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Shepherd's pie, cottage pie, or in French cuisine hachis Parmentier, is a savoury dish of cooked minced meat topped with mashed potato and baked, formerly also called Sanders or Saunders. The meat used may be either previously cooked or freshly minced.
Antoine-Augustin Parmentier (UK: / p ɑːr ˈ m ɛ n t i eɪ,-ˈ m ɒ n t-/, US: / ˌ p ɑːr m ə n ˈ t j eɪ /; [1] French: [ɑ̃twan oɡystɛ̃ paʁmɑ̃tje]; 12 August 1737 – 13 December 1813) was a French pharmacist and agronomist, best remembered as a vocal promoter of the potato as a food source for humans in France and throughout Europe.
A Paris newspaper in 1892 referred to dishes served at a bistro, including escargots, veal with sauce ravigote, navarin of lamb, hachis Parmentier, eggs, sausages and hot roast chicken. [ 3 ] The Oxford Companion to Food comments that the idea of simple inexpensive food served in a French atmosphere has wide appeal, so that by the end of the ...
Pâté chinois (pronounced [pɑte ʃinwa]) ('Chinese pie') is a French Canadian dish similar to the English shepherd's pie or French hachis Parmentier. It is a traditional recipe in Québécois cuisine.
The basic ingredients are potatoes, onions and cooking liquid. The dish, cooked slowly in a low oven, gradually absorbing the cooking liquid, has a crisp top layer of sliced potatoes, with a softer mixture of onion and potato beneath.
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Mashed potato or mashed potatoes (American, Canadian and Australian English), colloquially known as mash (British English), [2] is a dish made by mashing boiled or steamed potatoes, usually with added milk, butter, salt and pepper.
I've just looked at my old (1961) edition of Larousse Gastronomique, in which the text is in English but the index, bafflingly, is in French, and this is what I found: in the Index, there no NO "Hachis Parmentier"! There is, instead, "Hachis de boeuf a la Parmentier, 489". Then, on page 489, there is a recipe for Beef hash a la Parmentier ...