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French Classical Menu
Classical Menu Sequence 
17 Courses 
1. Hors d’oeuvre (appetizer) 
2. Potage (soup) 
3. Oeufs (eggs) 
4. Farineux (rice & pasta) 
5. Poisson (fish) 
6. Entrée (entry of 1st meat course) 
7. Sorbet (flavoured water ice) 
8. Relevé (butcher’s joints-meats carved & served) 
9. Rôti (roast poultry or game)
10. Légumes (vegetables) 
11. Salades (salad)* 
12. Buffet Froid (cold buffet)* 
13. Entremet de sûcre (sweets) 
14. Savoureux (savoury) 
15. Fromage (cheese)* 
16. Dessert (fresh fruits & nuts) 
17. Boisson (beverages like tea, coffee)*
• Hors-d’oeuvre : Traditionally this course consisted of a 
variety of simple salads but now includes items such as 
pâtés, mousses, fruit, cold meats and smoked fish. 
• Potages (Soup) : Includes all soups, both hot and cold. 
• Oeuf (Egg): There are a great number of egg dishes 
beyond the usual omelettes, but these have not 
retained their popularity on modern menus. 
• Farineux (Pasta, rice): Includes all pasta and rice dishes. 
• Poisson (Fish) : This course consists of fish dishes, both 
hot and cold. Fish dishes such as smoked salmon or 
seafood cocktails are mainly considered hors-d’oeuvre 
dishes and therefore would be served earlier in a meal.
• Entrée: Entrées are generally small, well garnished dishes 
which come from the kitchen ready for service. They are 
usually accompanied by a rich sauce or gravy. Potatoes and 
vegetables are not usually served with this course if it is to 
be followed by a main course. 
• Sorbet : Traditionally sorbets were served to give a pause 
within a meal, allowing the palate to be refreshed. They are 
lightly frozen water ices, often based on unsweetened fruit 
juice, and may be served with a spirit, liqueur or even 
Champagne. 
• Relevé: This refers to main roasts or other larger joints of 
meat, which would be served together with potatoes and 
vegetables.
• Rôti (Roast): This term usually refers to roasted 
game or poultry dishes. 
• Légume (Vegetables) : Apart from vegetables 
served with the roast courses, certain vegetables 
(e.g. asparagus and artichokes) may be served as 
a separate course. 
• Salade (Salad) :The salad course refers to a small 
plate of salad that is taken after a main course (or 
courses) and is quite often a green salad and 
dressings.
• Buffet froid(Cold buffet) : This course includes a 
variety of cold meats and fish, cheese and egg 
items together with a range of salads and 
dressings. 
• Fromage (Cheese):This course includes a range of 
cheeses and various accompaniments, including 
biscuits, bread, celery, grapes and apples. This 
course can also refer to cheese based dishes such 
as soufflés. 
• Entremet de sucre (Sweet) Hot and cold sweets
• Savoureux (Savoury): Sometimes simple 
savouries, such as Welsh Rarebit or other items 
on toast, or in pastry, or savoury soufflés, may be 
served at this stage. 
• Dessert : Fresh fruit, nuts and sometimes candied 
fruits. 
• Beverages : Traditionally this referred to coffee 
but nowadays includes a much wider range of 
beverages being generally available, including 
tea, tisanes and chocolate.
1) Hors D'oeuvre (Appetizer) 
• Being highly seasoned and piquant in nature, this course is used to 
stimulate the appetite for the meal. The term “hors d’oeuvre variés 
froides” applies to the service of assorted cold salads and morsels 
of anchovy, sardines, olives, prawns, pickled vegetables etc from a 
rotating trolley or tray. There are also many items served hot, such 
as bouchées, croquettes, fritters, etc., and these are known as hors 
d’oeuvres chauds (warm appetisers). 
• The course also covers whatever items are served before the soup 
(hors d’oeuvre substitutes). 
• Cover: Cold half plate, fish knife, fish fork 
• Accompaniments: Oil and vinegar cruet
Vegetarian assorted hors d’oeuvres 
Artichoke à la grècque— cooked in water, lemon 
juice and oil with fennel, bay leaf, thyme and 
coriander and serve with some of the cooking 
liquid. 
Beetroot Normande—Cut into batons, mix with 
French dressing and garnish with batons of apple 
Pickled red cabbage/olives/mushrooms/beetroot 
Cole slaw—shredded cabbage, vinaigrette/mayo 
Carrots Jardinière—marinated cooked batons of 
carrots , French dressing.
Vegetarian assorted hors d’oeuvres 
Cauliflower Portugaise—cauliflower florets, chopped onions 
and diced tomatoes in oil with thyme and bay leaf 
Celery a la Russe-- celery batons with grated horseradish 
cream and mustard 
Marinated mushrooms—cooked in a mixture of vinegar, oil, 
garlic, thyme, bay leaf, fennel and coriander and serve with 
some of the liquid 
Pimento salad—green yellow and white pimentos and mix 
with batons of tomato flesh and vinaigrette dressing 
Russian salad-diced vegetable, mayonniase 
Tomato salad
Non-vegetarian assorted 
horsd’oeuvres 
• 1. Bismark Herring- They are soused boned herring usually purchased ready for 
use. 
2. Roll Mops- Roll fillets into paupiettes, pack in jars, cover with vinegar and white 
wine, flavour with onion rings, bayleaf and keep refrigerated for 3 to 4 days before 
serving. 
3. Herring à la Russe- Cut smoked fillets of herrings into thin slices, arrange on 
sliced cooked potatoes and sprinkle with chopped chervil, shallots, fennel, oil and 
vinegar. 
