French cuisine/Catalogs

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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