Meribel

For the holidays this year, I decided to take up a friendโs offer to visit their family in Mรฉribel, a village way high up in the French alps. As you can see, itโs a spectacular place. And Iโm not just talking โgorgeous sunsetsโ or โcharmingly quaintโ spectacular. I mean, Mรฉribel was mind-blowingly, insanely hallucinante.
Seriously, I wasnโt prepared for the awesome beauty of it all. Although I havenโt strapped on a pair of skis in over thirty years, there I stood, at the top of the mountain on my first day on skis in decades, ready to slide down.


Let me tell youโskiing isnโt one of those things that you get more comfortable with as you get older. *sigh* Especially when youโre with a group of skiers that include some crazy teenagers who, at the top of a particularly steep run, simply point their skis in the straight-down position, and shove off with their poles and a banchee-like โOn y va, Daveeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeed!โ

And off theyโd goโฆ
They were certainly fun to watch and I do remember how much fun I had at their age. But since I was celebrating being yet another year older, and Iโd left my dentures inadvertently soaking by my bedside, the idea of spending my birthday toothless, in a helicopter being sped away by medics with a few broken bones (and a broken ego), wellโฆletโs just say that wasnโt exactly my idea of fun. Yet I did have fun nevertheless; just at my own paceโฆthank you very much.
We stayed in a little cozy chalet, which is called a mazeau, although no one seems to know why itโs called that or how itโs actually spelled. So if anyone French knows, weโre all ears. The birds nearby had a nice little spot to spend the winter as well. I know thatโs a birdhouse, although thereโs probably a very specific word for it in French too.

I know many of you were upset not to be around for my aforementioned birthday. But just to let you know, Iโve opened up the window for gift-giving until next year, so you still have plenty of time. If you werenโt around, I got my wish for the best birthday cake imaginableโa nicely-caramelized apple tarte Tatin.
Yes indeed, it wouldnโt be vacationโฆor Franceโฆif there wasnโt a lot of good food around. And my other birthday wish was granted and I got to pick whatever I wanted to have for dinner too. So I choose Raclette, a regional dish (although I think itโs originally Swissโฆbut I wasnโt going to quibble with anything cheesy) where a triangle of cheese of the same name is set by the fire to roast. Once warm, itโs scraped over boiled potatoesโฆwhich we cheated and roasted, since they taste betterโฆand salty little pickled cornichons.


Luckily in the rather Euro-ish chic town of Mรฉribel, thereโs a homey little local cooperative which sells specialties of the region. Aside from jams made with rosehips and gรฉnepi-flavored eau-de-vie, there were huge..and I mean HUGEโฆwheels of mountain cheeses like Beaufort, Tomme de Savoie, and Reblochon.
Once again, it wouldnโt be France if there wasnโt just one person working there, waiting on each person as if there wasnโt 25 people behind themโฆwhich there were.
My friend Jean-Baptiste said, โIf this was America, there would be a riot.โ

Of course the cheeses were worth waiting for and I even brought a few hunks home (of cheeseโฆ) as well as some other choice morsels from the Savoie including real polenta, not instant, which is almost impossible to find around these parts. There were also saucissons with hazelnuts (heyโฆI just realized that link is my second blog post ever.)
And just in case youโre wondering what I had for my birthday lunchโฆ

But the best meal I had wasnโt at home, but it was on top of the world.

We rode up the chairliftโฆthen two โeggsโ as they call the enclosed oval ski-podsโฆand a โtire-fessesโ, or โbutt-pullerโ, which is the actual name they call it in France, only to arrive at the top of what could only be described as one of the most perfect places in the world.

