Acadian Food American Food Australian Food British Food Byzantine Food Canadian Food Chinese Food Egypt (Ancient) French Food German Food Greece (Ancient) Greek Food Irish Food Irish Food (Northern) Italian Food Japanese Food Jewish Food Medieval Food Mexican Food Norwegian Food Québecois Food Raw Foods Roman Food Scottish Food Sicilian Food Slow Food Spanish Food Tex-Mex Food Turkish Food Tuscan Food Previous | Next | French Food© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedUnlike other cuisines of the world, French cuisine is codified, organized and set out in almost canonical terms -- at least, the "grande cuisine" part of French cooking is. It's owing partly to the politically centralized nature of France itself, and partly to the fact that writers and consumers alike of the "grande cuisine" treat it as an art form approaching a science. Cooks in other cooking traditions, such as Japanese or Chinese, may be as rigorously trained as French cooks are, but French cooks have had access to a wealth of written material. It should be noted, though, that aristocratic cooking wasn't always necessarily good. Quality was often sacrificed for show and presentation, and with the kitchens being so far from the dining tables, food would often arrive quite cold. France is actually still a country of its old feudal provinces, though the Revolution tried to sweep those away by reforming everything into Départements whose geographical lines differed from the historical ones. French regional cuisine is based on these old historic regions or provinces, not on the relatively new "départements", so you could say that the concept of regional cuisines has now become just a cultural construct -- but an important one none-the-less. France is highly centralized country. In order to keep the agricultural outlying regions happy and quiet, the centre in Paris has always favoured pro-agriculturalist policies. And, in order to create a strong sense of nationalism, the centre has always celebrated its regional variety as part of the whole and appropriated it as one of the symbols of France French cuisine largely has two categories: cuisine bourgeoise (home cooking), and haute cuisine (high cooking.) The haute cuisine is refined, complicated cooking done by highly trained people. But nowadays, with kitchen appliances and tools, more haute cuisine cooking can be imitated in homes. French "peasants" are now becoming middle-class, and can afford the food that they hear about and see advertised on TV. This has helped French cooking to become more homogenized than it was. For instance, crêpes are pretty much universal food in France now, and almost every town has a crêperie, or a combination crêperie/pizzeria. Supermarkets in France are chock-full of convenience goods and ready-made foods now, everything from frozen pizza to packaged ham slices and pre-washed salad greens. In fact, the contents of the average grocery cart wouldn't look very different now from those in North America or the UK. You can even buy eggs already boiled to save time. France is the second biggest market for Nestlé after North America. In France, Nestlé has a strong market (as of 2004) in individual portion ready-made chilled meals. The French are now discovering sandwiches as meals, especially the kinds of gourmet sandwiches -- for instance, apple, Brie and walnut -- that the English are now used to. And, they are discovering more aspects of English food. Simple Simon is a franchise chain in France that is selling English pies, as well as apple crumbles, bakewell tarts, scones, and custard. In the restaurants, tea is served from silver pots into china cups. The first Simple Simon shop was set up in Avignon in the early 1970s (rue Petite Fusterie) by two English women who couldn't get a decent cup of tea there. Many food traditions remain, however. As of 2001, people in France still preferred homemade soup to commercially prepared soup -- and put their pots where their mouth is. 70% of the soup they eat is homemade, and only 30% bought ready-made. When they do buy ready-made soup from the supermarket, 60% of it is in cartons or bottles, as opposed to canned or dehydrated form. [*Research and Markets, The Soup Market Market Assessment, Report 3895. Jan 2001.] Most French still don't drink tap water, drinking bottled water instead, even at restaurants. And the French remain indifferent to rice. And many French cooking habits still defy current Anglo-Saxon "health thinking", in areas for instance such as the use of fat. In Aquitaine, where many traditional dishes are based on goose and duck, goose fat is still preferred over oil or butter, as it is in Gascony as well. And in Périgord, the preferred fat is goose fat again, supplemented by walnut oil. An English speaker would run screaming to the nearest hospital, pleading for an angioplasty. Restaurants in France
Restaurants of all types in France are now having to juggle increasingly high expectations of customers with:
Consequently, in order to square the circle and stay in business, restaurants are starting to take more short cuts and cut back in small areas, because they have had to cut back on the number of employees. The answer may lie in more prepared food -- such as sauces in vacuum-packages ready to use -- being used in restaurant kitchens; or it may lie in re-examining the science of the kitchen, to see what time-honoured practices in the French kitchen actually matter to the end product. Some bistros now even buy and serve completely-prepared meals.
