Visit France during the Paris Olympics in 2024

Visit France during the Paris Olympics in 2024

“Combine muscle and mind!” said Pierre de Coubertin. 

Paris and the whole of France are pulling out all the stops to do just that for 2024 as the French capital hosts the Olympic Games. Aside from sporting events throughout the land, how are towns and cities in mainland France and overseas territories celebrating the Olympics? Are there any cultural events for people visiting France to experience the Olympic theme with locals? 

Let’s take you on an Olympic tour of France… 

The Olympics are being held in towns all over France and its overseas territories.

Paris is turning into an arena for the games! The sporting events will be even more spectacular playing out in legendary venues and some of the best landmarks in Paris and France. 

Team games will put the spotlight on several cities in France: the football tournament will be held in stadiums in Bordeaux, Nantes, Lyon, Saint-Etienne, Nice and Marseille. The men’s and women’s handball finals will play out in Lille. In terms of water sports, the sailing events will hit the Mediterranean Sea in Marseille whilst the surfing elite will ride the best waves in the world at Teahupo’o in Tahiti…

Events in exceptional locations: Versailles goes Olympic

The Château de Versailles will host equestrian events for the 2024 Olympics.

The national treasure sets the scene for equestrian, para-equestrian and pentathlon events. It makes sense, given how integral horses have been to the site since the Sun King had it built in 1623. The animal was part of the royal family’s lives and catered for the court, as you can tell from the buildings that make up Versailles itself: the Great Stables, Small Stables, Gallery of Coaches etc.

Just imagine watching eventing, dressage and show jumping in the Grounds and Park around the Étoile Royale, set up to protect the heritage site and give the events a unique royal showcase! 

Visitors who need to calm down after the exciting show of sportsmanship can still visit the Château de Versailles, Estate of Trianon and Gardens throughout the Olympics and Paralympics. There are even special cultural events and original themed guided tours to experience: Versailles, games and sport; Dance in court; Gods and heroes; Versailles, on horseback or carriage; Horses in art and bike rides around Versailles Park.

Cultural events celebrating the Olympics all over France

The Olympic torch will fire up your inner athlete as it makes its way through France and the overseas territories. The torch will be lit in Olympia on April 16th and begin its journey in France on May 8th in Marseille. It will wind through 65 départements before reaching Paris on July 26th. Along the way, it will visit several towns and villages in France which will host Olympic celebrations. Here are a few of them… 

Castelnaudary: A photo contest with a sports theme

The Olympic torch will visit Castelnaudary on May 16th 2024. The welcoming Occitanie town in the Aude département will host a photo contest on the theme of “The Beauty of Sport in Castelnaudary.” What does it involve? Taking photos of athletes in action in Castelnaudary. The exhibition will be unveiled on May 16th when the torch passes through…

Marseille to Manosque:

The Olympic torch is landing at the Vieux-Port in Marseille on May 8th 2024 on board the majestic three-masted ship, the Belem! The legendary ship will take a spin around Marseille harbour with an armada of boats in its wake. The torch bearer will “walk on water” to dry land on a floating 100m athletics track looking out onto La Canebière. It’s going to be quite a show! 

The torch relay will then run through 7 towns and cities: Cassis, Miramas, Aix-en-Provence, Port-Saint-Louis-du-Rhône, Istres, Eygalieres and Arles. 

Let’s get the party started!

The Menton Lemon Festival (which we discussed in our last article about Carnivals in Provence) is going all out Olympic this year! The Modern and Ancient Olympics are the theme of the corsos (parades) for the Menton Carnival. A dozen floats will hit the streets and seaside in the Provençal town with John Lemon, the Lemon Festival mascot, strutting his stuff alongside the Phryges, the official mascots of the Paris Olympics!

How about Brittany?

There aren’t any Olympic events happening in Brittany but the torch will be passing through the popular tourist region. It will visit Ille-et-Vilaine, Morbihan and Finistère and end its race on land on June 7th, when the torch sets sail to the Antilles on board Armel Le Cléac’h’s maxi-trimaran!

There’s a 125-year age gap between the Belem and the maxi-trimaran! The torch will cross the Atlantic in 7 (or 8!) days to reach the coasts of Guadeloupe then Martinique. Everyone will be keeping a close eye on the torch during the journey to protect it from the sea spray and wind!

All over France: the grande randonnée to Paris

Let’s end this tour of sporting and cultural events celebrating the Olympics in France with a nationwide challenge: the FFR (French Rambling Federation) has an incredible hike from Paris to the rest of France!​​ 

Seven major trails have been designed in France and its overseas territories to reach Paris and celebrate this grande randonnée on the weekend of May 11th and 12th 2024.