Of course, someone dropped the Opinel knife, which went sliding down an icy ravine. Which led to an all-out scaling of a treacherous snow-capped wallโฆhey, that cheese and salami were worth risking our life for, donโt you think? And nature was our plate, since I doubt anything could be more clean than what was up there, high above the clouds and the rest of civilization. And we dined with a 360-degree view of the French alps and the Mont Blanc off in the sparkling-clear distance.
After a long day on the slopes, my dogs were barkinโ (and my fesse was getting chapped for sitting on those cold rocks) and thankfully we were sure to stock plenty of rich, drinkable red wine on hand to pour for ourselves the moment we came inside.

Someone had told me that Mรฉribel was bitter cold so Iโd raced around Paris the week before Christmas (mistake #1) looking for a very warm winter jacket that wasnโt a gazillion euros.
Let me tell you, thereโs only one thing worse than shopping a week before Christmas (mistake #2), and thatโs shopping in Paris a week before Christmas (mistake #3โฆwhich I wonโt make again).
Nothing is in stock, no one really wants to help you, and youโre left with the dregs of whatโs left, including lots of XXL and XXXL. Honestly, I donโt think anyone in France even wears anything larger than Large.
Still, I lucked out at one store out in Bercy Village and found a down jacket in my size that was in the wrong department, that wasnโt hideously ugly. I mean, whatโs with all those prints on winter jackets, folks? But when I actually got on the slopes, I started schvitzing like I was on the beach in Aruba.
Everyday Iโd peel off more clothes than a Chippendaleโs dancerโminus the mulletโand was down to nothing but a t-shirt and my Nanook du Nord jacket by the end. Oy!
But girlfriendโฆdid I look good out there on those slopes, or what!
Ok, not really.
I mean, I didnโt look as good as those teenagers speeding down the slopes. But in my defense, they were going so fastโฆand were so rail-thinโฆthat all you could see was me.
Still, it was nice to be warm instead of freezing my fesse off.


Let me just tell you, after a few hours of trying to keep up with those young โuns, more than a couple of times I opted to head to one of the welcoming alpine lodges that dotted the mountain to repair myself with a shot of something a bit more soothing for the soul: Chartreuse Verteโa shot of herbal Chartreuse in a steaming mug of hot chocolate.

And the last day, when everyone decided to go on an extended ski promenade, I decided to stay in by the fire and do pretty much nothing. (Will you think less of me if I mention that another factor was the 8am departure time?)
So after everyone left and I finally roused myself into enjoying a quiet morning alone in the mountains, I finally took off my warm jimmies, got dressed, and took a little hike on my own. For some reason, I wound up at the local butcher shop where I had them slice me up some of their meaty-looking racks of pork ribs, which I tossed in my backpack, hiked back up to the chalet, and got to marinating pronto for our dinner.

I just pulled out whatever they had on hand for the marinade from around the kitchenโsoy sauce, garlic, peanut butter, the juice of a few tangerines, fresh ginger, vinegar, cocoa powder, coffee, lots of black pepper and chili powder, and of course, a nice belt of whisky. You name it, itโs in there.
When everyone got back, I never saw such happy French faces: it was either the sight of the ribs or they were just glad to be home from skiing 20 kilometers. Or they werenโt Parisians. Naturally everyone wanted to know what ingredients went into the marinade, but I think they lost interest after I reeled off the 27th one. Thank goodness I didnโt make molรฉ!
I started roasting the ribs and once everyone pulled off their ski togs and recovered from their exhaustion, the fire got stoked and those ribs were charred to crispy, yet tender perfection. I had to let my French friends know that itโs acceptable to pick up ribs with your fingers, which a few people had a hard time doing. Old habits die hard, I guess. But those of us that did were rewarded with the best-off-the-bone scrapes of caramelized pork while the rest had to be content with trying to wield their knives-and-forks and making the best go of it they could. Suckasโฆ
And when all is said and done, how does one end a vacation in the worldโs largest wine cooler?

Well, thereโs always plenty of Mousseaux de Savoie, a locally-made sparkling wine, to go around. Especially when Iโm there. And nothing makes a finer ending to a week on the slopes, or a week in the French alps.







