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The Flemish and Brabant cities of Bruges, Antwerp, and Ghent became the largest trading cities in Europe, where the richest people settled and where goods were brought from all over the world, including spices from India and exotic fruits from warm countries. A Richly Laid Table with Parrots, Jan Davidsz de Heem, c. 1650. On the table one can ...
It looks like the medieval stew which contains onions and red wine. It is reported that besides venison, onions and red wine, you need verjuice, butter, sugar, nutmeg and cardamom. The hochepot was then just a kind of meat cooked in a liquid. It is the only similarity that allows to connect the medieval hochepots with the current Flemish hochepots.
Flemish stew, [1] known in Dutch as stoofvlees (pronounced [ˈstoːfleːs] ⓘ) or stoverij and in French as carbon(n)ade flamande, [2] [3] and also known as "grandma's stew", is a Flemish beef (or pork) and onion stew popular in Belgium, the Netherlands, Aosta Valley (Italy) and French Flanders.
Newly created neo-baroque furniture, old arts and paintings created an "old Flemish" interior that not only fits well into the historic building, but also attracts lovers of art in Bruges. In the café are also headquarters of various associations who meet regularly and favorably affect sales, for example Art Genegen, an association founded in ...
Flemish stew; W. Waterzooi; Z. Zoervleis This page was last edited on 23 June 2024, at 02:01 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
The Cranenburg House (right of centre) from a postcard, c. 1905 Modern restaurant/café conversion (left) in 2007 The Cranenburg House (also Craenenburg) is a historic building located on the Markt (main square) of Bruges, Belgium.
' Saint Peter on the Dike '), is a quarter of Bruges, in the province of West Flanders, Belgium. It was a separate municipality until 1899. In 1899, it was merged into Bruges.
Bruges had a strategic location at the crossroads of the northern Hanseatic League trade, who had a kontor in the city, and the southern trade routes. Bruges was already included in the circuit of the Flemish and French cloth fairs at the beginning of the 13th century, but when the old system of fairs broke down, the entrepreneurs of Bruges ...