A Season for That: Lost and Found in the Other Southern France

A Season for That: Lost and Found in the Other Southern France

by Steve Hoffman

Narrated by Steve Hoffman

Unabridged — 10 hours, 47 minutes

A Season for That: Lost and Found in the Other Southern France

A Season for That: Lost and Found in the Other Southern France

by Steve Hoffman

Narrated by Steve Hoffman

Unabridged — 10 hours, 47 minutes

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Overview

In this poignant, delicious memoir, American tax preparer and food writer Steve Hoffman tells the story of how he and his family move to the French countryside, where the locals upend everything he knows about food, wine, and learning how to belong.

Steve Hoffman is a perfectly comfortable middle-aged Minnesotan man who has always been desperately, pretentiously in love with France, more specifically with the idea of France. To follow that love, he and his family move, nearly at random, to the small, rural, scratchy-hot village of Autignac in the south of the country, and he immediately thinks he's made a terrible mistake. Life here is not holding your cigarette chest-high while walking to the café and pulling off the trick of pretending to be Parisian, it's getting into fights with your wife because you won't break character and introduce your very American family to the locals, who can smell you and your perfect city-French from a mile away.

But through cooking what the local grocer tells him to cook, he feels more of this place. A neighbor leads him into the world of winemaking, where he learns not as a pedantic oenophile, but bodily, as a grape picker and winemaker's apprentice. Along the way, he lets go of the abstract ideas he'd held about France, discovering instead the beauty of a culture that is one with its landscape, and of becoming one with that culture.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

05/20/2024

Food writer Hoffman debuts with a finely detailed memoir about learning to live, cook, and eat like a local. When the author, a longtime Francophone, and his wife traded their Minnesota suburb for a small village in southern France in hopes of helping their kids master the language, Autignac turned out to be less than the quaint immersion site they’d expected (“Nowhere in France isn’t pretty... except for the place we picked to live for the next six months”). Hoffman felt excluded from the “harmonious bubble” of village life until trips to the grocer, nights spent cooking unfamiliar dishes, and long days of harvesting grapes with a neighbor yielded insights into a culture that tightly linked food, wine, land, family, and community. Hoffman’s musings on his adopted home sometimes lapse into sentimentality (“, figs were those rare and precious things” on charcuterie boards, while “Here, ubiquitous and free, they were the blue collar refreshment that Yvan the carpenter grabbed from the tree in the alley”). Still, the author’s perceptive dissections of such small moments as watching his son try an oyster for the first time, and, he imagines, experiencing “a feeling of joining the adult world in some way he couldn’t make happen in other realms,” speak lucidly to the challenges and rewards of connection at home and abroad. Francophones and foodies will be charmed. (July)

Kirkus Reviews

2024-05-04
The transformation of a Minnesotan family in rural France.

In his tender debut memoir, tax preparer and food journalist Hoffman recounts his family’s adventure of living for six months in Autignac, a village of 800 people in rural Languedoc that, at first, seemed decidedly not as magical as he had hoped. It was not picturesque, like Provence; above all, it wasn’t Paris, where he had spent nine months during college. “I don’t know what I’m doing here,” he told his wife. “This isn’t the trip I expected. It isn’t the trip I wanted it to be. It’s not the village I wanted it to be. It’s not the climate I wanted it to be. It’s not even the French food I wanted it to be. We’re just here.” But as time passed and he, his wife, and their two children—14-year-old Eva and 9-year-old Joseph—got to know their “new, unfamiliar neighbors,” they settled into the rhythms of the place, from the fishmonger’s weekly visits to the seasonal changes that presented them with succulent ripe apricots in summer and sweet wine grapes in the fall. Hoffman describes in sensuous prose his delighted discovery of new aromas and tastes, including aromatic herbs, briny oysters, and pungent cheeses. Even a homemade vinegar, “filling my sinuses and wringing my salivary glands, changed the definition of whatever I had previously understood ‘vinegar’ to mean.” With the help of neighbors and shopkeepers, he learned to cook coq au vin, rabbit, beef daube, mackerel, and anchovies. “The kitchen,” he writes, “had begun to feel like the center that held this all together, and I craved my nightly aproned shift.” If food is central to Hoffman’s memories, so are the warm, embracing friendships that enriched each member of the family.