Miscellaneous French Food History Facts
Pounds of meat consumed per capita per year:
Egg Consumption, France per capita per year:
Literature & Lore "If you wanted to be heard at a [French] dinner party, you had to talk very loud, and very fast, and to have a very firm opinion about whatever it was, or else you'd be ignored." -- Julia Child. Quoted by Alex Prud'homme in "Writing Pulia". Gastronomica. University of California Press: Berkeley, California. Summer 2005, Vol. 5, No. 3, Pages 23-25. "This nouvelle cuisine has been extremely useful because it has released chefs from the traditional straitjacket and makes them feel freer to do what they want. But sometimes they go overboard. The next thing you know, we may get poached cow's udders with oysters!" -- Julia Child. As quoted by Suzy Patterson in "Vacation doesn't mean getting away from food". Charleston, West Virginia: Sunday Gazette-Mail. Sunday, 3 September 1978. Page 83. "La Cuisine n'est pas seulement une science de Gueule, elle est avant tout une science de haute portée morale qu'il faut apprendre et comprendre." [Ed. - Food isn't just a science of the mouth, it is above all a science of elevated morality that one must learn and understand.] -- Montaigne (1533-1592). From his "Essais." Language Notes The word "restaurant" wasn't recognized by the Academie Francaise until 1835. In France, "boulangers" is a "new" word for "bakers", that came about in the 1400s. Prior to that, they were called "talemeliers". Acknowlegements Cahill, Dominique Magada. Quelle horreur - is it true that the French can't boil an egg these days? Daily Telegraph. 9 November 2004. Jean-Louis Flandrin & Massimo Montanari, Eds. Food: A Culinary History. New York: Columbia University Press, 1999. Randall, Colin. Bread and butter issue for France. London: Daily Telegraph. 11 March 2006. Simon, François. It's What's For Dinner. New York: Gourmet Magazine. March 2001. Special Food DaysSome Typical Foods Items / IngredientsCrème de Noyau
Crème de Saint Agur Cheese (Crème de Saint Agur) Duchess Potatoes (Pommes de Terre Duchesse) Edel de Cléron Cheese (Edel de Cléron) Entrammes Cheese (Fromage Entrammes) Espelette Chile Peppers (Piment d'Espelette) Farine de Blé Type 110 (Farine complète) Farine de Blé Type 150 (Farine complète) Farine de Blé Type 45 (Farine avec poudre levante) Farine de Blé Type 65 (Farine bise) Farine de Blé Type 80 (Farine bise) Farine de Froment (Farine de froment) Fin de Bagnols Beans (Bagnolais) Fourme d'Ambert Cheese (Fromage Fourme d'Ambert) Fourme de Montbrison Cheese (Fourme de Montbrison) French Bread Law (1993) (Décret pain) French Breads (Pains français) French Fillet Beans (Haricots verts) French Flours (Farines françaises) French Liqueurs (Liqueurs françaises) French Revolutionary Calendar (Calendrier Républicain) French Vermouth (Vermouth blanc) Fromage Blanc Cheese (Fromage blanc) Galette des Rois (Galette du Roi) Galeux d'Eysines Squash (Courge Brodée Galeuse) Gaperon Cheese (Fromage Gaperon) Grapeseed Oil (Huile de pépins de raisin) Green Anjou Pears (Poire d'Anjou verte) Green du Berry Lentils (Lentilles vertes du Berry) Hollandaise Sauce (Sauce Hollandaise) La Maison Dorée (Maison Dorée) Livarot Cheese (Fromage Livarot) Madrange Ham (Jambon Madrange) Maître d'Hôtel Butter (Beurre à la Maître d'Hôtel) Mandarine Impériale (Mandarine Imperatrice) Marrons Glacés (Marrons glacés) Marseille Vanilla (Vanille de Marseille) Montmorency Cherries (Cerise de Montmorency) Morbier Cheese (Fromage Morbier du Livradois) Nantes Carrots (Carotte Nantaise) À la Dauphinoise