What does the challenge involve? 7 major trails suitable for all ages with 560 marked-out stages covering 20-25km each. Keen walkers can begin their epic journey on January 13th and hike 10,000km to the finish line in Paris by the weekend of May 10th.  

Here are the 7 trails based on the GR® routes that have been carefully marked-out by FFR volunteers:

  1. Secret plains and forests in Hauts de France 
  2. The Grand Est battlefield
  3. Vauban fortifications from Nice to Paris via Grenoble, Besançon etc.
  4. Culture and wine in Burgundy
  5. The Loire springs to the Seine
  6. Cathar castles or Loire châteaux
  7. Brittany tides to the winding Seine
Institut des Frères Lumière à Lyon<br />

The FFR has been approved as a Land of Games 2024. The label recognises its commitment to the Olympic adventure and to sharing its values, the benefits of sport and its importance in people’s everyday lives.

Institut des Frères Lumière à Lyon<br />

For anyone planning to visit France in this Olympic year: Paris will be the nerve centre for the competition but every region, town and village in France is getting ready to celebrate the event. Cultural festivals, heritage sites and community events will fly the flag for Olympic values and showcase France in all its glory. You need to come and experience it for yourself!

Carnivals in Provence

Carnivals in Provence

Let’s head to the South of France to find out more about three iconic events in Provence: Nice Carnival, Menton Lemon Festival and Mandelieu Mimosa Festival. The annual celebrations are packed with history, parades, local flavours and zesty colours basking under the warm winter sun on the Med. 

Get dressed up, have fun and dive into an ocean of flowers and fruit beneath the bright blue sky. This is your final boarding call for the Côte d’Azur, a go-to among French as a foreign language students from all over the world!

Nice Carnival: a sight for sore eyes

History of the UNESCO World Heritage Nice Carnival

1294: The Nice Carnival was first mentioned in writing by Charles d’Anjou, Count of Provence, who detailed his visit to Nice to celebrate the “joyful days of the Carnival”. 

The festivities were heavily regulated in the 15th century and based on social class: Nice celebrated with 4 balls (noblemen, merchants, tradesmen and workers) presided over by the fool’s abbots or “abbés des fous”. 

1830: The Nice Carnival became what we know it as today. The city was named the “winter holiday capital” and Nice noblemen were in charge of the festivities. 

A “festival committee” was founded in 1873 and the carnival pulled out all the stops! Float processions, ymagiers or illustrators, ticketed stands, epic displays by Alexis Mossa and more. The Nice Carnival has always known how to put on a good show. Plaster confetti or Italian confetti rained down on the parade floor. The poet and gardener Alphonse Karr inspired the first flower battles which appeared in 1876.

A carnival with a language of its own

Classic characters

The Nice Carnival has a group of characters that come back every year in different guises to suit the theme. The King, Queen and dolphin mascot open proceedings with a procession worthy of royalty. 

One of the carnival’s iconic characters is Lou Paillassou (“the straw man”): a huge puppet filled with straw that flies through the sky on a taut line. It has been interpreted in lots of different ways but the most popular is that the straw man is filled with all the pain and worry of the past year. So when he’s dipping and diving through the air, he lets go of all our troubles so we can face the future with a free spirit. How about that for a spring clean?!

And caricatures!

They’re part of the folklore surrounding the carnival and make it what it is: the floats are meant to make people smile and have a laugh at some of the world’s biggest names in sport, politics and fashion. Everyone from Jacques Chirac and Karl Lagerfeld to Trump and Depardieu have been turned into instantly recognisable big heads crafted by ymagiers and carnival masters.

Carnival highlights

The opening ceremony is a show-stopper uniting the carnival’s stars, floral floats, heralds, flagbearers, bands, dancers and a sound and light show. These processions are traditionally called “corsos” and parade down the Promenade des Anglais and the entire city. The Tourist Board chooses the amazing floats from hundreds of designs and puts them on show near Place Masséna so you can feast your eyes on them before the parade.

Nice buzzes with street art and performance for all ages for days: it’s the heart and soul of the Nice Carnival. Local and international performers bring the festival and corsos to life and perform all over the city to the delight of children and adults.

The carnival ends on a high with the traditional burning of the Carnival king!

Have you heard the expression “go through fire and water”? Well, that’s what the carnival does with the traditional Carnival Bath when brave souls dive into the Baie des Anges with a bracing average temperature of 12 degrees in February…

Flower Battle

The Flower Battle is the most spell-binding and heart-warming moment of the Nice Carnival. It’s magical no matter your age. The one-of-a-kind procession of floats covered in flowers celebrates local species as 80% of the flowers are grown in the region. Performers in eye-catching outfits throw armfuls of mimosas, daisies and lilies into the audience! Visitors pick up the flowers later and put together their own bouquets to remember the carnival by! 

