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Definição e significado de Herbes_de_Provence

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Herbes de Provence

                   
  Herbes de Provence

Herbes de Provence (French pronunciation: [ɛʁb.də.pʁɔ.vɑ̃s]) is a mixture of dried herbs typical of Provence. Formerly simply a descriptive term referring to herbs typical of Provence, in the 1970s, commercial blends started to be sold under this name.[1] These mixtures typically contain savory, fennel, basil, thyme, and lavender flowers and other herbs, though lavender was not used in traditional southern French cooking.[2]

As the name "Herbes de Provence" is generic, and not a Protected Geographical Status, there is no guarantee that Herbes de Provence in fact come from Provence; indeed, the vast majority of these blends come from central and eastern Europe, North Africa, and China.[3]

Herbes de Provence are used to flavour grilled foods such as fish and meat, as well as vegetable stews. The mixture can be added to foods before or during cooking or mixed with cooking oil prior to cooking so as to infuse the flavour into the cooked food. They are rarely added after cooking is complete.

Herbes de Provence are often sold in larger bags than other herbs, and the price in Provence is considerably lower than other herbs.

Provençal cuisine has traditionally used many herbs, which were often characterized collectively as "herbes de Provence", but not in standard combinations, and not sold as a mixture:

...the famous mixtures of herbes de Provence... were unknown to my Provençal grandmothers, who used, individually and with discernment, thyme, rosemary and savory gathered in the countryside.[4]

It was in the 1970s that standard mixtures were formulated by spice wholesalers, including notably Ducros in France (now part of McCormick & Company).[4]

  See also

  References

  1. ^ Laget, p. 134
  2. ^ It does not appear at all in the best-known compendium of Provençal cooking, J.-B. Reboul's Cuisinière Provençale (1910)
  3. ^ Jacques Marseille, ed., Dictionnaire de la Provence et de la Côte d'Azur, Éd. Larousse, Paris, 2002 (ISBN 2035751055), p. 382.
  4. ^ a b Laget, p. 138

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