Provencal cooking
Provençal cuisine is almost always prepared with oliveoil (huile d'olive) and garlic (ail).
Tomatoes are another common ingredient, and you can safely assume thatany dish described as "à la provençale" will beprepared with garlic-seasoned tomatoes.
Other vegetables that frequently appear on Provençal menusare eggplant
(aubergine), summer squash (courgette)and raw onions.
Tomatoes, eggplant and squash stewed together along with green peppers,garlic
and various aromatic herbs produce that perennial Provencal favorite,ratatouille.
Perhaps
the most typical sauce of the region is the Aioli,prepared
by mixing mayonnaise - made with olive oil of course - with lotsof fresly crushed
garlic.
It is spread generously on hot or cold vegetables, such as asparagus (asperges),eggs,
fish...
Provence's most famous dish is bouillabaisse,which
is made with at least three kinds of fresh fish cooked for ten minutesor so in
broth with onions, tomatoes, saffran, and various herbs, includinglaurel, sage
and thyme.
Bouillabaisse is usually served with toast and rouille, a spicy sauce thatsome
people mix into the soup but which others spread on the toast. Themost renowned
bouillabaisse is made in Marseille.