French cuisine/Catalogs: Difference between revisions

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*[[Melon au jambon de Bayonne]]—melon with cold [[Bayonne ham]]
*[[Melon au jambon de Bayonne]]—melon with cold [[Bayonne ham]]
*[[Mousse au chocolat]]—cold dessert of chocolat mixed with eggs and often whipped cream
*[[Mousse au chocolat]]—cold dessert of chocolat mixed with eggs and often whipped cream
*[[Navarin à la printanière]]—lamb stew with spring vegetables
*[[Navarin à la printanière]]—mutton or lamb stew with spring vegetables
*[[Pâté de foie gras]]—a pâté (paste) made from ground or puréed foie gras; it is cheaper and less desirable than the whole foie gras.
*[[Pâté de foie gras]]—a pâté (paste) made from ground or puréed foie gras; it is cheaper and less desirable than the whole foie gras.
*[[French fries|Pommes frites]]—french fries—probably originated in Belgium, but are generally considered by most people today to have been invented in France, where they were certainly popularized during the 19th century
*[[French fries|Pommes frites]]—french fries—probably originated in Belgium, but are generally considered by most people today to have been invented in France, where they were certainly popularized during the 19th century

Revision as of 14:11, 19 December 2009

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An informational catalog, or several catalogs, about French cuisine.


Under construction: this will be a list of well-known dishes in French cuisine, in alphabetical order.

  • Andouille, andouillette—sausages
  • Baeckeoffe—thick Alsatian stew with potatoes, meat, and vegetables
  • Blanquette de veau—veal stew in a rich white sauce
  • Boeuf bourguignon or boeuf à la bourguignonne—beef bourguignon, a rich, slowly simmered stew of browned beef cubes in red wine and aromatics, garnished with onions, mushrooms, and pork lardons
  • Boudin—sausage that can be either white or black (blood pudding)
  • Bouillabaisse—fish stew of the Mediterranean area
  • Bourride—Provençal fish stew similar to bouillabaisse
  • Camembert—soft cheese made from cow's milk
  • Cassoulet—slow-cooked bean dish garnished with meats, poultry, and sausage
  • Charcuterie—dressed meat and cooked meat dishes such as sausages, salamis, and other pork products
  • Chateaubriand—a large piece of filet of beef
  • Civet—highly seasoned stew of wine and meat, classically made with "furred" game such as hare or rabbit; see salmi
  • Choucroutechoucroute alsacienne—sauerkraut with sausage and meat; choucroute royale—made with champagne
  • Confit—preserved meat, generally goose, duck, or pork, cooked slowly in a large quantity of fat
  • Confit d'oie—preserved goose, a speciality of both Southwestern France and Alsace
  • Coq au vin—chicken (originally rooster) prepared in wine in a method quite similar to that of boeuf bourguignon
  • Cuisses de grenouille—frog legs, a specialty of both Provence and Alsace
  • Cotriade—yet another type of fish stew, from Brittany
  • Crème brûlée ("burnt cream"—dessert of a custard base with a hard caramel surface
  • Crème Chantilly—whipped cream
  • Crêpe—thin French pancake; crêpe de sarrasin or galette, with ham and cheese; crêpes de froment, crêpes Suzette
  • Demi-glace—brown sauce made by reducing an espagnole sauce until it becomes the basis for all the classic brown sauces in French cuisine
  • Escargots de Bourgogne—snails prepared in the manner of Burgundy
  • Foie gras—the liver of a goose or duck that has been specially reared and fed a carefully controlled diet using gavage (force feeding); prepared whole, it is more expensive than pâté de foie gras, with which it is frequently confused
  • Gratin dauphinois—a baked preparation of potatoes and various cheeses
  • Homard à l'armoricaine (also called "à l'américaine"—the exact name is controversial)—lobster preparation in Brittany
  • Île flottante (floating island)—rich dessert of island-like pieces of meringue floating on a dish of custard
  • Jambon de Bayonne—the French equivalent of prosciutto, an air-dried salted ham from the area around the southwestern city of Bayonne
  • Kirsch—a liqueur made from fermented wild cherries, the best coming from Alsace

+Langue de chat (Cat's tongue)—thin, flat, narrow cookies or biscuits somewhat like the tongue of a cake in appearance