4. Kilkis- These are Norwegian anchovies that are served as purchased. 
5. Sardines a la crème- Sardines coat with mustard flavored acidulated cream. 
Egg based- 
1. Egg Aurore- Fill halves of hard boiled eggs with yolk made into a puree with 
béchamel and coat with cocktail sauce. 
2. Egg mayonnaise- Arrange sliced, halved or quartered egg on shredded lettuce 
and mask with mayonnaise, garnish to choice. 
• Examples of assorted cold hors d’oeuvre: 
• Anchovies, Potato & sausage salad, fish mayonnaise, cocktail sausages.
Non-vegetarian classical horsd’oeuvres 
Smoked salmon (Saumon fumé), - cayenne pepper, peppermill, lemon 
segments, brown bread & butter 
Smoked trout (Truite fumé) Smoked eel (Anguille fumé) Accompaniments 
same as above, also horseradish sauce 
Snails (Escargots)- brown bread & butter 
Oysters (Huîtres)- Half lemon, brown bread & butter, oyster cruet: cayenne 
pepper, peppermill, chilli vinegar, Tabasco 
Caviar (Caviare) 
Ham mousse (Mousse de jambon) 
Potted shrimps 
Fresh prawns (Crevettes roses) 
Gull’s/ plover’s eggs (Oeufs de mouette) 
Shrimp, Prawn or Lobster Cocktail (Cocktail de crevettes) 
Pâté of Goose Liver (Pâté de Foie Gras) 
Taramasalata
Vegetarian classical hors d’oeuvres 
Chilled Melon (Melon Frappé)- ground ginger, castor sugar 
Grapefruit (Pamplemousse)- castor sugar 
Avocado (Avocado vinaigrette/aux crevettes)-brown bread & 
butter 
Globe artichoke (Artichaut au beurre fondu/hollandaise/ à la 
vinaigrette) 
Citrus Fruit Cocktail (Coupe Florida) 
Asparagus (Asperges au beurre fondu/hollandaise/à la 
vinaigrette) 
Corn on the cob ( Maïs naturel)- beurre fondu 
Tomato juice (Jus de tomate)- Worcester sauce 
Fruit juice (Jus de fruit)- castor sugar
2) Potage (soup) 
The French have various words for soup. 
1) Consommé is a clear, thin clarified meat broth and is 
listed before other soups on the menu. 
2) A bouillon is similar to consommé but unclarified. 
3) Soupe refers to a thick, hearty mélange with chunks of 
food. 
4)A potage is usually puréed and is often thick, well-seasoned 
meat or vegetable soup, usually containing 
barley or other cereal or a pulse (e.g. lentils). 
Today, the words soupe and potage are often used 
interchangeably.
Thick soups can be crème, velouté, purée or bisque. 
5)A crème soup is based on bechamel or finished with 
cream, a velouté is based on roux, stock, egg yolk and 
cream. 
6)A purée is made from processed starchy vegetables 
7)A bisque is based on shellfish-shrimp, lobster, 
crayfish and rice. 
8) Brown soups are mainly of British origin and are 
usually prepared from a base of roux diluted with 
stock and cooked with the addition of vegetables and 
meat. They are passed and are usually garnished.
• Florentine-spinach 
• Dubarry-cauliflower 
• Doria-cucumber 
• Clamart-peas 
• Portugaise-tomatoes 
• Princesse-asparagus tips 
• Argenteuil-asparagus puree
• Palestine-Jerusalem artichoke 
• Washington-corn 
• Gumbo-okra 
• Creçy-carrots 
• Parmentier-potatoes 
• Nesselrode-Chestnut puree 
• Bresani-pumpkin 
• Soubise-onion puree
Classic soups 
• Consommé julienne- garnish of strips of vegetables 
• Consommé en gelée- cold jellied consommé 
• (Lobster, shrimp, prawn, crayfish) bisque 
• Cream of tomato, mushroom, broccoli, celery, chicken, 
asparagus. Crème de tomate is the only cream soup 
served with croûtons 
• Chicken or veal velouté 
• Potage St Germain- Green pea soup, garnish croûtons 
• Potage Germiny- Consommé thickened with egg yolks 
& cream, garnish cheese straws
Popular regional soups 
• A chowder is an American thick soup containing fish or 
shellfish, especially clams, and vegetables, such as potatoes 
and onions, in a milk or tomato base. 
• Bortsch is a Russian or Polish duck or beef and beetroot 
soup, served hot or cold. Garnished with diced meat & 
turned vegetables. Served with sour cream, beetroot juice & 
bouchées filled with duck paste 
• A Gazpacho is a cold pureed tomato, garlic and breadcrumbs 
soup from Spain . 
• Avgolemono is a soup made in Greece and Cyprus with 
chicken, rice, egg and lemon.
Popular regional soups 
• Cock-a –leekie is a leek and potato soup from 
Scotland is made with chicken stock, from Scotland. 
• A Goulash is a Hungarian soup made with beef, pork, 
paprika, peppers, tomato, potato and onion. 
• A Gumbo is a traditional Creole soup from the 
American South, thickened with okra pods and filé 
powder. 
• Minestrone is an Italian vegetable soup with pasta 
and cheese. Served with grated parmesan & grilled 
flutes 
• Mulligatawny is an Anglo-Indian soup with meat, 
vegetables and spices.
Popular regional soups 
• A Vichyssoise is a French inspired American creamy potato 
and leek soup, served with chives. 
• Bouillabaisse is a hearty Mediterranean French fish stew, 
served with thin slices of French bread dipped in oil & 
grilled. 
• A Waterzooi Belgian fish or chicken and vegetables soup. 
• French Onion soup is a broth made with onions and beef, 
often topped with croutons and cheese. 
