January 2011 : Where Magazine 2011 - "Best French Cuisine" award
January 2011 : Avenue Best Restaurants 2011 - Runner-up for the category "Best Sandwich"
Avenue Magazine 8th annual awards
"Between staff speaking French and sandwiches filled with duck rilette, foie gras and brie de meux — all on crusty baguettes — lunch at l’Epicerie is like going to France, without the exorbitant airfare."
15 Novembre 2010 : Trophée d'excellence 2010 du Conseil de Développement Economique de l'Alberta
Le Chinook - L'Epicerie [...] honorée
"C'est dans le sud de l'Alberta que nous retrouvons deux des récipiendaires des trophées de l'excellence remis par le Conseil de développement économique de l'Alberta. Le trophée remis à l'entreprise s'étant le plus démarquée en restauration va au restaurant l'Epicerie situé à Calgary [...].
L'Epicerie que nos lecteurs connaissent déjà beaucoup grâce à la chronique mensuelle qu'écrit Dominique Moussu dans le journal, a vu le jour il y a un peu plus de deux ans. Après avoir travaillé 5 ans au restaurant Teatro de Calgary comme chef exécutif, Dominique décida de se lancer dans une nouvelle aventure avec sa conjointe Anne-Claire. Depuis le départ, ils s'efforcent à enseigner aux gens de Calgary que la quantité ne l'emporte pas toujours sur la qualité. Et à voir la fréquentation du restaurant, les citoyens de la ville sont de très bons étudiants. Il est rare de voir le restaurant soit vide et ce, même un mercredi à 14:30. Le service est très important dans ce petit établissement. C'est bien connu, même devant le meilleur produit au monde, si les gens qui le vendent n'offrent pas un service de qualité, les Calgariens n'essayeront pas les petits délices, Dominique Moussu sait de quoi il parle : il produit des pâtés exquis et quelques-uns de ces fromages sublimes.
L'Epicerie offre plusieurs services, dont évidemment le restaurant où l'on peut déguster un croque-monsieur ou savourer une quiche. De plus, le chef est souvent appelé comme traiteur dans des évènements. Des cours de cuisine française sont aussi à l'agenda, pour ceux et celles qui désirent impressionnelr leurs futures conquêtes...
Depuis quelques temps Dominique Moussu a des projets d'expension. Il est vrai que son premier restaurant situé sur la 1ère rue SE dans le centre-ville n'est pas très grand et qu'il n'a pas de permis de boissons alcoolisées. Par contre, il a pu s'y faire un nom. Maintenant, il voit grand. Il ouvrira en février 2011 une crêperie au nouveau Calgary Farmer's Market qui ouvrira ses portes dans l'ancien Heritage Market sur Blackfoot trail.
[...]
David Vanier"
March 30 2009
March 20 2009
November 21 2008 Published on Avenue (http://www.avenuecalgary.com)
Foie gras is the kind of luxury food most people only eat occasionally at the finest restaurants. But if you’d like to serve slivers of house-made duck liver terrine on bits of baguette at your next party, or just hoard a whole jar of foie gras pâté and that bottle of Sauterne yourself, it’s now possible to find a steady supply of all things foie right here in Calgary.
THE FOOD
On the culinary controversy scale, foie gras is right up there in the red zone. Foie gras — literally “fat liver” — is the enlarged liver of a duck (or sometimes goose), a liver that has reached its big, fatty (and, ergo, extremely rich and delicious) state by force-feeding a duck large amounts of grain during the last two weeks of its life.
Foie gras is an authentic Canadian artisan food product. It has been produced this way in France (and now in Quebec) for centuries. It’s something that’s decadent and expensive and not to be scarfed every day. Like caviar, ramps and wild sockeye salmon, foie gras is a delicacy — a special treat for a special occasion. We need to respect the rarity of the product and use it accordingly.
And to be fair, wild ducks and geese gorge on grain naturally as part of their annual migration ritual, storing fat in their enlarged livers to sustain them for long flights across continents, which is doubtless how some early French forager first discovered the addictive richness of duck liver pâté. We’ve just discovered a way to replicate the process and add value to that Moulard duck on the farm.