Aboukir Almonds (Amandes Aboukir) Anna Potatoes (Galette de Pommes de Terre au Beurre) Appellation of Controlled Origin (Appelation d'Origine Contrôlée) Ardennes Dry Ham (Jambon sec des Ardennes) Banon Cheese (Fromage de Banon) Banyuls Vinegar (Vinaigre de Banyuls) Bar-Le-Duc Jelly (Confiture de groseilles Bar-Le-Duc) Batavia Lettuce (Laitue batavia) Batavia Red Lettuce (Laitue batavia rouge) Béarnaise Sauce (Sauce Béarnaise) Beaufort Cheese (Fromage Beaufort) Beaujolais Mustard (Moutarde de Beaujolais) Beurre Pâtissier (Beurre pâtissier) Bordeaux Mustard (Moutarde de Bordeaux) Bouteillan Olives (Plant de Salernes) Brebis des Pyrénées Cheese (Brebis des Pyrénées) Bresse Chickens (Volaille de Bresse) Brie de Coulommiers Cheese (Brie de Coulommiers) Brioche Vendéenne (Brioche de Vendée) Broad Bean Flour (Farine de fèves) Camargue Red Rice (Riz rouge de Camargue) Campénéac Cheese (Fromage de Campénéac) Carpentin Apple (Pomme carpentin) Chantilly Cream (Crème Chantilly) Charentais Devil (Diable charentais) Charentais Melons (Melon Charentais) Cigales de Mer (Cigales de mer) Cinderella Pumpkins (Rouge Vif d'Etampes) Cornichons (Cornichons au vinaigre) Neufchâtel Cheese (Fromage de Neufchâtel)
Niçoise Olives (Le Cailletier) Niçoise Salad (Salade Niçoise) Nyons Olive Oil (Huile d'olive de Nyons) Olives Noires de la Vallée des Baux de Provence (Olives noires de la Vallée des Baux de Provence) Onglet en Sarment (Onglet en sarment) Oronge Mushrooms (Amanite des Césars) Ossau-Iraty Cheeses (Brébis Pyrenées) Pain au Froment (Pain au froment) Pain au Levain (Pain au levain) Pain de Campagne (Pain de campagne) Pâte de Guimauve (Pâte de guimauve) Pavé d'Isigny Cheese (Pavé d'Isigny) Perail de Brebis (Perail de brebis) Pets de Nonnes (Beignet de vent) Porcini Mushrooms (Cèpe de Bordeaux) Port du Salut Cheeses (Fromage Port du Salut) Port Salut Cheese (Fromage Port Salut) Pre-Ferments (Préfermentations) Reblochon Cheese (Fromage Reblochon) Red Anjou Pears (Poire d'Anjou rouge) Red Wine Vinegar (Vinaigre de vin rouge) Rump Steak (Bifteck de croupe) Saint Agur Cheese (Fromage Saint Agur) Salonenque Olives (Plant de salon) Sauce Béarnaise (Sauce Bernaise) Selles-sur-Cher (Fromage Selles-sur-Cher) Steak Tartare (Filet américain) Tailladées Olives (Olives Tailladées) Tanche Olives (Olive de Carpentras) Tarbais Beans (Haricot Tarbais) Tartiflette Tart (Tarte tartiflette) Timadeuc Cheese (Fromage de Timadeuc) Truffle Butter (Beurre de truffes) Truffle Oil (Huile de truffle) Vache Qui Rit Cheese (Vache Qui Rit) Vacherin Mont d'Or (Vacherin du Haut-Doubs) Vallée des Baux Cracked Olives (Olives cassées de la Vallée des Baux) Verdale Olives (Olives Verdale) Violet Syrup (Sirop de violette) Some French RecipesAlso called: Cuisine francaise (French)
Other entries for: Cuisine PagesAcadian Food, American Food, Australian Food, British Food, Byzantine Food, Canadian Food, Chinese Food, Egypt (Ancient), French Food, German Food, Greece (Ancient), Greek Food, Irish Food, Irish (Northern), Italian Food, Japanese Food, Jewish Food, Medieval Food, Mexican Food, Norwegian Food, Roman Food, Scottish Food, Slow Food, Spanish Food, Tex-Mex Food, Turkish Food, Tuscan Food |
|