• Petite Marmite is a French beef, chicken & vegetable 
broth garnished with turned root vegetables and diced 
meat, served in an earthenware crock. Served with 
grated parmesan, grilled flutes, poached bone marrow
Cold soups 
• Ajo blanco (white gazpacho)- Spanish cold soup made of bread, 
crushed almonds, garlic, water, olive oil, salt and sometimes 
vinegar, usually served with grapes or slices of melon. Spain 
• Borscht- duck consommé garnished with meat and turned 
vegetables. Russia/Ukraine 
• Chlodnik Botwina- beetroot greens, beetroot, and radishes in a 
sour cream and yoghurt base with hard-boiled eggs. Polish 
• Cucumber soup (Ogórkova)- Polish soup of pickled cucumbers & 
potato 
• Fruit soups (based on berries)- Cherry soup, Norwegian fruktsuppe, 
Kissel, Bärsoppa, Nyponsoppa (Swedish rosehip soup, Russian 
Kissel,
Cold soups 
• Gazpacho- Tomatoes, cucumber, peppers. Spain 
• Okroshka- cucumbers and spring onions, boiled potatoes, eggs, and 
a cooked meat such as beef, veal, sausages, or ham with kvass, 
garnished with sour cream. Russia 
• Pistou- white beans, green beans, tomatoes, summer squash, 
potatoes, and spaghetti. Southern France 
• Salmorejo- tomatoes, bread, oil, garlic and vinegar. Garnished with 
ham & hard-boiled eggs. Spain 
• Sorrel soup- sorrel leaves, egg yolks , potatoes, carrots, parsley root, 
and rice. Russia, Eastern Europe 
• Sour cherry soup- sour cherry, sour cream & sugar 
• Tarator-yogurt, cucumber, garlic, walnut, dill, vegetable oil, and 
water. Albania/Bulgaria 
• Vichysoisse- cold chicken stock, potato, onion, cream and leek. US
3) Oeuf (Egg) 
Oeufs are the dishes made from egg. 
Preparations include boiled, en cocotte, 
baked, poached, scrambled and omelettes. 
This course is not usually included in the 
dinner menu.
Egg dishes 
• Omelette fines herbes- Savoury herb 
omelette 
• Omelette Espagnole- flat omelette with 
onions, peppers and tomato 
• Omelette parmentier- Omelette with diced 
potatoes & chopped parsley 
• Eggs en cocotte a la crème
• Eggs en cocotte a la reine- eggs cooked over a 
base of creamed minced chicken, topped 
with fresh cream 
• Stuffed eggs Chimay- Hard boiled eggs filled 
with mixture of yolks and duxelle, coated 
with mornay sauce, sprinkled with grated 
cheese and glazed in hot oven 
• Eggs sur le plat Bercy-Baked eggs garnished 
with chipolata sausage and tomato sauce
• Poached eggs florentine- poached eggs on a 
bed of spinach, coated with cheese sauce and 
gratinated 
• Frittata- Italian dish made with eggs, 
vegetables, cheese, similar to a tortilla or 
spanish omelette 
• Scotch eggs- boiled eggs covered with 
savoury minced meat, crumbed, deep fried 
and served with tomato sauce
4) Farineux (pasta & rice) 
This is Italy's contribution to the courses of 
the menu. It includes different kinds of rice 
and pasta eg: spaghetti, lasagne and gnocchi. 
Pasta is made from durum wheat semolina or 
milled durum wheat dough. It can cooked 
and sauced in various ways. Risotto is a rice 
dish based on a short grained rice such as 
arborio, cooked with various ingredients.
• Spaghetti bolognaise-sauce with shallots, 
garlic, minced beef, tomatoes & demi-glace 
• Spaghetti napolitaine- sauce with garlic, 
tomato concassé, topped with grated 
parmesan. Variation arrabiata sauce- spicier 
version (with cayenne) of napolitaine 
• Canneloni milanaise-stuffed with napolitaine 
sauce to which add julienne of ham, tongue, 
mushrooms, and truffles
• Macaroni au gratin-mixed with mornay sauce, 
sprinkled with cheese and gratinated 
• Ravioli florentine-filled with spinach, shallots, 
garlic & egg yolk mixture, coated with mornay 
sauce, grated parmesan and glazed 
• Gnocchi romaine- pasta made with semolina, 
milk, garlic, egg yolk then tossed in butter, 
mornay sauce, sprinkled with parmesan and 
browned
• Gnocchi piedmontaise- gnocchi made from 
mashed potatoes, cooked chicken puree, flour, 
egg yolks, poached, tossed with butter and 
sprinkled with parmesan cheese 
• Penne carbonara- penne tossed in butter, 
garlic, bacon and cream, topped with 
parmesan 
• Risotto milanese- saffron risotto with 
mushrooms & tomato concassé
5) Poisson 
Poisson are the dishes made from fish. Fish, being soft-fibred, 
prepares the palate for the heavier meats that follow. 
Deep-fried or grilled fish dishes do not generally occupy a 
place on the “classical dinner menu,” but are freely offered 
on the shorter-coursed luncheon menu. This also applies to 
the coarser members of the fish family, and the dinner menu 
is usually comprised of the finer fish prepared and cooked in 
the more classical manners. Ideal fish for dinner menu 
compilation are: Sole, Salmon, Halibut, Escallops, etc. Rarely 
seenon a menu for the evening meal are: Cod, Bass, 
Haddock, Brill, Hake, and Plaice.
