I had the pan fried foie gras with figs (not very corsican except for the figs tbh), the figatelli with brocciu (enormous spicy sausage with fresh sheep cheese) which was delicious but huge and I could not finish! with O Prove Calvi wine. And my sister had the brocciu omelette and stuffed eggplant with tomatoes, and roasted clementines with local honey. All very good and I strongly advise the restaurant if you ever go to Paris!
I found this account of Corsican cuisine from Saveur : http://www.saveur.com/ar...Travels/Corsican-Cuisine if anyone is interested!
Though this evening we are going to another regional French cooking with the Alsacian fondue : my recipe is
* one whole munster cheese (I found that this can be replaced by Stinkin Bishop if you are in England for similar overall taste when melted, otherwise ask your cheesemonger for a local equivalent)
* grated comte or emmental
* white wine (dry from Alsace preferably), 2 to 3 glasses
* kirsch (1 tiny glass, like a shot worth of it)
* garlic
* maizena (cornflour), 3 teaspoons
* semi stale brown loaf of bread (poilane will do but with thick slices), cut in cubes
* pepper and cumin seeds (optional)
Peel and cut the garlic clove in half and rub it hard all over inside the fondue set.
Cut the cheese in cubes and start the fondue set on low heat. Put one glass of white wine in and incorporate the cheese until it starts melting, then slowly incorporate the rest of the cheese and wine until the mix becomes smooth. Mix the kirsh and the maixena and mix this up until completely combined. Add cumimn seeds and fresh pepper if using.
And that is it you are all set, you can start putting the bread cubes on your forks and just start dipping.