When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cordon bleu (dish) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordon_bleu_(dish)

    The French term cordon bleu is translated as "blue ribbon". [4] According to Larousse Gastronomique, the cordon bleu "was originally a wide blue ribbon worn by members of the highest order of knighthood, L'Ordre des chevaliers du Saint-Esprit, instituted by Henri III of France in 1578. By extension, the term has since been applied to food ...

  3. Marthe Distel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marthe_Distel

    Marthe Distel started the culinary magazine La Cuisinière Cordon Bleu. To prompt readership, Distel offered subscribers cooking lessons with professional chefs. The first class was held in January 1895 in the kitchens of the Palais Royal. The classes led to the development of a more formal school, now known as Le Cordon Bleu. [2]

  4. La cuisine pour tous - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_cuisine_pour_tous

    La cuisine pour tous, [1] Je sais cuisiner, [2] The French Pocket Cookbook, [3] or I Know How to Cook [4] is a French cookbook edited by Ginette Mathiot and H. Delage.. Originally published in 1932 as Je sais cuisiner ("par Un groupe de cordons bleus, sous la direction de Mlles H. Delage et G. Mathiot, professeurs d'enseignement ménager à la ville de Paris.

  5. Larousse Gastronomique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larousse_Gastronomique

    Larousse Gastronomique (pronounced [laʁus ɡastʁɔnɔmik]) is an encyclopedia of gastronomy [2] first published by Éditions Larousse in Paris in 1938. The majority of the book is about French cuisine, and contains recipes for French dishes and cooking techniques.

  6. La Cuisinière Cordon Bleu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Cuisinière_Cordon_Bleu

    La cuisinière Cordon Bleu, also spelled as La cuisinière cordon-bleu, was a culinary magazine started in the late 1890s by French journalist Marthe Distel (1871—1934). The magazine offered recipes and tips on entertaining. To prompt readership, the magazine offered cooking classes to subscribers.

  7. Cordon Bleu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordon_Bleu

    Cordon bleu may refer to: the blue ribbon of the Order of the Holy Spirit; the blue ribbon of the Order of St. Andrew, Russian Empire; La Cuisinière Cordon Bleu, a 19th-century culinary magazine; Le Cordon Bleu, international group of hospitality management and cooking schools teaching French cuisine

  8. Le Cordon Bleu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Cordon_Bleu

    Le Cordon Bleu ([lə kɔʁdɔ̃ blø]; French: "The Blue Ribbon"; LCB) is a French hospitality and culinary education institution, teaching haute cuisine. Its educational focuses are hospitality management, culinary arts, and gastronomy. The institution consists of 35 institutes in 20 countries and has over 20,000 attendees. [1]

  9. Madame Brassart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madame_Brassart

    Élisabeth Brassart (1897–1992) was the proprietor of the Le Cordon Bleu school in Paris from 1945 to 1984. [1] Le Cordon Bleu had been founded in 1895 by Marthe Distel and Henri-Paul Pellaprat . In 1945, after the end of WWII , she purchased what had become a struggling school from a Catholic orphanage which had inherited it after the school ...