• Sole menuière- dredged in flour, shallow fried in 
butter, sprinkled with lemon juice. Belle 
meunière indicates addition of soft roes as 
garnish 
• Sole véronique-white wine sauce, garnish of 
skinned muscat grapes 
• Sole cubat-poached, dressed on a mushroom 
puree and coated with cheese sauce 
• Sole colbert-crumb fried and served with tartare 
sauce or colbert butter
• Sole bonne femme-in white wine veloute 
sauce with mushrooms 
• Lobster Thermidor- lobster, white sauce, 
mustard, egg yolks, brandy, stuffed into a 
lobster shell topped with cheese and grilled. 
• Lobster Newburg- lobster served with sauce 
based on fish stock, cream, eggs, brandy, 
wine, cayenne pepper and butter 
• Fried fillet of plaice, tartare sauce
• Poached salmon, hollandaise sauce 
• Grilled darne of salmon, béarnaise sauce 
• Grilled herring, mustard sauce 
• Pomfret Orly-batter fried and served with 
tomato sauce 
• Truite au bleu- fresh trout dipped in vinegar, 
simmered in stock, garnished with parisienne 
cut boiled potatoes, served with melted 
butter and hollandaise sauce
Pomfret/sole recipes 
• bretonne-baked, with white sauce 
• au beurre noisette/noir- with nutty stage/black 
butter 
• Duglère-white wine and tomato veloute sauce 
• Florentine-poached, dressed on spinach, coated 
with Mornay sauce and glazed 
• St Germain-dipped in butter, bread crumbed, 
grilled, served with bearnaise sauced and 
noisette potatoes 
• Grillé- grilled
• Mornay-poached, coated with cheese sauce and 
glazed 
• Otero- paupiette of sole mornay served in half 
baked potato shell 
• Dieppoise-cooked with fish veloute, white wine, 
mussels, shrimp tails, shallots, mushrooms, 
cream, butter 
• Bercy-poached in white wine and fumet with 
chopped shallots and parley, glazed with butter 
• Waleska- Baked in oven with Mornay sauce 
topped with lobster tail, truffle
6) Entreé 
This is the first of the meat courses on a menu. It is always a complete dish 
in itself. It is despatched from the kitchen garnished 
and sauced in the manner in which it is intended to be served. The 
“entrée” is always cooked and garnished in an artistic manner and 
usually served with a rich sauce. The “entrée” can be devised of 
almost anything light. This course consists of all the small cuts of 
butcher’s meats, usually sautéed.
Rump, Entrecote and Tournedo Beefsteaks, Filet Mignons 
· Lamb Chops, Lamb cutlets, Lamb noisettes 
· Pork Chops, Pork cutlets 
· Escallops, Granadins, Medallions, and Cotes of Veal 
· Hot Souffles or Mousses (with meat) 
· Bouchées (containing meat) 
· Pilaf and Risottos (containing meat) 
· Small cuts or portions of poultry, individually cooked, are 
also served as entrées. 
In first-class hotels and restaurants, all entrées are cooked, 
garnished and presented for service by the sauce cook (saucier).
The following offal items, with their appropriate garnishes 
and sauces, can also be successfully served as entrées. 
· Brains (Cervelles)eg Brain cutlets 
· Liver (Foie) eg Grilled liver 
· Oxtail (Queue de Boeuf) 
· Kidneys (Rognons) eg Steak & kidney pie, Sautéed 
kidneys, Devilled kidneys 
· Calves Head (Tête de Veau) 
• Trips (Tripes) eg Haggis (Scottish national dish of stuffed 
sheep stomach) 
• Sweetbreads(thymus gland of veal/lamb)
Entrées 
• Entrecôte bordelaise- Sirloin steak with a red wine sauce 
• Steak Diane- Steak sautéed with onion, mushrooms & cream 
• Steak au poivre- sauted steak served wit a pan sauce of cracked peppercorns, 
shallots, cognac, butter and cream 
• Steak & kidney pie 
• Carpetbag steak- steak stuffed with oysters 
• Beef Wellington- traditional English preparation of beef tenderloin coated with 
liver pâté and duxelles, which is then wrapped in puff pastry and baked, served 
with Madeira sauce 
• Porterhouse steak- part sirloin, part fillet steak grilled 
• Chicken Tetrazzini-mushrooms, and almonds in a butter/cream and parmesan 
sauce flavored with wine, over spaghetti 
• Rognons sauté turbigo- sautéed kidneys in a rich brown sauce garnished with 
chipolata sausages 
• Côtelettes d’agneau réforme- Lamb cutlets in a rich brown sauce, garnished with 
chopped ham, tongue, mushrooms 
• Grilled lamb/pork chops
Sautéed chicken dishes 
• Chicken chasseur (Poulet sauté chasseur) - sautéed, 
with demi-glace, mushrooms, tomatoes, shallots 
• Chicken cacciatore (hunter’s style)-Italian recipe, 
sautéed chicken with garlic, onion, tomato, 
mushroom, olives and wine 
• Chicken Maryland- Crumb fried chicken served with 
raifort (horseradish) sauce, corn pancakes, croquette 
potatoes, grilled bananas, tomatoes, bacon rashers 
• Chicken Marengo- served with sauce of white wine, 
garlic, parsley, tomato concasse, demi-glaze, garnished 
with mushrooms, crayfish, olives, fried eggs & toast
Sautéed chicken dishes 
• Chicken Kiev- boneless chicken breast pounded and 
rolled around cold garlic butter with herbs, then 
breaded and fried. 
• Chicken a la King- diced chicken in a cream sauce, with 
sherry, mushrooms, and pimentos, served over rice, 
pasta, or buttered toast. 
