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  2. List of French dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_French_dishes

    French cuisine ingredients [ edit ] An entire foie gras (partly prepared for a terrine ) Escargot cooked with garlic and parsley butter in a shell (with a €0.02 coin as scale) Black Périgord Truffle

  3. French cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_cuisine

    A nouvelle cuisine presentation French haute cuisine presentation French wines are usually made to accompany 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.

  4. Cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisine

    Nouvelle cuisine ('New cuisine') is an approach to cooking and food presentation in French cuisine that was popularized in the 1960s by the food critics Henri Gault, who invented the phrase, and his colleagues André Gayot and Christian Millau in a new restaurant guide, the Gault-Millau, or Le Nouveau Guide. [10]

  5. These 13 Most Popular French Pastries Will Make Your ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/13-most-popular-french-pastries...

    Profiterole. Some French pastries also start with pâte à choux, or choux paste, a hot dough made by cooking water, butter, flour, and eggs together in a saucepan; when it bakes, it puffs up and ...

  6. Category:French cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:French_cuisine

    P. Pachade; Pain petri; Pariser schnitzel; Pâté; Pâté aux pommes de terre; Patranque; Péla (dish) Henri-Paul Pellaprat; Persillade; Petit pâté de Pézenas

  7. Lyonnaise cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyonnaise_cuisine

    Lyonnaise cuisine refers to cooking traditions and practices centering on the area around the French city of Lyon [1] and historical Lyonnais culinary traditions. In the 16th century, Catherine de Medici brought cooks from Florence to her court and they prepared dishes from agricultural products from many regions of France .

  8. Cuisine of Quebec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisine_of_Quebec

    The cuisine of Québec (also called "French Canadian cuisine" or "cuisine québécoise") is a national cuisine in the Canadian province of Québec. It is also cooked by Franco-Ontarians . Québec's cuisine descended from 17th-century French cuisine and began to develop in New France from the labour-intensive nature of colonial life, the ...

  9. Poutine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poutine

    Poutine made with thick beef gravy on french-fried potatoes with fresh cheese curds is a style commonly found outside Quebec. The texture, temperature and viscosity of poutine's ingredients differ and continuously change as the food is consumed, making it a dish of highly dynamic contrasts.