Menton Lemon Festival: When life gives you lemons…

The history of the Lemon Festival

Why does the pretty town of Menton celebrate citrus? Because it’s the European capital of lemons! It’s a surprisingly popular event: over 200,000 people take to the streets of Menton every year to be part of the unique festival.

It all began in 1875 when Menton’s hotels were looking for a new festival to entertain and attract more people to spend their winter holiday on the Côte d’Azur. Mission accomplished! Processions, costumes, masks, music and dance: the very first carnival won over locals and wealthy winter holidaymakers. Princes, artists and even kings flocked to Menton’s palaces and coastline!

Menton became Europe’s biggest lemon producer in the 1920s. 1936 saw the first citrus fruit and flower exhibition in the Jardins Biovès before lemons and oranges adorned corso floats at the major February festival. 

Visitors from all over the world still come to experience the Menton Lemon Festival which was listed as Intangible French Cultural Heritage in 2019.

Lemon Festival highlights

It has classic corsos and show-stopping processions just like the Nice Carnival, but Menton’s are bright and zesty because they’re covered in citrus fruit! The parades take place on Thursdays, Sundays and at night: the corsos are illuminated and joined by brass bands and traditional dancers. The floats are painstakingly and expertly decorated with a creative spin on the year’s theme. 

The Golden Fruit Corso is the most famous parade and the one that everyone looks forward to. It’s a Lemon Festival institution that captures Provence’s citrus fruit in all its zesty glory. Visitors have over 2 weeks to feast their eyes on the fruity creations at parades or the zingy structures on display at the Jardins Biovès.

Last but not least: the Mimosa Festival in Mandelieu

The Côte d’Azur is bursting with colour and aroma all February long. The region’s most precious winter gem takes centre stage in Mandelieu: mimosas! The fluffy yellow little balls imbue the winter air with their soft and soothing scent… 

The Mimosa Festival is a local institution held in mid-February: a corso (parade) covers 1.2km in the Le Capitou and La Napoule districts along the coast. Show-stopping processions and floral parades light up every street, market and square in town to turn Mandelieu into mimosa land. We always recommend our visitors go on a hiking trail to Tanneron, the biggest mimosa forest in Europe. 

Institut des Frères Lumière à Lyon<br />

Have you got a February holiday in Provence on the brain now? These floral, zesty or Nice events are a great way to experience the wonder of local produce and the idyllic Mediterranean coast. 

It’s warm here in late winter, making a language stay and French course extra special. You can even pick up the lovely Southern French accent! 

For us, it’s a golden opportunity to put together exciting breaks exploring nature and culture for our visitors and French as a foreign language students: museum and gallery tours, seaside and inland trips, cookery and perfumery classes and more.

The Lyon Festival of Lights: the visitor guide

The Lyon Festival of Lights: the visitor guide

Millions of people flock to Lyon every year for the city’s popular Festival of Lights. The Capital of the Three Gauls lights up with thousands of candles to put on a magical show for visitors and locals alike on December 8th. It’s a golden opportunity to soak up the fairytale atmosphere as you explore the city at night. Here are some facts and top tips to help you squeeze every last drop out of the Lyon Festival of Lights, the 4th most popular festival in the world!

The Festival of Lights in figures

  • 20 kilometres:

That’s the distance between the first installation (usually Lyon Cathedral) and the last (often Hôpital Saint-Joseph Saint-Luc). You can feast your eyes on all the illuminations along the way but be warned, you certainly won’t be alone so keep a cool head! 

  • 2 million people

That’s how many people usually descend on the city for the 4-day event. The Council puts the figure at between 1.8 and 2 million with half from the Rhône region and 100,000 overseas visitors. That makes an average of 500,000 people exploring the streets of Lyon per day. 

  • Millions of tealights

The Festival of Lights is a record-breaker every year: 8 million tealights were sold in the Grand Lyon area in 2014, 12 million were used for a single installation in 2022 called Les Lumignons du Coeur! 

  • The world’s 4th most popular festival

The Festival of Lights is currently the 4th most loved event among its visitors and won the Best Public Event award in 2007!

The history behind the Festival of Lights

A 19th century tradition.

It all began in the 17th century when the plague reached the South of France. On September 8th 1643, Lyon Council began to pray to the Virgin Mary statue at Fourvière Church to spare Lyon from the epidemic. Their prayers were answered and there’s still a pilgrimage on September 8th to remember the event.

The Council was meant to unveil a statue by the sculptor Joseph Fabisch at the top of Fourvière during the pilgrimage on September 8th 1852. But the Saône flooded and delayed the inauguration until… December 8th. The weather had a mind of its own again on that day and put a damper on events. But things brightened up and the locals put candles in their windows to celebrate. The Church did the same and kept Fourvière lit up all night as the locals gazed in wonder. Flares, fireworks and candles: that’s the story behind the Festival of Lights.

