Grisettes of Montpellier
The grisettes of Montpellier are candies containing honey and of liquorice in the shape of small black balls. Redécouverte in the years 1980, the grisette goes back to the Middle Ages.
According to the legend, at the 12th century the tradesmen of the district of Our-Lady-of-Tables used the grisettes like currency of exchange to make the going supplement at the time of the transactions with the many pilgrims with Saint-Jacques-with-Compostelle by the Camin Roumieu . Its flavors accompanied and comforted the long walk of these pilgrims.
| Random links: | Bonaparte visiting the pestiferous ones of Jaffa | -549 | Reaction of Sabatier | University of Bucharest | Marcel Marcilloux | Fabrication_de_gaufrette |