A collection of engaging recollections.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940159589231
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 07/09/2024
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

1

“What do you think?” asked Mary Jo.

“About what?”

“About everything. The village.”

We had just completed our first tour of Autignac, population eight hundred, burrowed deep in rural Languedoc. This was home for the next six months. This is where our two kids—Eva, fourteen, and Joseph, nine—would go to school. This is what we had picked, of all the options available.

A knife edge of Mediterranean sunlight sliced the central square in two. To our right, in a hot wedge of shade, the white plastic tables and green plastic chairs outside the Cafe de Commerce were talkatively half-occupied. Two bikes leaned against the nearest table. A pair of men sat across from each other in tight jerseys and half-shorts, with two glasses of white wine sweating on the table between them.

“I think it’s a perfectly beautiful village,” I said. “It’s just not a particularly beautiful village, is all.”

“What’s seiche?” asked Joe.

“What’s what?”

“Seiche.”

He was pointing to the first of four dishes the Cafe de Commerce was proposing for lunch.

“Seiche Farcie a la Setoise,” I said thoughtfully, as if deciding how best to explain it to him. But I had no idea what a seiche was, nor what the stuffing in a seiche farcie might be, nor what it meant to be a la Setoise.

I did not know what a Gardiane was either—item two on the laminated menu. Nor, in fact, did I know what number three, Daurade, was, or whether it would taste good grillee.

I did recognize item number four—rather a classic—referred to in this part of France, it appeared, as Cheeseburger avec Frites.

The owner of the cafe, who doubled as the waiter, had a hint of James Dean prettiness, with sandy hair swept back, and sandy stubble along a remarkable shelf of jaw. But the bruised hollows around his eyes and his dingy teeth spoke of a pack or two a day, too much coffee, and not enough sleep.

Something about our group, whether it was our flushed, Nordic skin, our two cameras, or simply the ineffable scent of touriste americain we must have given off in spite of ourselves—something about us had evidently triggered something in him, and his sunken eyes had glared at me as he first approached our table, as if, after all these years, he finally found himself face-to-face with the bastard who had run off with his wife.

Our two kids had received their elementary education at a public school called L’Etoile du Nord French Immersion, where the curriculum had been taught in French. As a result, we had spent a good chunk of the prime of our lives commuting more than an hour a day, five days a week, nine months a year, from a perfectly good suburban school district to the east side of Saint Paul, so our kids could speak French, like their father.

As that era of our lives had drawn to a close, Mary Jo and I had decided that eight years of Raffi songs, multiplication cards, and French vocabulary quizzes on the morning commute would feel more worthwhile, in retrospect, were it capped by a semester in France, and (we hoped) by some pretty spanking good French emanating from the mouths of our two children.

One of the very first things American students of French learn is how to order un Coca at a restaurant, although you would not have guessed that from Joe and Eva’s blank and disbelieving stares when I had ordered two beers, and invited them, in French, to order their Cokes from Monsieur. He had stood there, looking back and forth, apparently as irritated with my turning this into a teachable moment as with their refusal to speak.

He returned now, carrying a tray, in T-shirt and Adidas sweats, walking on the collapsed heels of his espadrilles.

He set two glasses of Kronenbourg—that ubiquitous, inoffensive, thoroughly quaffable Parisian cafe standard—in front of Mary Jo and me, and poured each of the kids a Coke.

“Can you ask for some ice for the kids?” asked Mary Jo.

The cafe owner stood waiting to hear something in his own language.

“They never serve ice in France,” I said.

“Sure they do,” she said.

“No, they don’t,” I said.

And what I meant was that, sure, you could ask for ice in France, and they might even have some, but it was not normal, and it made you into that person—in my case, the tall American, wearing hiking shoes, at a table with two cameras on it, speaking English to my family—who asks for ice. Nobody wants to be that person.