• Chicken cutlets Pojarski- Patties made of ground 
chicken, mushrooms, bread & cream breaded and fried 
in butter 
• Chicken stroganoff- diced chicken (or beef) in a creamy 
mushroom sauce served over flat noodles or buttered 
rice
Meat stews 
• Blanquette –stew of veal or chicken in white stock, onions, mushrooms, 
carrot & thickened with liaison of egg yolk & cream 
• Boeuf a la mode- beef stewed in red wine, vegetables & herbs, served hot 
or cold in its own jelly 
• Boeuf bourguignonnne- beef stewed in red wine with onions & 
mushrooms 
• Carbonnade of beef- steak stewed with beer, onions & brown stock 
• Cassoulet- meats braised with haricot beans 
• Coq au vin- chicken in red wine sauce with onions & mushrooms 
• Daube- a method of cooking meat by braising slowly in wine & meat stock 
with vegetables & herbs 
• Fricassé- white stew of veal or chicken 
• Goulash- Hungarian beef stew with diced onions , tomato purée, potatoes, 
white stock & paprika, served with caraway dumplings 
• Irish stew- stew of lamb, celery, onions, cabbage, leek, potatoes
Meat stews 
• Lamb curry (Kari d’agneau)- lamb curried with onions and 
brown stock 
• Lancashire hotpot- lamb, kidney, sliced potatoes, onions & 
seasoning 
• Navarin-brown stew of lamb/mutton with onions, carrots, 
turnips & potatoes 
• Pot au feu- soup/stew of meat & root vegetables, leeks, 
cabbage, potatoes, etc 
• Ragoût- rich, well seasoned meat stew 
• Salmis- rich game stew in which the meat is first partially 
roasted, divided and then simmered in wine sauce, eg 
salmis de bécasse- woodcock stew
Savoury pies 
• Steak/ Steak and kidney pie/Steak & oyster pie 
• Quiche lorraine 
• Chicken and mushroom pie 
• Beef Wellington 
• Chicken/Lamb vol au vent 
• Stargazy pie (sardines) 
• Lamb/Beef empanada 
• Shepherd’s pie 
• Spanakopita 
• Cornish pasty
Cold buffet 
• Cold salmon (Saumon poché froid) 
• Cold turbot in aspic (Turbot farci en aspic) 
• Beef galantine (Galantine de boeuf) 
• Cold ox-tongue (Langue de boeuf froide) 
• Cold supreme of chicken (Supreme de volaille en chaud-froid) 
• Chicken galantine/ballotine (Galantine / Ballotine de volaille) 
• Chicken mayonnaise(Mayonnaise de volaille) 
• Ham soufflé (Soufflé de jambon espagnole) 
• Salmon/Chicken/Ham/Seafood terrine (Terrine de 
saumon/volaille/jambon/ fruits de mer 
• Home style liver pâté - Pâté de foie maison
Accompaniments to entrées 
• Meat curry (Kari de viande)- Popadums, 
Bombay ducks, mango chutney, curry tray-apples, 
sultanas, sliced bananas, desiccated 
coconut 
• Boiled mutton-Caper sauce 
• Salt beef (silverside)- turned root vegetables, 
dumplings, natural cooking liquor 
• Boiled fresh mutton- turned root vegetables, 
natural cooking liquor, rock salt, gherkins
• Calf’s head- boiled bacon, parsley sauce, brain 
sauce, sauce vinaigrette 
• Mixed grill and grilled steaks- French and 
English mustard, maître d’hôtel butter, straw 
potatoes, watercress 
• Irish stew- Worcester sauce, pickled red 
cabbage
7) Relevé 
• 
This is the main meat course on the menu, and 
is commonly 
known as the “piece de resistance.” It may 
consist of joint of any of the following: 
Lamb (Agneau) Chicken (Poulet) 
Beef (Boeuf) Duckling (Caneton) 
Veal (Veau) Fowl (Poulard) 
Ham (Jambon) Pork (Porc)
• These joints would be cooked by the sauce 
cook in a first class 
hotel or restaurant, by any method except 
roasting. They are 
usually cooked on casserole, braise or poêle. 
Generally cooked in a sauce and served with 
it.
• Joints suitable for roasting include: 
• (Beef) 
• Fillet (filet de boeuf) 
• Fore ribs (premier côte) 
• Middle ribs (Côte de boeuf) 
• Sirloin (aloyeau) 
• Topside (tranche tendre) 
• Rump(culotte de boeuf) 
• Wing end (Côte de boeuf)
• (Pork) 
• Leg (cuisse de porc) 
• Loin (longe de porc) 
• Shoulder (épaule de porc) 
• (Lamb & Mutton) 
• Best end (carré) 
• Leg (gigot) 
• Saddle (selle) 
• Shoulder (épaule) 
• Each dish is accompanied with its own particular sauce 
and salad.
