
Sunday, 10 am to 6 pm, with special hours Dec 31st.
Free
admission
Hangar MJ1
Quai de la Joliette
Quai de la Joliette
13002 Marseille
Photos: Three views of the J1 building...and the poster for the show. Top photo by Michele Clavel, second photo by Frederic D. at Photos-Provence.fr. Third photo (inside the J1 looking out) by Alizé Almozinos.
Monday, December 4, 2017
One Restaurant I Love: A Guest Post
You can't live in Provence and not be passionate about food. The cliché is that the French spend much of each meal talking about what they ate at their last meal or what they'll eat at the next. The produce here is so good...and there's so much culinary talent...there aren't enough days in a month to try a fraction of the restaurants I'd like to. Many of my friends feel the same way so of course we trade notes constantly. Periodically someone will rave so enthusiastically about a meal that I'll ask them to share the info with all of us, through a guest post. And since it had been a few years since I wrote about Jean-Luc Rabanel (one of my favorite chefs) and his outstanding restaurant, L'atelier, in Arles, I was delighted when Keith Van Sickle suggested a guest post about a recent meal there. Keith's bio appears at the end of this text; read on for his Rabanel review!
There
are a lot of great restaurants in Provence, with Michelin stars galore like Le Petit Nice in Marseille and Baumanière
in Les Baux. But for my money, the best
fine dining in Provence is at L’atelier de Jean-Luc Rabanel in Arles.
In
1999, Rabanel became the first chef in France to earn a Michelin star for an organic
restaurant, Coté Garonne in the small
town of Tonneins in southwest France. He
later closed that restaurant and moved to Provence, renowned for its fresh
produce, and opened L’atelier in 2007.
On a
quiet street just off the Place de la Republique, Rabanel works his magic. He calls his approach “Greenstronomie” –
light on the meat and heavy on the abundance of Provence. As he puts it, “At the center of my cuisine
is emotion and taste, a philosophy based on the vegetable. Vegetables, roots,
plants, leaves, flowers and wild herbs thus become the main actors of my
creations.”
L’atelier offers you just two choices: the
six-course menu (95€) or the nine-course menu (123€). That’s it. On certain days, there's also a three-course option for lunch (55€). You can order wine by the glass, by the
bottle, or pick one of the wine pairings chosen by the sommelier (three glasses, 45€; five glasses, 65€).
The
server will ask if you have any food allergies, which is a nice touch. I can’t eat gluten and I normally have to
bring up the subject myself, which can make for an awkward moment. I appreciate that L’atelier made this discussion a comfortable one.
My
wife and I went to L’atelier recently
for her birthday, as it's our special occasion restaurant of choice. We usually order the six-course menu. The courses are small but you always get more
than advertised (this year we counted eight courses) so there's no risk of going
hungry.
Plus
there's the bread - you're served a selection of five different freshly baked varieties. And lucky me, I enjoyed the best
gluten-free bread I’ve ever had.
After
a glass of Champagne, the plates started arriving. My wife says that each plate is like a work
of art you get to enjoy twice. First you
appreciate its beauty, and then you savor the tastes.
Our meal began with a piece of raw tuna marinated in sesame oil and laid atop sliced celery root and basil. This
was sprinkled with a peanut crumble. Oh
yes, there were also little pieces of smoky lardon hiding in there. And the flower on top was spicy. All those flavors were nice way to wake up
the taste buds!
Next
came the sweetest peas I’ve ever eaten, mixed into a fava bean puree and topped
by Parmesan foam and a shrimp that had been dipped in ginger and grilled.
After
that came mackerel over fava beans and then asparagus with morel mushrooms and
white garlic ice cream.
While
the menu changes regularly, we were thrilled to be able to enjoy one of Rabanel’s
signature dishes. This is an impossibly
tender filet mignon of taureau de
Camargue (bull) topped with an egg yolk that's been marinated in soy sauce
and rice vinegar. The combination is to
die for! It was accompanied by too many kinds
of vegetable to count.
Then
came the desserts, three different ones. The first was a jelly of verbena, topped by pureed Jerusalem artichoke
hearts and macha ice cream. The second
was a combination of fresh and sautéed fruits with tarragon sorbet. Then came the black-olive cookies and citrus
macarons.
L’atelier has two Michelin stars and is
unlikely to get a third, even though the food is as good as it gets. Why? Because to get a rare and coveted third star usually means you have to
invest millions of dollars in the décor. Rabanel
has chosen to keep the décor simple, the staff relatively young, and the focus on the food.
This is the reason that the Gault Millau guide, which rates purely on food quality, has given L’Atelier 5 toques and a score of 19 out of 20. These stratospheric ratings make it one of the top restaurants in France.
Since he first opened in Arles, Jean-Luc has grown the business organically. Once L'atelier was up and running he opened a bistro next door, called À Côté, which remains extremely popular. Then he opened a seafood spot called Iode, which has since closed.
He also expanded L'atelier, doubling the dining space and adding accommodations. Today you can rent rooms in two flavors: “Les Confidentielles” which is a guestroom plus meals if you want them (breakfast + either lunch or dinner) and “Les Appartés,” which is four rooms with a common living-room area...which you can rent by the room or as a whole. If you're staying in Les Appartés you can request cooking classes for your group there; classes are also available in the restaurant in the morning for would-be sous chefs who want to cook along with the restaurant's brigade. All the details are on the restaurant's website here.