Foie gras producers are also duck producers, so companies like Rougie and Palmex (the country’s largest producer of foie gras in Quebec) sell a variety of duck and duck liver products, from whole ducks, duck breast, entire lobes of liver for terrines and smoked duck breast, to foie gras products, such as foie gras mousse in jars, slabs, ficelle (convenient little rolls of mousse for slicing into coins) and duck confit.
Canadian producers of foie gras do feed their ducks a paste of crushed corn and warm water twice a day for 14 days through a tube that fits into the duck’s mouth, but each feeding only lasts three seconds. As chefs like Dominique Moussu say, those who worry about foie gras production methods might better ponder the conditions faced by factory-farmed chickens and other livestock.
THE FIND
There are a few places in Calgary to indulge in takeout foie gras.
Dominique Moussu of Teatro (200 8 Ave. S.E., 403-290-1012) — and now L’Epicerie (1325 1 St. S.E., 403-514-0555) — is a French chef with a penchant for fattened duck liver. Where Moussu grew up in Brittany, nearby farms used the classic gauvage method to feed ducks to fatten their livers for terrines and decadent seared appetizers. The rest of the duck went to the meat market, as it does today — legs for confit and tender breasts for magret.
That’s exactly what you’ll find Moussu doing with duck in the kitchen at Teatro and at his L’Epicerie, tucked into the little mall between Bernard Callebaut and Manuel Latruwe Belgian Patisserie & Bread Shop.
Moussu sells whole lobes of fresh foie gras to adventurous cooks, but his specialty is turning it into the terrines and torchon that make the most elegant cold appetizers. You’ll also find other examples of his handmade charcuterie in his shop, from traditional Pâté Breton to duck rillettes and confit.
The day I visited, Moussu was rolling the fresh liver into mini-terrines — enough for six to eight servings — stuffed with his own fig compote, apple and Calvados, or black truffles, and speedily steamed to perfection in the pressure cooker.
At $139 per kilogram, these products aren’t cheap, but you’re getting true artisan charcuterie from a master chef. The torchon, rolled and cooked in duck fat, is the house-made foie gras delicacy that Moussu uses in his now-famous foie gras sandwiches: creamy slices topped with arugula and fleur de sel on his own rustic breads ($14 with hand-cut potato chips).
The whole big yellow duck liver comes vacuum packed, as it does at L’Epicerie, with a price tag of about $90 to $125/kg, ready for you to bake or sear at home.THE FIX
There’s nothing particularly pretty about a coin of creamy foie gras mousse perched on a piece of toasted baguette, or a lobe of fresh, fat, yellow duck liver. But with a sip of sauternes, a dab of ice wine gelee or a bit of port-infused fig paste, the foie gras taste experience is ambrosian.
That’s the beauty of foie gras — simply seared and caramelized in its own rich fat, even a repellent slab of pale liver is transformed into the kind of appetizer you won’t soon forget—rich, unctuous decadence, with very little work on the cook’s behalf.
You can pick up the pre-cooked torchon, terrine or mousse, or take home the whole lobe of duck liver and start from scratch. You’ll need one or two 1.5-pound livers (about $150 worth) for a classic terrine.
Moussu says it’s important to work with fairly cold foie gras (too warm and it melts like butter). Each lobe splits into two sections; then you need to use your tongs or tweezers to gently pull out the veins that connect the lobes.
For a classic terrine, marinate the pieces of liver in sweet wine or cognac, salt and white pepper for 24 hours in a sealed plastic bag. Next, pack it into a heavy loaf pan, cover with plastic and foil, then bake slowly in a water bath at 200F for about 45 minutes until the internal temperature reaches 120F and no more.
Lastly, cover with foil and top with a piece of cardboard and a tin of tomatoes to weigh it down neatly in the fridge. Two or three days later, it’s ready to slice. Under its thick layer of duck fat, your terrine will keep for a week. Unmould and slice with a hot chef’s knife, dipped in boiling water. Serve with toasted bread.
For seared foie gras, just slice the cold, raw foie gras with a hot knife, season with salt and pepper, then sear it quickly in a hot dry pan, and serve warm over a bit of frisee with a dab of rhubarb confit or fig sauce.