• Accompaniments to roasted meats: 
• Beef: french and english mustard, yorkshire 
pudding, horse-radish sauce 
• Lamb- Mint sauce or mint jelly 
• Mutton saddle or leg- red currant jelly 
• Mutton shoulder- onion sauce 
• Pork- sage and onion stuffing, apple sauce
Vegetarian entrées 
(often contain legumes, lentils, beans, nuts & edible 
seeds, cheese, tofu, mushrooms, meat analogues 
to compensate for meat) 
Eggplant Parmesan 
Eggplant, zucchini, parmesan lasagna 
Barley, beans and feta cheese stuffed artichokes 
Walnut broccoli pesto penne 
Fennel, roasted red pepper and goat cheese flan 
Lentil almond loaf 
Butternut squash macaroni and cheese
Vegetarian entrées 
Roasted nut loaf/ Nut vegetable roast 
Ratatouille with rice/pasta 
Turkish Imam bayildi- braised stuffed eggplant 
Spanakopita-Greek spinach feta in phyllo pastry 
Chili sin carne-made with beans instead of meat 
Chile relleno- chile pepper stuffed with cheese, deep-fried 
Stuffed- onions, tomatoes, peppers, zucchini, eggplant, 
courgette, cabbage, vine leaves 
Flans, quiches, vol au vents, pies, pastas, rice with 
vegetarian ingredients
Vegetable accompaniments to meats 
• Eggplant- egyptienne, fried, Provencal 
• Broccoli- buttered, amandine 
• Brussels sprouts-anglaise, buttered 
• Carrots- buttered, glazed, creamed 
• Cauliflower-creamed, au gratin, Milanese, 
polonaise 
• Courge (Vegetable marrow)- stuffed, Provencal 
• Cucumbers- stuffed, creamed
• French beans- buttered 
• Peas- buttered, flamande, française 
• Pimentos (bell peppers)- stuffed, sautéed 
• Spinach- creamed, au gratin, 
• Braised- celery, cabbage, endive, onions, leeks 
• Grilled-mushrooms, tomato, 
• Sauté- Brussels sprouts, onions, mushrooms, 
spinach
Potatoes to accompany meats 
• Parsley, matchstick, Anna, straw, boulangère, 
brioche, château, chips, croquettes, Dauphine, 
fondantes, gaufrette, gratin savoyarde, lorette, 
maître d’hôtel, marquise, mint, noisette, 
parisienne, robert, St Florentine, soufflé
• Allumettes- match size, deep fried 
• Anna- sliced, pressed, baked in mould 
• Au four- Baked in their skins 
• Boulangère- sliced, with sliced onions, moistened with stock & baked 
• Château- turned to olive size, blanched & roast in butter 
• A la crème- diced potatoes cooked in milk & butter 
• Dauphine- choux paste & duchesse potato mixture shaped between 
spoons & deep fried 
• Delmonico- raw diced potatoes cooked in milk, browned with 
breadcrumbs 
• Duchesse- pureed with egg yolk & piped out 
• En purée- mashed 
• Flamande- shaped as chateau, cooked with small onions & carrots in white 
stock
• Hongroise- paprika flavoured roundels with sweated, chopped 
onion cooked on consommé, finished with chopped parsley 
• Lyonnaise- Sautéed with onions 
• Macaire- puree from jacket potatoes, shaped like fish cakes and 
shallow-fried 
• Marquise- duchesse potatoes flavored with tomatoes 
• Paille- straw potatoes, deep-fried 
• Parmentier- cubed, blanched & roasted 
• Persillées-Steamed or boiled, tossed in butter with chopped parsley 
• Pont-neuf- thick-cut, deep fried 
• Soufflées- rectangular slices deep fried twice to balloon them up 
• Vapeur- turned to château size & steamed
8) Sorbet 
This course is a rest between courses. It 
counteracts the previous dishes, and 
rejuvenates the appetite for those that are to 
follow. Normally served between the releve and 
the rôti. It is a frozen dessert made primarily of 
fruit juice, sugar, and water, and also containing 
milk, egg white, or gelatin. Russian or Egyptian 
cigarettes are often passed around during this 
course.
Rôti (Roast poultry 
• Roast accompaniments besides roast gravy: 
• bread sauce, parsley and thyme stuffing, 
bacon rolls, game chips, watercress 
• Duck- sage & onion stuffing, apple sauce, 
watercress 
• Goose- sage & onion stuffing, apple sauce 
• Turkey- cranberry sauce, bread sauce, 
chestnut stuffing, chipolatas, game chips, 
watercress
Roast game 
Game birds- Woodcock, pheasants, grouse, partridge, wood 
pigeon, black grouse, thrush, black bird, ortolan bunting, 
plover, wild turkey etc. 
Game animals-roebuck, reindeer, wild boar 
• Wild duck- orange salad, acidulated cream dressing 
• Hare- heart shaped croûtes, forcemeat balls, red currant 
jelly 
• Venison- Cumberland sauce, red currant jelly 
• Partridge/grouse/pheasant-fried breadcrumbs, hot liver 
paste spread on a croûte, bread sauce, game chips, 
watercress 
(Cumberland sauce combines redcurrant jelly, port wine, 
orange juice & lemon juice)
10) Legume 
These are vegetable dishes that can be served 
separately as an individual course or may be 
included along - with the entrée, relevé or roast 
courses. Some examples are 
• Cauliflower mornay/polonaise 
• Asparagus with beurre fondu/hollandaise 
• Steamed corn on the cob with beurre fondu 
• Baked jacket potato 
• Eggplant parmesan
Classic salads 
• à la française- lettuce hearts, beetroot, tomatoes, hard 
boiled eggs, tarragon vinaigrette 
• Allemande- diced apples, potatoes, gherkins, smoked 
herrings, onion, chopped parsley, beetroot, vinaigrette 
• Archiduc- julienne of beetroot, endive, truffle, potato, 
vinaigrette 
• Augustin- Cos lettuce heart, french beans, quartered 