This is the reason that the Gault Millau guide, which rates purely on food quality, has given L’Atelier 5 toques and a score of 19 out of 20. These stratospheric ratings make it one of the top restaurants in France.
Since he first opened in Arles, Jean-Luc has grown the business organically. Once L'atelier was up and running he opened a bistro next door, called À Côté, which remains extremely popular. Then he opened a seafood spot called Iode, which has since closed.
He also expanded L'atelier, doubling the dining space and adding accommodations. Today you can rent rooms in two flavors: “Les Confidentielles” which is a guestroom plus meals if you want them (breakfast + either lunch or dinner) and “Les Appartés,” which is four rooms with a common living-room area...which you can rent by the room or as a whole. If you're staying in Les Appartés you can request cooking classes for your group there; classes are also available in the restaurant in the morning for would-be sous chefs who want to cook along with the restaurant's brigade. All the details are on the restaurant's website here.
So if
you have a special occasion coming up, or want to taste the best that Provence
has to offer, consider a meal at L’atelier
in Arles. You won’t be sorry.
L'Atelier de Jean-Luc Rabanel
7, rue des Carmes
13200 Arles, France
Phone: +33 4 90 91 07 69
rabanel.com
L'Atelier de Jean-Luc Rabanel
7, rue des Carmes
13200 Arles, France
Phone: +33 4 90 91 07 69
rabanel.com
Photos: (1-3) A few dishes from Keith and Val's recent meal: raw, marinated tuna on celery root with smoky lardon, a sprinkle of peanut crumble and an edible, spicy flower;
sweet-pea and a fava-bean puree topped with Parmesan foam and a grilled shrimp; and a Rabanel signature: filet mignon of taureau de Camargue (bull) topped with an egg yolk that's been marinated in soy sauce and rice vinegar, accompanied by "too many kinds of vegetable to count." (4) Jean-Luc with a few of his favorite things. The ingredients are all organic and many are grown specifically for him by friends. Photo courtesy of Le Figaro. (5) The dining room is striking but simple, meant to keep the focus on the food. (6) You'll find hearty, Spanish-influenced bistro fare at Rabanel's restaurant À Côté, which is right next door. (7) The rental accommodation called Les Appartés. (8) One of Jean-Luc's many cookbooks. (10) Val and Keith in front of the Château de Vauvenargues (wondering, no doubt, where they should have lunch).
Keith Van Sickle is the author of "One Sip at a Time: Learning to Live in Provence," which was published in January, 2017 and is available on Amazon here. He grew up in Alameda, California, and got his first taste of overseas life during a college term in England and later, a six-month backpacking sojourn. Grateful for the scholarships that helped him pay for college, in 1987 he started a foundation that helps students from Alameda pursue their own educations. His career has been in tech, primarily on the finance side. During a five-year work assignment in Switzerland, where they lived in a village with more cows than people, Keith and his wife Val fell in love with the European expat lifestyle. After returning to the US, Keith helped start a company whose product was so geeky he says he still doesn’t quite understand it. When the couple decided they wanted to live abroad again but were unable to find another expat gig, they decided to invent their own. Now they and their trusty dog split their time between Silicon Valley and Provence, where Keith does financial consulting for startups and Val consults in a variety of fields. Keith publishes a blog called Life in Provence and you can follow him on Twitter, Facebook and Medium.
sweet-pea and a fava-bean puree topped with Parmesan foam and a grilled shrimp; and a Rabanel signature: filet mignon of taureau de Camargue (bull) topped with an egg yolk that's been marinated in soy sauce and rice vinegar, accompanied by "too many kinds of vegetable to count." (4) Jean-Luc with a few of his favorite things. The ingredients are all organic and many are grown specifically for him by friends. Photo courtesy of Le Figaro. (5) The dining room is striking but simple, meant to keep the focus on the food. (6) You'll find hearty, Spanish-influenced bistro fare at Rabanel's restaurant À Côté, which is right next door. (7) The rental accommodation called Les Appartés. (8) One of Jean-Luc's many cookbooks. (10) Val and Keith in front of the Château de Vauvenargues (wondering, no doubt, where they should have lunch).
Keith Van Sickle is the author of "One Sip at a Time: Learning to Live in Provence," which was published in January, 2017 and is available on Amazon here. He grew up in Alameda, California, and got his first taste of overseas life during a college term in England and later, a six-month backpacking sojourn. Grateful for the scholarships that helped him pay for college, in 1987 he started a foundation that helps students from Alameda pursue their own educations. His career has been in tech, primarily on the finance side. During a five-year work assignment in Switzerland, where they lived in a village with more cows than people, Keith and his wife Val fell in love with the European expat lifestyle. After returning to the US, Keith helped start a company whose product was so geeky he says he still doesn’t quite understand it. When the couple decided they wanted to live abroad again but were unable to find another expat gig, they decided to invent their own. Now they and their trusty dog split their time between Silicon Valley and Provence, where Keith does financial consulting for startups and Val consults in a variety of fields. Keith publishes a blog called Life in Provence and you can follow him on Twitter, Facebook and Medium.
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