A tradition rooted in Lyon’s cultural heritage

The Festival of Lights became Lyon’s official festival in a sign of faith. The custom of putting candles on your windowsill on the night of December 8th spread among families and religions from 1852 onwards.

The city’s mayor, Michel Noir, sparked (pun intended!) the tradition of illuminating Lyon’s landmarks and bringing the city to life with art installations in 1989. The festival has lasted 4 days since 1999 and is devoted entirely to the festivities and hosting millions of visitors.

Lyon and light: they go way back!

This event was meant to happen in Lyon! It ties in perfectly to the city’s history. Lights, sounds, colours… Does cinema come to mind? What about Auguste and Louis Lumière? The brothers who invented cinematography in 1896 in Lyon? Actually, Auguste also invented autochrome, the first colour film development process. 

Let’s not forget André-Marie Ampère, another bright spark from Lyon who became famous for his experiments with the electrical telegraph. A unit of electric current is even named after him: ampere.

Institut des Frères Lumière à Lyon<br />

An international festival

There are lots of reasons to describe the Festival of Lights as an international festival. 

Firstly, it celebrates artists from Lyon and overseas (11 foreign artists out of 37 in 2022) who hail mainly from Europe. 

It’s world famous and millions of visitors from all over the globe flock here to gaze at the interactive installations. 

Last but not least, the artistic sound and light creations go around the planet. The Festival of Light is a real laboratory and fantastic showcase for all the avant-garde, innovative and creative artists involved in illuminations and performance. Other cities have followed in Lyon’s footsteps and established their own Festival of Lights, including Dubai, Turin, Montreal and Rio de Janeiro.

Foreign visitors: here’s your Festival of Lights guide

Local lingo: what’s a lumignon?

They make the magic happen. They’re tealights in holders that the locals call lumignons or lampions. As soon as November comes around, the shops stockpile bags of these iconic ribbed tealights and glass holders. Locals and visitors light the candles and place them on their windowsills or on public squares on the night of December 8th

Wrap up warm

It’s cold in Lyon in winter, plus the Saône and Rhône riverbanks make it feel damp. So it’s best to wear the right clothing. Remember that Lyon is near the mountain so you can wear a ski suit… or a chunky jumper… or a flashy puffer to stay warm and toasty as you wander around the city all night!

Enjoy a mulled wine

It’s the festival’s go-to drink to warm your cockles (please drink responsibly). Hot and sweet red wine infused with oranges, ginger, cinnamon, vanilla and star anise. The sweet scent of spices is irresistible! Pick up a bretzel or praline brioche bun to go with it to boost your energy and keep you cosy!

Festival of Lights key sites

The Capital of the Three Gauls (find out more about Lyon’s history) plays host to 4 days jam-packed with installations and sights. Feast your eyes on the artwork and soak up the fairytale atmosphere with streets illuminated by millions of tealights on a 20km route through the city between the Saône and Rhône (with shortcuts in and out of the Pentes de la Croix-Rousse neighbourhood). 

The landmarks and squares set the scene for performances or video mapping, including Place Bellecour, Place des Terreaux, Place des Jacobins, Place de la République and Place des Célestins, Lyon Cathedral, Saint-Paul train station and Parc de la Tête d’or. From the Renaissance district to La Confluence, the entire city puts the spotlight on shows and installations that range from the traditional to the game-changing and unexpected. What’s the highlight of the Festival of Lights? Head up Fourvière hill to drink in views of Lyon from the church…

The work that the council, national and international artists and designers put into creating unique sights to showcase the city’s architecture is what makes the festival what it is. The views of the city at night are a sight for sore eyes for children and adults alike! The Festival of Lights is a unique event when visitors from all over the world can get together and literally invade the Capital of the Three Gauls! It may not be the quietest time to visit the city, but it is an international hotspot that provides a unique showcase for Lyon’s neighbourhoods and heritage! 

Visiting the Braderie de Lille

Visiting the Braderie de Lille

Want to visit France while taking advantage of the country’s major popular events?

The Braderie de Lille is an opportunity not to be missed!

Go to Lille for a trip to the North of France, to the largest flea market in Europe. For a weekend, Lille becomes a vast bazaar of flea markets and mussels and chips!

A unique festive event that gives travellers the opportunity to learn the basics of flea markets and negotiation, and to discover the cultural and culinary traditions shared by thousands of visitors from France and around the world.

The Braderie de Lille in a few figures:

  • 10000 slots, totally free!
  • 100 km of stalls
  • 2.5 million visitors, bargain hunters, strollers, street vendors in 2019
  • 33 hours of non-stop clearance sale
  • Every 1st weekend of September

What is the origin of the Braderie de Lille?