tomatoes, hard-boiled eggs, green peas, mayonnaise 
• Carmen- pimentoes, diced chicken, peas, rice, mustard 
& tarragon vinaigrette
• Chicago- tomatoes, asparagus tips, French beans, 
sliced foie gras, carrot julienne, mushrooms, 
mayonaisse 
• Cressonière- Sliced potatoes, hard-boiled egg, 
watercress, chopped parsley, mayonnaise 
• Dalila-Bananas, apples, celery julienne, 
mayonnaise 
• Demi-deuil- lettuce hearts, strips of truffle & 
potato, vinaigrette 
• Elenora- cos lettuce heart, artichoke bottom, 
asparagus points, mayonnaise
• Eve- scooped apple filled with dices of apple, 
pineapple, banana, acidulated cream dressing 
• Fanchette- chicken & truffle julienne, mushrooms, 
chicory, vinaigrette 
• Florida- lettuce hearts, orange quarters, vinaigrette 
• Gauloise- cos lettuce hearts with strips of nuts, 
mayonnaise 
• Indienne- rice, asparagus, pimento julienne, diced 
apples, curried cream dressing 
• Japonaise- diced fresh fruit, fresh lettuce in half 
orange, acidulated cream
• Jockey-Club- asparagus tips, truffle julienne, 
lettuce hearts, mayonnaise thinned with 
vinaigrette 
• Légumes- diced potato, chopped french beans, 
green peas, cauliflower, vinaigrette 
• Lorette- lamb’s lettuce, beetroot strips, celery 
root, vinaigrette 
• Louisette- cos lettuce heart, quartered tomato, 
skinned pipped grapes, vinaigrette 
• Mimosa- lettuce hearts, orange fillets, grapes, 
bananas, acidulated cream
• Niçoise- french beans, tomatoes potatoes, 
anchovies, olives, capers, lettuce, vinaigrette 
• Rachel- celery, potato, truffle, artichoke bottoms 
in srtips, asparagus points, mayonnaise 
• Salade à la russe/Salade Olivier/Macedoine 
mayonnaise- diced potato, carrots, turnips, 
french beans & peas in mayonnaise 
• Mesclun- traditionally chervil, arugula, leafy 
lettuces and endive in equal proportions 
• Coleslaw- shredded raw cabbage, carrot 
(optional), vinaigrette
International salads 
• Waldorf(US)- diced celeriac or celery, apples, 
walnuts, mayonnaise 
• Caesar(US)-Romaine lettuce, garlic croutons, 
egg, parmesan cheese, olive oil, lemon juice 
• Caprese(Italy)-Slices of tomato & buffalo 
mozzarella, basil, olive oil
• Panzanella(Italy) sliced bread and fresh 
tomatoes flavored with basil, olive oil, and 
vinegar 
• Greek salad (Horiatiki)- wedges of tomatoes, 
cucumber, green bell peppers, red onion, 
sliced or cubed feta cheese, and kalamata 
olives, olive oil.
11) Entremet de sucre 
Eggless sweets 
Apple/Pear/Cherry pie- shortcrust tart in which the principal filling ingredient is fruit. It is sometimes 
served with whipped cream or ice cream on top 
Apple/Pear crumble-stewed fruit topped with a crumbly mixture of butter, flour, and sugar 
Brown Betty- made with bread crumbs (or bread pieces, or graham cracker crumbs), and fruit, usually 
diced apples, in alternating layers & baked 
Cobbler- fruit filling poured into a large baking dish and covered with a batter, biscuit, or pie crust 
before being baked. Unlike a pie, cobbler does not contains a bottom crust. 
Gooseberry fool- English dessert generally made by mixing puréed fruit, whipped cream, sugar 
Summer/rice/tapioca pudding 
Blancmange- sweet made with milk or cream, sugar & cornstarch 
Peach Melba- peach halves on vanilla ice cream , coated with raspberry sauce. Created by Auguste 
Escoffier in 1892, named after Dame Nellie Melba, famous Australian opera singer (variation 
Peach Alexandra-substitute sauce with strawberry purée) 
Pear Belle Hélène- ice cream with poached pear and hot chocolate sauce & crystallised violets. It was 
created around 1864 by Auguste Escoffier and named after the operetta La belle Hélène by Jacques 
Offenbach 
Pears poached in red wine 
Rødgrød- Denmark/Germany - red summer berries cooked with sugar, potato starch, moulded, cooled 
and served with cream
Flambé sweets 
Fruit flambé- banana, pear, peach, pineapple 
Cherries Jubilee- cherries and liqueur (typically Kirschwasser), which is 
subsequently flambéed, and commonly served as a sauce over vanilla ice 
cream. 
Strawberries Romanoff- strawberries steeped in orange juice, sometimes 
flamed with brandy or liqueur and served with cream or ice cream 
Bananas Foster- flamed bananas with vanilla ice cream, with the sauce made 
from butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, dark rum, and banana liqueur. 
Baked Alaska- Omelette surprise/norvégienne- sponge cake covered with ice 
cream, meringue & often flamed with alcohol before serving 
Crêpes suzette- thin pancakes in orange butter sauce, flamed with brandy 
and orange liqueur like Grand Marnier
Sweets with egg 
Vanilla/Lemon/Pineapple/Chocolate soufflé- made lighter 
with stiffly beaten egg whites, dessert soufflés may be 
baked, chilled or frozen 
Pineapple upside-down cake 
Fruit and rice condé- rice, egg yolk, milk and cream pudding 
with fruit such as apricots or pears 
Charlotte- Bread, sponge cake or biscuits/cookies are used to 
line a mold, which is then filled with a fruit puree or 
custard. 
Cheesecake- dessert consisting of a topping made of soft, 
fresh cheese usually on a crust or base made from hard 
biscuits pastry or sponge cake and flavored or topped with 
fruit, nuts, fruit sauce. It may also be baked.
