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  2. French cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_cuisine

    French cuisine is the cooking traditions and practices from France. In the 14th century, Guillaume Tirel, a court chef known as "Taillevent", wrote Le Viandier, one of the earliest recipe collections of medieval France. In the 17th century, chefs François Pierre La Varenne and Marie-Antoine Carême spearheaded movements that shifted French ...

  3. Early modern European cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_modern_European_cuisine

    Unlike France's continued path toward high-cuisine, Italy began to show a change toward regionalism and simple cooking in the late 17th century. In 1662 the last cookbook on Italian high-cuisine was published by Bartolomeo Stefani chef to Gonzagas. L'Arte di Ben Cucinare introduced vitto ordinario ("ordinary food") to Italian cookery. [16]

  4. Cuisine bourgeoise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisine_bourgeoise

    In the late 19th century, cooking schools such as Le Cordon Bleu and magazines such as La Cuisinière Cordon Bleu and Le Pot-au-Feu, emerged in Paris to teach cooking technique to bourgeois women. Pellaprat's La Cuisine de tous les jours (1914) and Le Livre de cuisine de Madame Saint-Ange (1927) come from those cooking schools. [1]

  5. François Pierre La Varenne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/François_Pierre_La_Varenne

    La Varenne was the foremost member of a group of French chefs, writing for a professional audience, who codified French cuisine in the age of King Louis XIV.The others were Nicolas Bonnefon, Le Jardinier françois (1651) and Les Délices de la campagne (1654), and François Massialot, Le Cuisinier royal et bourgeois (1691), which was still being edited and modernised in the mid-18th century.

  6. Compendium ferculorum, albo Zebranie potraw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compendium_ferculorum...

    The original publication of Compendium ferculorum came three decades after the French cookbook entitled Le Cuisinier françois (The French [male] Cook, 1651), by François Pierre de La Varenne, started a culinary revolution that spread across Europe in the second half of the 17th century. In this new wave of French gastronomy, exotic spices ...

  7. Mille-feuille - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mille-feuille

    According to the Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets, mille-feuille recipes from 17th century French and 18th century English cookbooks are a precursor to layer cakes.. The earliest mention of the name mille-feuille itself appears in 1733 in an English-language cookbook written by French chef Vincent La Chapelle. [4]

  8. Entremet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entremet

    The staging of an elaborate entremet at the banquet of Charles V in 1378; illumination from Grandes Chroniques, late 14th century.. The word entremets, as a culinary term, first appears in line 185 of Lanval, one of the 12th century Lais of Marie de France, and subsequently appears in La Vengeance Raguidel (early 13th century), line 315.

  9. Ambigu (meal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambigu_(meal)

    Ambigu is a French term meaning a type of meal service that was popular in the upper class circles of France and Britain during the second half of the 17th Century and 18th Century. [1] It originated from the needs of high society to provide an elegant but informal format for entertaining large numbers of people.