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Life in rural France - Food - Friends - Wine - Cheese - Comments
Welcome to French Food
Focus. The name describes the intent of this blog. I'll focus on food
and because I live in rural France the stress will be upon French food.
Not that I will limit myself to food only. There are numerous posts
concerning life in France, comments on life in general and, certainly,
opinions about anything that strikes my fancy.
I welcome your comments and promise to publish all of them good & bad so
long as they're not offensive, pornographic or rude.
If
you have some good recipes you'd like to share or if you want to rave
about any great French
restaurants this
is the place to do it. I hope you enjoy my ramblings about rural France!
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Comments
to: yankinparisot@gmail.com
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We went up to
the village hall yesterday at lunch time for the village New Years
celebration put on by the Marie. About half the village attended. (our
whole commune has 450 adults plus children) We had mulled wine, orange
juice, crisps, olives and galette. (The village can't afford the
'galette des Roi' that's traditional in homes.) A good time was had by
all.
It was nice to be greeted warmly by so many of our neighbors. Beaucoup
de bise were exchanged. These are kisses on the
cheek; more friendly that a simple handshake and a sign of acceptance.
Everyone wishing everyone a happy new year. Nice party.
I couldn't, however, not notice that the real politics are starting. We
have our local elections coming up for the Mayor and the town council.
(All 14 of them. Seems a lot, but then again why not.)
The current Mayor was working the room like a pro. He even tried out his
English on us! He's running for election to be Mayor for the first time
in his own right. He became Mayor this time when his predecessor
retired; he was the Deputy Mayor so automatically stepped up.
Running against him is the owner of the local pharmacy. He's younger,
but an outsider having only been living in the village for a couple of
years.
So to start with we have the incumbent who has been living in the
village for many years running against the new comer from outside. (The
villagers say; "he's a Parisian." Now I don't know if he really comes
from Paris, but they call most French outsiders Parisians just as they
call all foreigners "les Anglais" whether or not they come from the UK.)
The old guard versus the new. Add to that the fact that the Mayor is a
staunch Socialist and the challenger a fan of Sarkozy and you have nice
left right split. This is a pretty conservative area so being of the
right is not necessarily a bad thing.
The challengers accuse the Mayor of being stogy and do nothing. They
want the village to be more dynamic. Issues are things like why hasn't
the Mayor sorted out the cafe situation? (The local cafe is closed
because the license holder (unfortunately a drunk) is banned from
opening due to poor hygiene in the cafe. The owner would like to reopen,
but can't get the license off the holder.) Why can't the local shop be
combined with the Post Office to the benefit of both? The Mayor is also
accused of being uncommunicative preferring to do things then inform
people. And so it goes. Why was a house out of character allowed to be
built in the village?
The incumbents say that the 'newcomers' just want to stir up trouble;
that all they have are pipe dreams and what do they know about the
'real' village anyway. "We have a nice village let's keep it that way.
Don't rock the boat."
Now in these elections there can be an open slate or a closed one. In
the open slate its each person who's standing is voted for individually.
One votes for up to 15 people (including the Mayor's position.) In a
closed slate one votes for a selection of candidates as a block. That is
if its a full slate one can only give it all 15 votes. The Mayor has
opted for a closed slate. (remember he's a Socialist and party
oriented), but he only has 9 people on his slate. The challengers are
still gathering potential names, but... They already have two
'foreigners' signed up. Both British! Will the true locals accept them?
The rest of the open slate so far tends to be the younger people of the
village.
This is getting interesting. I'll keep you posted as the campaigns
progress.
I expect that anyone reading this who lives or has ever lived in a small
town will find all of this familiar. Politics are politics methinks.
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