No view,
no landscape,
however varied,
picturesque or grandiose
can make me forget
my little valley in Burgundy.
- Alexandre Dumas.
French author.
Village upon village and
valley upon valley drifted past as we crisscrossed the Burgundian backroads
from Quemigny-Poisot to Vougeot, from Gevrey-Chambertin to Dijon, from
Nuits-Saint-Georges to Beaune and beyond, to Chalon-sur-Saône and then back again
along the “Grand Cru Highway” to Gilly-lès-Citreaux.
It was the end of
March. Spring was still loosening itself from winter’s claws and the
valleys and rolling hills were an ugly dark greyish brown. This is not how I
would have liked to see the Côte
d’Or or any wine country for that matter! The famous grapes were nothing more
than possible reborns. Just hope! Hope for a good harvest year.
It was cleanup time
in the vineyards. It was the start of the new production year. Everywhere small
white or blue Peugeot industrial vans could be seen, parked on narrow gravel
roads between the domaines, the
estates. These little vans are the transport of choice for the capped, coated and
gloved “vine crafters” who methodically worked up and down along the miles and
miles of strung wire and among the thousands upon thousands of gnarled grape
vine stumps, some already skillfully pruned by these pruning artists, some not…yet.
Here and there smoke from small fires rose in thin columns into the still air,
fueled by vine offcuts. Occasionally one would see a farmer in one of those tiny, narrow,
strange looking, stilted vineyard tractors tilling between the vines.
I'm drifting off...
My dominant memories
of Burgundy are of its friendly helpful people, the historic splendor of old
town Dijon, and the region’s incredible food and wine. My only regret is going
to Burgundy at the “wrong” time. It was really still winter, granted, at the
very end of winter, but still, late spring would have been a better time to
visit. Summers can be hot, fall you will have nice colors but it is the busy
harvest season. But in mid to late spring, I can imagine a quilted, and ever changing
landscape as grape leaves sprout and transform from patches of yellow and lime
to darker shades of green depending on the season’s progression.
I parked our car
on the western end of the historic district behind the Eglise St-Michel, a flamboyant Gothic church from the 16th
century. I had no map of the city so we followed the tourists’ information
signs that you see in most French cities, to the Palace of the Dukes of
Burgundy and the Place de la Libération,
a semicircular square in front of the Duke’s Palace. Dijon’s “Trafalgar Square”.
Unfortunately it was a Monday and the palace which now houses the Musée des Beaux Arts,
the Fine Arts Museum, was closed. Many museums
in France are closed on Mondays. If I wasn’t so free and easy and looked at or
even just brought our guidebook, I would have known about the closure. On the
other hand, an open museum would have meant several hours of missing countless other
architectural wonders we discovered on our walkabouts.
Dijon's Notre Dame church
From the information
center we walked around to the Dijon Notre Dame where we lingered for a
moment. The façade struck me as something I would expect in Venice. The thin
upper arches caught my eye first (is it Byzantine? I wondered, wrongly) and on
closer inspection fifty one gargoyles in three rows of seventeen, is supported
by three very tall Gothic arches. Inside
a service was in progress so we stay for only a minute or two. The natural
light inside was quite amazing. Colored
stained glass windows, mostly blue, keeps the bottom portion of the church
darkish while the upper windows are clear glass and this play of light gives
the roof a floating effect.
We switched back and
crossed the Place de la Libération again and came upon the Palace of
Justice, construction started in 1518, the Burgundian Parliament building
during part of the 16th century. Its carved front door and its Hall
of St. Louis evoked a lively and noisy vision of scattering parliamentary
delegates and shopkeepers talking to visiting ladies in vertugadin en bourrelet dresses, billowy at the hips with puffed up
arms, wearing 1580’s version of the Jackie Kennedy pillbox hats, who came to
listen to a public hearing or to their husbands or fathers speak in parliament and
shop at the same time. This place was a beehive during the early 17th
century. Upon entering the empty St. Louis Hall, the front door was slightly
open and I, inquisitive as always to explore nooks and crannies, but also hesitantly
walked in with M on my heels. Two policemen at the end of the long hall gave us
a beady-eye look as they guard the entrance to modern day Dijon’s Court of Appeals.
Once they saw I was just shooting pictures with my camera and no threat to them
or the guarded justices they ignored us and we continue gawking at the arched wooden
ceiling and intricately carved crossbeams of the hall.
The Palace of Justice
It was easy to mentally drift off while walking down the narrow streets with their many timber-framed houses and dreamingly imagine all the dramas of life that played out on these alleys and passages through the centuries.
Besides Paris, M
feels Dijon is the second most beautiful town in France after Les Baux-de-Provence.
Dijon has beautiful and delicately carved door entrances, many 15th century
timber-framed houses that somehow survived time and weather’s onslaught over
the centuries, and numerous architectural styles from different periods and
they all appear to blend seamlessly together as if a single architect designed
and built the historic town in one lifetime.
The dinner was good traditional Burgundian food and so much better than what we had the night
before at Le Clos Prieur. We looked
at two other restaurants before we stumbled upon des Caltivateurs. The display menu outside the front door looked
decent and the many pieces of porcelain roosters and other chicken related artwork
inside looked inviting. M loves chicken art. The restaurant had a cozy country
feeling to it, created by wood-beamed ceilings, exposed brick walls and tables
covered in checkered red and white tablecloths; simple, typical, no-frills! The
wine list was all local. The Domaine
Philippe Gavignet, Bourgogne Hautes-Cotes du Nuits, “Clos des Dames Huguettes”,
a 2014 gold medal winner at a Paris wine show, was enjoyable.
During dinner we had another rather amusing “lost in
translation” moment (the second for the night after the store clerk). We had a
few of them on this trip, which is not surprising at all seeing that we hugged
the French countryside for most of the vacation. It always amazes me on
business travel trips when I hear some people complain about the lack of
English among the local people. OMG…while back home they are the same crowd
that complains if a foreigner, English-abled, visiting their backyard can’t
understand their local accent…
M wanted to find
out more about some of the desserts on the menu and asked the waiter for a
translation of one of the dishes. He couldn’t help so he asked another diner,
who couldn’t translate the dish to English either. He went to another table for
help and the whole issue snowballed. Eventually several of the diners tried to
help with the translation until one of the waiters disappeared into the kitchen
and came back with a bottle of honey and a loaf of gingerbread to explain what
was in the specific dessert.
Friezes in Dijon
“Ah! Merci” M
exclaimed to great applause and laughter from the whole restaurant. We were
somewhat embarrassed being the center of the attention, but only for a fraction
of a second, because the spirit of friendliness and the desire of Burgundians to
help a non-French speaking person were very touching.
She decided
against the gingerbread and honey dessert and asked what the next dessert item was
and I thought, oh no, here we go again, but luckily a woman at a table close by
could translate the rest of the menu items and M eventually settled on a cherry
or berry pie. However, she ended the evening by ordering coffee for us in
perfect French: “Deux grands cafés s'il vous plaît”.
It was incidents
like these and a general sense of spontaneity
and freedom throughout the whole trip that made this vacation in France one of
our most memorable vacations.
1 comment:
I lived that part of our trip so very much. Dijon is just mind blowing, I would go back anytime. Fantastic scenery.
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