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Fish chef poissonnier: Fish dishes, and often fish butchering, and their sauces. (May be combined with the saucier position.) Roast chef rôtisseur: Roasted and braised meats, and their sauces. Grill chef grillardin [ɡʁijaʁdɛ̃] Grilled foods. (May be combined with the rotisseur.) Fry chef friturier: Fried items.
Poissonnier (fish cook) prepares fish and seafood dishes. [4] Entremétier or entremettier (entrée preparer) prepares soups and other dishes without meat or fish, including vegetable dishes and egg dishes. [3] Originally the entremets preparer. [6] [7] Potager (soup cook) in larger kitchens, reports to the entremétier and prepares the soups ...
Fish chef poissonnier: Fish dishes, and often fish butchering, and their sauces. (May be combined with the saucier position.) Roast chef rôtisseur: Roasted and braised meats, and their sauces. Grill chef grillardin [ɡʁijaʁdɛ̃] Grilled foods. (May be combined with the rotisseur.) Fry chef friturier: Fried items.
The whole gutted fish are marinated in a hearty mixture of oil, spices and garlic and skewered on sticks of about 60 cm length. The sticks are then fixed in a way that the fish are positioned upside-down and angular next to the embers. During the process of grilling they are brushed a few times with the marinade so that the skin becomes crispy.
Seafood restaurants may have a marine-themed decor, with decorations such as fish nets, nautical images and buoys. [1] [2] Fare can vary due to seasonality in fish availability and in the fishing industry. [2] [3] Seafood restaurants may offer additional non-seafood items, such as chicken and beef dishes. [2] [4]
Robatayaki Robataya Ginmasa Shinjuku Nomura Building. In Japanese cuisine, robatayaki (炉端焼き, literally "fireside-cooking"), often shortened to robata (ろばた in hiragana), refers to a method of cooking, similar to barbecue, in which items of food are cooked at varying speeds over hot charcoal.
Ikan bakar is an Indonesian and Malay dish, prepared with charcoal-grilled fish or other forms of seafood. Ikan bakar literally means "grilled fish" in Indonesian and Malay.Ikan bakar differs from other grilled fish dishes in that it often contains flavorings like bumbu, kecap manis, sambal, and is covered in a banana leaf and cooked on a charcoal fire.
The dish named sole meunière has varied over the years. In his 1846 cookery book The Gastronomic Regenerator, Alexis Soyer leaves the skin on the fish and rubs salt and chopped onions into it, before grilling it whole and, once cooked, adding a sauce of melted butter with lemon juice and cayenne pepper. [5]