The history of the Braderie de Lille goes back to the Middle Ages (first mentioned in 1127), we then spoke of “frank fair” when the town council of Lille authorised merchants from outside to come and sell without paying tax.

In the 16th century, the braderie became a large garage sale when servants were authorised to sell the objects accumulated in their master’s attics, once a year between sunset and sunrise.

This popular event in Lille has been represented several times by various artists, including the romantic painter Watteau, who devoted a now cult work to it: La Braderie de Lille in 1800.

How to prepare for the Braderie de Lille?

The Braderie de Lille can be summed up in 3 components: antiquing, popular festival and mussels and chips. Travel advice: a well-prepared bargain hunter is armed with patience, good shoes, an umbrella, and a shopping cart! Because the Lille weather in September can be capricious and disrupt the party.

At the clearance sale, you can find absolutely everything, from small everyday objects at 1 euro, to rare pearls, furniture and works of art not necessarily recognized, which are the delight of professional antique dealers and collectors. So much so that the event attracts curious people and experts from all over the world.

Lille, a city where the art of negotiation reigns

Negotiating the price of objects is part of the game at the Lille sale. The price is “indicative”! So you have to arm yourself with audacity and a gift of the gab, and engage in haggling in order to conclude the best transaction. As the people of Lille say: We speak the language of the banknote here!

The culture of commerce is anchored in the history of Lille, which has developed thanks to its function as a market place and trade since the Middle Ages.

Find the right way to buy well at the Braderie de Lille

The Braderie takes up the whole city, the linear stands cover kilometres of streets in the centre of Lille. So you have to be a strategist when you are a buyer and know the geography of the clearance sale well. You should know that each neighbourhood has its own “style” of objects and sellers. For example, for furniture lovers, it is better to go to the boulevards Louis XIV and de la Liberté; for toys, the appointment is mainly at Saint Sauveur station; in the realm of second-hand clothing, the Lebas park and the Foch and Dutilleul squares are transformed into a vast empty dressing room!

You inevitably find your favourite neighbourhood at the Braderie de Lille, and you always find something to bring back! Better to anticipate the space in the suitcase!

Traditions and attractions of the Braderie de Lille

One-upmanship on mussels and chips.

This is the essential dish for any participant in the Braderie de Lille. Traditional and fast, the favourite dish of bargain hunters and vendors is prepared by all the restaurants in the city, and is served on banquet tables. Sharing, feasting together at the same table: this is the soul of this popular festival.

The marinière mussels are number 1 in sales, but the Maroilles sauce holds its own, and delights the most seasoned palates. On average, 500 tons of mussels are cooked during the sale.

So what to do with the leftovers?

The people of Lille definitely like to outbid everyone else! Instead of being thrown away, the shells are carefully piled up to form the highest mound possible, setting new records every year. Head to Place Rihour to see the most spectacular piles of mussels.

And after ?

The mussel shells are finally collected and processed to be transformed into slabs of tiling… Nothing is thrown away, everything is recycled!

An extraordinary banquet at the Natural History Museum

La Braderie is synonymous with convivial banquets for bargain hunters and vendors… as well as for animals! Visitors can come for free to visit the toucan, bear cub, emu and other gorillas, positioned around a table in the main room of the Natural History Museum, an original way to discover animals in an unusual environment, seated to honour the tradition of the Braderie de Lille banquet.

Meet at La Vieille Bourse, for the book sale

Welcome to booksellers’ paradise! What an impression of grandeur on entering the Vieille Bourse de Lille, a remarkable building made up of 24 merchant houses. Its majestic and colourful facades, its lion heads and garlands, its Flemish mannerist architecture, combining Renaissance and Baroque, reveal all the wealth of 17th century merchants.

During this weekend of clearance sale, bulk paperbacks and beautiful books of all kinds cover the stalls arranged in this prestigious place. Our travellers and learners of French will be able to make great finds and slip a souvenir book into their luggage, perfect for continuing to work on the language of Molière…

Ready to take a trip to the country of the flea market?

The Vacances Actives agency offers the best welcome (and the best tables to devour local mussels and chips!) to travellers learning French. In Lille, we speak French, ch’ti, and the language of the nego! But travellers will not be the only ones to decipher the dialogues of Lille, as the Braderie attracts visitors from all over the world!

Write to contact@vacancesactiveslinguistiques  to prepare a colourful stay in Hauts de France!