October 15 2008 Published on Calgary Herald
Sugar and spice to go
At lunchtime, Dominique Moussu is making a sandwich. Moussu, a high-powered chef with a track record as a creator of fancy fare, is executive chef and part-owner of Teatro, one of Calgary's pre-eminent white tablecloth restaurants. But here he stands in a small kitchen, building a rustic sandwich with layers of sliced egg, homemade pate and tomato.
At lunchtime, Dominique Moussu is making a sandwich. Moussu, a high-powered chef with a track record as a creator of fancy fare, is executive chef and part-owner of Teatro, one of Calgary's pre-eminent white tablecloth restaurants. But here he stands in a small kitchen, building a rustic sandwich with layers of sliced egg, homemade pate and tomato.
"I can be happy all my life making sandwiches," he says. I believe him. At 39, Moussu, the father of three young children, is realizing there is life "after the line."
The line -- the professional kitchen's litmus test -- comprises the stove and counter where chefs and cooks work at high speed to cook and plate the meals their restaurant clientele have paid to eat. It is hot, crowded and hurried -- yet a top-calibre line cook must be none of those things.
Moussu, making his sandwiches in his new takeout shop, L'Epicerie, is calm, organized, methodical and quick, the hallmarks of an efficient line cook.
In June, Moussu and his wife, Anne-Claire Moussu-Lejuez, opened L'Epicerie in the food-centric Callebaut building on 1 St. S.W. It was an opportunity to step into a semblance of family life while keeping what mattered most as a cook -- the traditional dishes Moussu grew up with in Brittany, where his father ran a charcuterie-traiteur.
The blackboard menu lists a short collection of classics, including several styles of house-made pork pate (try the Breton, slightly coarse, made with pork cheeks, or the version with dried plum and anise), three soups (mushroom, lentil and pumpkin) and two hearty entrees (usually beef bourguignon and Toulouse-style cassoulet).
And, of course, sandwiches, made on Moussu's rustic miniature levain-risen bread or on baguettes from Belgian-born baker Manuel Latruwe next door.
Desserts are limited, but are made in-house and include macaroons and canele, a slightly fussy and historic Bordelaise cake baked in a fluted cylindrical mould. Its dense, chewy and slightly burnt top perfectly counters its tender custardy interior.
"There is nothing new here. I have gone back to the traditional foods," Moussu observes.
A Larousse Gastronomique, the bible of classic French cooking, takes up space on the bookshelf while Croque Monsieur sandwiches, the French version of grilled ham and cheese, sit on a nearby rack. His new shop is not a good place for vegetarians.
"Just like in a French shop," Moussu comments as he ladles out cassoulet and velvety pumpkin soup. All three soups are made with chicken stock, and both cassoulet and lentil soup are studded with pork for richness and flavour.
After running the kitchen brigade at Teatro for the past five years, Moussu is glad to be cooking alone. "Although I would like to have a commis, an apprentice," he says.
Good help is hard to find in Calgary's current climate. Across town, in A Ladybug Bakery & Cafe's new shop -- opening today -- co-owner Marie Leclerq agrees.
Leclerq, her husband, baker Yves Ghesquiere, and their son, Pierre, have turned their Calgary Farmers' Market success into a new location on Aspen Stone Boulevard S.W. It has been on the verge of opening for several months as Leclerq wrestles with permits, slow-running dishwashing machines and staffing shortages.
The airy west-side bakery and shop is equipped, the communal tables set with green and white place mats, the display cases ready to receive trays and baskets of baguettes, tarts, croissants and sandwiches. The coffees and teas are stacked, ready to steep and strain.
Marie waves her manicured hand at the empty room. "What good is all this without bakers to help us bake? Yves and I are working long days already to keep up with the busy market location alone."
A Ladybug Bakery & Cafe makes and sells mostly-organic baked goods, including frozen raw croissants, frozen par-baked spelt and wheat baguettes, luscious tarts, cakes and pastries -- danishes, cookies, pain au chocolat. It is also a sleek 50-seat cafe.
Leclerq says they will take baby steps into adding soups, salads, baguette sandwiches, panini, pizza and tartine, a simple open-faced French sandwich. It all depends on finding good people.








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