“Merci,” I said to the owner, and smiled. He notched the serving tray under his armpit, and stalked off.

Eva took a sip. “It’s warm,” she said.

“It’s not warm. It’s cool,” I said.

“It is warm,” said Joe.

“It’s not warm. It’s not a thirty-two-ounce Slurpee, but it’s not warm.”

“This is what I was talking about,” said Mary Jo. “Weren’t we literally just talking about this?”

“Guys, we’re in France,” I said. “Things are going to be different. That’s part of why we’re here.”

The church bell rang out the noon hour as I took a sip of beer. Across from us, the doors of a municipal library stood open, blasted by sunshine. I tried leaning back in my plastic chair, then, feeling a suspicious amount of give, sat back up.

The talk around us was blessedly free of the English, German, Swedish, and Dutch that seem to breed in those popular places that are in the process of changing, or have already changed, from themselves into painted and tourist-hungry imitations of themselves. But the French I was hearing was a rapid-fire singsong that sounded more Spanish or Italian in many ways than French, and, despite the near French fluency on which I had long prided myself, I struggled to follow much of anything that was said around us.

James Dean returned, and stood hipshot beside our table, as if resigned to get through this cruddy little episode so he could resume staining his teeth with dark roast and tar.

I asked him what a Gardiane was, and he explained that it was like a daube de boeuf, but made with the meat of bulls from the Camargue. I think I had a notion at that point of what daube de boeuf was. A beef stew. Red wine. But my awareness of it was like my awareness of haggis, or stockfish, or Krumkake—something exceptionally regional and distant, more tradition than food.

And what was Seiche Farcie, I wondered.

He puffed his cheeks and blew. It was a fruit of the sea, like an encornet. My blank smile revealed that I did not know what an encornet was any more than a seiche, and, as he absently described a stuffing made of breadcrumbs, sausage, and aromatics, he scanned the tables surrounding us, and skipped over to a bald man in a tracksuit sitting by the door, confiscated his partially eaten plate, and placed it under my nose.

“Seiche Farcie,” said the waiter.

On the plate were two and a half ghostly white inflated ovoids smothered in tomato sauce. The half-eaten one resembled the ivory-colored stomach of a good-sized largemouth bass that had been stuffed tight with bratwurst, and the steam rising into my face was a rich perfume of mingled tomato, sausage, onion, garlic, and saltwater pier.

“Some kind of shellfish?” I asked Mary Jo, as the waiter returned the plate to its rightful owner.

“Squid?” she asked.

The waiter returned now to display a whole fish, like a huge bronze sunfish, branded with grill marks. “Daurade,” he said, and swept away again, as the attention of our fellow diners gravitated toward us.

He returned once more, with a plate from the baker’s table, and—whether knowingly insulting or simply thorough—explained to us that the meat patty with melted cheese on it, sandwiched between two slices of brioche, was a sheese-boor-GARE.

“I will take the Seiche Farcie,” I said when the waiter had rejoined us.

Despite my introvert’s tendency toward social reticence, I was, and always had been, a broad-minded and rather swashbuckling eater, willing to find room in my heart and my palate for anything that any fraction of the human population had, at some time, found to be edible fare.

I asked the kids, in French, what they would like.

They sat uncomfortably for a second or two, and Joe looked imploringly at Mary Jo.

“Dad,” said Eva.

“Stevie,” said Mary Jo.

“What?” I asked.

“You know what they want, just order it.”

“And for you, Madame?” asked the waiter.

Mary Jo appeared, for a time, willing to wait me out.

“Madame?” asked the waiter.

“Cheeseburger avec frites,” said Mary Jo in unselfconscious American Franglais.

“We are not eating cheeseburgers,” I said.

The kids both nodded at her.

Mary Jo held up three fingers. “Trois,” she said, and the waiter nodded.

“And,” said Mary Jo. She pointed to the kids’ glasses. “Glace?” she asked.

He nodded again, and disappeared through the stone doorway into the cafe.

“I’ve got an idea,” I said. “Let’s ask if they have Doritos.”

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