A French stay in November: traditions and key destinations

A French stay in November: traditions and key destinations

All Saints’ holidays are the first two weeks of break given to French schoolchildren after the start of the school year. Still nostalgic of summer, but already immersed in the atmosphere of autumn, the shimmering colours of which brighten up the parks and gardens, families traditionally get together to experience a moment of remembrance at the time of the Feast of the Dead. On this occasion, the traditions are not so numerous and yet, All Saints’ Day is an essential step in the year for French families. Let’s see what are the customs and the gastronomic, cultural and tourist curiosities to discover during a language stay in France on All Saints’ Day.

A French stay on All Saints’ Day holidays: the traditions

From the Feast of the Saints to the Feast of the Dead

All Saints’ Day is a Catholic feast celebrated on November 1 in France in honour of God and all the saints. The French associate it – out of confusion and convenience of usage – with the Feast of the Dead which takes place the next day. However, only All Saints’ Day is a public holiday: it is this day that families choose to meditate and flower the graves. In a way, we are witnessing “chiaroscuro” celebrations: we go from light to shade, from the Feast of All Saints to the Feast of All the Dead!

chrysanthemes sur les tombes à la Toussaint
famille dans un cimetière à la Toussaint

All Saints’ Day: a cultural celebration more than a religious one

chrysanthemes de la Toussaint

We must warn foreign visitors, the cult of the dead in France is much prosaic and more reserved than in some countries, such as Mexico for example, where spectacular celebrations are traditionally held. 

The tradition of All Saints’ Day in France is that people go to the cemetery to pay homage to deceased loved ones and place flowers and candles on the graves, symbols of a happy life in the hereafter.

Chrysanthemums, even Marigolds, have the advantage over all other flowers, because they are the ones that resist the cold and humidity of autumn the best…

Who knows, perhaps global warming will modify these uses… During a stay in France for All Saints’ Day, you will be able to see to what extent the French are faithful to this ritual, not missing the appointment with their loved ones, beyond any religious conviction.

The “potato holidays”

vacances patates au champ

Historical anecdote: All Saints’ Day formerly coincided with the potato harvest. At that time, the whole family worked in the fields, and the children had to miss school! This is how the “potato holidays” were introduced. Nowadays, the expression still persists in certain French-speaking regions of Switzerland, for example, but it has been generally renamed “All Saints holidays”. So, dear students, ready for a “potato vacation” in France?

A French stay in November: gastronomy

Culinary rituals for All Saints’ Day are rare

patates et cepes

In France, as in other (Catholic) countries around the world, All Saints’ Day constitutes a moment of remembrance and gathering with family and ancestors, without fatal or nostalgic aspects. Gastronomy has its place at the heart of “celebrations”.

Against all expectations, France – despite being a gourmet – does not maintain proper culinary traditions for this occasion. While in other countries, the “meal of the dead” is a family feast to symbolically share the meal with their dead, there are very few All Saints recipes.

A few rare regional traditions persist in a very localized manner. For example, the pâté de poires de Fisée is a puff pastry cake with autumn scents (pears, sugar, cloves, wine and vanilla bean) which is eaten on All Saints’ Day in the Pays de Bray in the north-west of France. 

Or niflettes, a pastry originating from the town of Provins, in Seine-et-Marne, a traditional All Saints’ Day tart close to Portuguese Pasteis de Nata.

pâté de poires de Fisée
recette-toussaint-niflette

Good products of Autumn

So if our students and foreign travellers come to stay in France on All Saints ‘Day, what should they expect at their hosts’ tables? As the air cools and winter draws closer, the All Saints’ Day holidays are an opportunity to start a cure of restorative good things to prepare for hibernation!

Comforting recipes based on forest products and the first winter vegetables arrive on the plates: mushrooms, chestnuts are roasted while the pumpkin, Halloween star, is transformed into soup and as an accompaniment to roasted chickens! We prepare quince paste, we taste the pear in all its forms and we finish with a Périgord walnut cake for dessert!

noix du Perigord
potirons et citrouilles
chataignes grillées

Which destination to choose to travel in France in November ?

It’s hard to choose where to stay in France for All Saints’ Day, there are so many choices! Granted, cemeteries are not necessarily the first sites to visit that come to mind. However, France holds immense and particularly surprising famous cemeteries, as famous as the personalities they shelter. So let’s go for a brief overview of the curious cemeteries of France, which may, who knows, make you lean towards an Autumn holiday destination…

Visit Paris and Père Lachaise

paris cimetiere pere lachaise

Direction Paris 20th district and Père Lachaise, where the visitors enter a maze of 70,000 concessions, “to meet” Molière, Balzac, La Fontaine, Apollinaire, Oscar Wilde for literary artists, Chopin, Maria Callas, Edith Piaf, Jim Morrison… for musicians… It is an opportunity to dive into both the history and culture of France by retracing the biographies and successes of each of these French and international personalities. A true open-air museum not to be missed during your language stay in Paris!

