French cuisine/Catalogs
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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
- Chateaubriand—a large piece of filet of beef
- Choucroute—choucroute alsacienne—sauerkraut with sausage and meat; choucroute royale—made with champagne
- Confit—preserved meat, generally goose, duck, or pork
- Confit d'oie—preserved duck, a speciality of Southwestern France
- Coq au vin—chicken (originally rooster) prepared in wine
- Cuisses de grenouille—frog legs
- Cotriade—sort of "bouillabaisse" in Brittany
- Crêpe - French pancakes: crêpe de sarrasin (galette) e.g., with ham and cheese, crêpes de froment, crêpe Suzette
- 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). It is prepared and eaten whole, and is far more expensive than pâté de foie gras, with which it is frequently confused.
- Gratin dauphinois—a preparation of potatoes
- Homard à l'armoricaine (also called "à l'américaine"—the exact name is controversial)—lobster preparation in Brittany
- Mayonnaise
- Melon au jambon de Bayonne—melon with cold Bayonne ham
- Mousse au chocolat
- 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.
- 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
- Pommes lyonnaise—a simple dish of fried potatoes and onions
- Quenelles de brochet
- Quiche lorraine
- Ratatouille
- Roquefort—blue cheese
- Sauce bearnaise
- Sauce hollandaise
- Saucisson de Lyon
- Soupe à l'oignon or soupe à l'oignon gratinée—French onion soup—old-fashioned onion soup poured over dried bread; frequently covered with a thick layer of gratinéed cheese
- Tarte à l'oignon
- Tarte flambée—a pizza-like specialty of Alsace
- Tarte Tatin—an apple tart
- Tartiflette
- Tripes à la mode de Caen
- Veal—meat from very young calves.