More about our language stay in Paris

Visit Paris, and the Van Gogh cemetery

auvers sur oise cimetiere van gogh

About thirty kilometres from Paris, we reach Auvers-sur-Oise. In this green hamlet, we follow a pilgrimage in homage to Van Gogh, where the Dutch painter produced 70 paintings, inspired by local architecture in particular, and spent the last days of his life there close to his brother. The cemetery of Auvers-Sur-Oise is one that can be visited just for one name. Here, we find the two symmetrical, moving stelae of Theodore and Vincent Van Gogh.

Visit Normandy and the American cemetery

 The VAL agency offers cultural stays in Normandy : on All Saints’ Day, there is the opportunity to walk along the landing beaches and to visit the American cemetery of Colleville-sur-Mer (“Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial”), overlooking Omaha Beach. It brings together the graves of American soldiers fallen in combat, most of them on D-day on Omaha Beach, June 6, 1944. Moving, impressive (70 ha in area), it commands respect and recognition by its immensity and sobriety. It is another crucial step to discuss a phase of world history with students and foreign visitors.

 

cimetiere americain normandie
cimetiere americain normandie

Visit Provence and the cemeteries of Sète

The southern destinations are appropriate to stay in France on All Saints’ Day for those who fear the humidity of October! The Côte d’Azur warms up and Provence is just as welcoming and conceals mortuary curiosities that are just as surprising! If you opt for a language travel to Nice, why not take a detour to Sète, where two poets rest, two virtuosos of the French language in different styles: Paul Valéry and George Brassens. In a peaceful setting of pines, cypresses and a sea horizon, the Saint-Charles de Sète cemetery has been renamed “Marine cemetery” in reference to the poem by Paul Valéry, whose tomb is the star of this place. In the more popular Py cemetery, the songwriter George Brassens rests under a cypress.

Sète tombe de Paul Valéry
port de Sète

Ce toit tranquille, où marchent des colombes,

Entre les pins palpite, entre les tombes ;

Midi le juste y compose de feux

La mer, la mer, toujours recommencée !

Ô récompense après une pensée

Qu’un long regard sur le calme des dieux !

 

Paul Valéry, le cimetière marin, 1920.

The stay in France on All Saints’ Day ends with this poem by Paul Valéry, and many inspirations for an upcoming fall trip to France!

A language stay in France at Christmas time

A language stay in France at Christmas time

Are you planning a language and cultural stay in France for Christmas? Prepare for a marathon of traditions, culinary and festive experiences to share with family or groups of travelling friends! Although France is a secular country, Christmas remains a public and widely celebrated holiday, topped off with a hearty meal and an exchange of gifts.

Choosing the end of year celebrations to visit France and perfect your learning of the French language is a divine opportunity to soak up the magic of Christmas and enjoy moments of fervour and sharing.

Good reasons to organize a language stay in France at Christmas

1. Experience the magic of Christmas in France

Taking a trip to France during the end of year celebrations give a touch of magic and enchantment to your linguistic and cultural stay. Students and travellers learning the French language, if they choose to set sail at this time of year, can enjoy French culture in its most traditional, hieratic aspects, discovering both religious and lay people, even within local families. They can soak up the marvellous spirit of decorations, animations, in the streets as in the houses, and of the imagination around Santa Claus or his regional variants, whether they are believers or not.

2. Prepare the start of January in the best conditions

It is also a pivotal period in the year of French as a Foreign Language students, after 3 months of theoretical courses. This is a key moment for learners to put into practice all the teachings of the first trimester. A language stay is therefore welcome to test the knowledge, ideally by being hosted by the locals, in immersion with a French host family. It is an opportunity to start again in January with a good linguistic basis and prepare the rest of the year in the best conditions.

Paris à Noel - Metro illuminé
famille et arbre de Noel

Studying and visiting France in the magic of Christmas

The magical atmosphere of illuminated cities

Countries across the Atlantic and Western Europe have this in common: in December, public spaces and homes are adorned with their most beautiful attire to celebrate this special month of Christmas and the New Year. Cities and neighbourhoods compete in beauty with the decorations, light garlands and majestic trees that sit in the main places or in front of town halls. However, the trend in French municipalities is now towards energy saving and ecological decorations… The number of illuminated streets is reduced, LEDs have replaced light bulbs, and the green firs of the forests are transformed into cardboard trees or luminous tubes.

decoration-des-rues

The tradition of tree and red balls

decoration-noel-sapin

Decorating the Christmas tree at home is an essential moment of sharing within French families, long awaited by the little ones who will have the honour of positioning the star on the tip of the tree. Originally, families hung fruit, especially apples. In the Vosges region, in the middle of the 19th century, a major drought hit the production of apples. To compensate for the absence of this elementary fruit in the Christmas decoration, a glassblower recreated the apples in red glass. In absence of the edible ones, these ornamental apples quickly became a decorative tradition throughout France and beyond. 

The tradition of santons: a Provence destination

fabrication des santons

To celebrate Christmas, some families set the nativity scene, placed near the Christmas tree and made of santons. The tradition appeared in Provence, inspired by an Italian custom. The term comes from the Provencal “santoun” (translated as “little saints”), representing small figurines in local clay, painted and assembled to form the nativity scene. 

If you decide to organize your language study trip in the South of France, you will see how much this tradition of santons is still very present in Provence, so that santon fairs are organized throughout the region, the largest being the one from Marseille.

Christmas markets: destination Strasbourg

partir-sejour-linguistique-strasbourg-maison-kammerzell

Spending a cultural stay in the Alsatian region for Christmas is a chance!  Strasbourg was designated Capital of Christmas in 1992, a well-deserved title which can be explained by a very old Germanic tradition. The first Christmas market in Strasbourg was held in 1570! Students, learners, and FLE teachers will stroll through the Marché des Délices, the Carré d’Or market or the Irréductibles market, in front of the marvellous stands of the craftsmen, and under the sparkling lights of the Baccarat crystal chandeliers. 

An ideal enchanting break to find the small souvenir and handcrafted gift (no tourist trap here!) that will hit the mark once back home. 

Finally, the Strasbourg Christmas market is the time to warm up with gastronomic specialties to enjoy on the go. The pretzel kugelhopf, moricettes or mannala abound on the tantalizing stalls. The essential and traditional drink that can be found in all the Christmas markets in France is mulled wine, a suave beverage made from red wine infused with cinnamon, orange and other spices that warm hearts and minds.

vin chaud noel
marche-de-noel alsace

The Christmas decoration of stores: destination Paris

Paris offers a unique magical spectacle thanks to the decorations on the windows of the capital’s department stores. Galeries Lafayettes, Samaritaine, BHV and other major brands play the escalation of lights and entertainment to dazzle passers-by. The windows are transformed into a puppet theatre, a cabaret, a fashion show, a magical festival of ingenuity and creativity for the pleasure of all. 

Paris vitrine-grands-magasins Noel
Paris vitrine-grands-magasins Noel
Paris vitrine-grands-magasins Noel

For a gastronomic trip to Christmas: very gourmet France

The hearty Christmas Eve meal

Traditionally, the French like to get together during the Christmas holidays around hearty meals, where quality products are honoured. Beware of indigestion for foreign travellers! At the table of French hosts, there will be essentials: foie gras, oysters, smoked salmon and turkey with chestnuts, the winning quartet of the dinners on December 24 (and the days that follow for that matter). If the stomachs are still hungry, we must do justice to the Yule log (lined with vanilla butter cream, surrounded by a chocolate ganache) which ends the Christmas Eve meal, among other chocolates, clementines and candied chestnuts.

Your stay then turns into an exceptional culinary marathon! And the restaurants don’t break with tradition, restyling “in their own way” these great gastronomic end of year classics, enjoying the pleasure of presenting them to visitors from other countries.

Perhaps this focus on regional Christmas gastronomic rituals will help travellers choose the destination for their next stay in France…

noel-foie-gras
dinde-aux-marrons-de-noel
sejour-gastronomique-noel-buche

Christmas in Provence

repas de noel-nougat-provence

If you are spending your end-of-year holidays in Provence, your stay will be punctuated by tasting the 13 Christmas desserts! They personify the 13 members of the Last Supper. The Mediterranean diet satisfies the sweet tooth this time! We find the traditional bread in olive oil flavored with citrus zest called “oil pump”, nuts, dried figs, raisins, dates, quince paste, various candied fruits , white nougat, black nougat (with toasted almonds and caramelized honey), red nougat (with pistachios and rose), oranges, clementines, watermelon and the famous Calissons d’Aix-en -Provence. 

Christmas in Alsace

stollen-de-noel-alsacien

Baking with the family a month in advance is part of the art of living and the unconditional traditions of Alsatian Christmas. We make all kinds of Christolles, Mannele and Bredele, a multitude of cookies, brioches and other sweets illustrating the themes and characters of Christmas and Saint Nicolas. The gingerbread flavoured with cinnamon, cardamom, almonds and honey, also accompanies the snacks in December since the sixteenth century!

Each region and each family has its own specialty and customs. The end of the year celebrations bring joy and fervour, unique and culturally rich experiences for travellers. Language immersion in France at Christmas will be bright and delicious!

However, beyond the borders, it seems that a common tradition of Christmas continues, whatever the cultures and the ages…the ugly sweater! With it, travellers will not feel out of place! Think about it, you will succeed in your integration for sure!

famille-royale-pull-moche