British sweets 
• Queen of Puddings- traditional British dessert, consisting of a baked, breadcrumb-thickened 
mixture, spread with jam and topped with meringue 
• Bakewell pudding- English dessert commonly consisting of a flaky pastry base with a layer of sieved 
jam, topped with an egg and almond paste filling 
• Treacle sponge pudding- English dessert consisting of a steamed sponge cake with golden syrup 
cooked on top of it, sometimes also poured over it and often served with hot custard 
• Fruit trifle- English dessert made from thick custard, fruit, sponge cake, fruit juice or jelly, and 
whipped cream 
• Queen of Puddings- traditional British dessert, consisting of a baked, breadcrumb-thickened 
mixture, spread with jam and topped with meringue 
• Bakewell pudding- English dessert commonly consisting of a flaky pastry base with a layer of sieved 
jam, topped with an egg and almond paste filling 
• Treacle sponge pudding- English dessert consisting of a steamed sponge cake with golden syrup 
cooked on top of it, sometimes also poured over it and often served with hot custard 
• Bread and butter pudding- baked pudding of layers of sliced buttered bread in an oven dish into 
which an egg and milk/cream mixture is poured. 
• Fruit trifle- English dessert made from thick custard, fruit, sponge cake, fruit juice or jelly, and 
whipped cream
French sweets 
• Gâteau Mont blanc- chestnut puree on top of meringues, finished with whipped cream 
• Gâteau St Honoré- named after the patron saint of French bakers and pastry chefs, it is a circle of 
puff pastry at its base with a ring of choux pasrty piped on the outer edge. After the base is baked 
small cream puffs are dipped in caramelized sugar and attached side by side on top of the circle of 
the pâte à choux. This base is traditionally filled with crème chiboust and finished with whipped 
cream using a special St. Honoré piping tip. 
• Gâteau Alcazar- almond & apricot cake 
• Chocolate éclair- oblong choux pastry filled with cream and glazed with chocolate 
• Tarte Tatin- upside down apple tart, created accidentally by French sisters Stephanie & Caroline 
Tatin in the 1880s. 
• Baba au rhum- cake leavened with yeast and soaked in a rum based syrup 
• Mousse au chocolat- chocolate mousse 
• Omelette a la confiture- Jam omelette 
• Omelette au rhum- omelette dredged with sugar & flamed with rum 
• Gâteau Mille feuille- literally “Thousand layer cake” 3 puff pastry layers sandwiched with pastry 
cream, whipped cream or jam, dusted with sugar on top 
• Paris-Brest is a French dessert, made of choux pastry and a praline flavoured cream 
• Clafoutis- baked French dessert of black cherries and batter, dusted with powdered sugar
French sweets 
Crêpes Normande- filled with apple purée 
Oeufs à la neige- aka île flottante (floating island) meringue prepared from whipped egg whites, sugar 
and vanilla extract then quickly poached, floating on crème anglaise (a vanilla custard). 
Charlotte russe- Invented by the French chef Marie-Antoine Carême (1784–1833), who named it in 
honor of his former employer George IV's only child, Princess Charlotte , and his current, Russian 
employer Czar Alexander I (russe being the French word for "Russian"). It is a cold dessert of 
Bavarian cream set in a mold lined with sponge fingers 
Crème caramel (aka flan in Spanish)- custard dessert with a layer of soft caramel on top, cooked in a 
bain marie 
Crème brûlée- also known as burnt cream, crema catalana, or Trinity cream is a dessert consisting of a 
rich custard base topped with a contrasting layer of sugar burnt under a salamander or using a 
blowtorch 
Croquembouche (piece montee) traditional dessert in French cuisine, its name comes from the French 
words croque en bouche, meaning 'crunch in the mouth'. It's a form of choux pastry that is 
generally served as a high-piled cone of chocolate, cream-filled profiteroles all bound together with 
threads of caramel. It is also decorated with sugared almonds, chocolate, flowers, or ribbons. 
Sometimes it may also be covered in macaroons or ganache. It is traditionally served during 
wedding reception.
Italian sweets 
• Cannoli- (Italy)tube-shaped shells of fried pastry 
dough, filled with a sweet, creamy filling usually 
containing ricotta. 
• Zabaione- warm Italian dessert made with egg 
yolks, sugar & Marsala wine 
• Tiramisu- lit. "pick me up" or "lift me up") is an 
Italian dessert. It is made of sponge cake(Italian: 
Savoiardi) dipped in coffee, layered with a 
whipped mixture of egg yolks and mascarpone 
cheese, and flavored with Marsala wine and 
cocoa
Austrian/German sweets 
• Sachertorte- chocolate Savoy cake filled or spread with apricot jam then 
covered with chocolate icing, traditionally served with whipped cream and 
a cup of coffee. Invented by Austrian Franz Sacher in 1832 for Prince 
Wenzel von Metternich in Vienna, Austria. 
• Linzertorte- Austrian short, crumbly pastry made of flour, unsalted butter, 
egg yolks, lemon zest, cinnamon and lemon juice, and ground almonds or 
hazelnuts or walnuts or almonds, covered with a filling of redcurrant jam 
• Apfelstrudel/Apple strudel - Of Austro-Hungarian origin, it consists of an 
oblong strudel pastry jacket with a filling of cooking apples, sugar, 
cinnamon, raisins, and bread crumbs. It is traditionally served in slices, 
sprinkled with powdered sugar 
• Black Forest cake- English names for the German Schwarzwälder 
Kirschtorte, consists of several layers of chocolate cake soaked with kirsch, 
with whipped cream and cherries between each layer. Then the cake is 
decorated with additional whipped cream, maraschino cherries, and 
chocolate shavings
• Key Lime Pie- American dessert made of Florida Key lime juice, egg 
yolks, and sweetened condensed milk in a pie crust 
• Pumpkin pie- traditional pie filled with pumpkin based custard, 
eaten during the fall and early winter, especially for Thanksgiving 
and Christmas in the United States and Canada. 
• Pavlova- made by beating egg whites to a very stiff consistency 
before folding in caster sugar, white vinegar, cornflour, and 
sometimes vanilla essence, and slow-baking the mixture, similarly 
to meringue, topped with whipped cream and fresh fruit. Popular in 
Australia & New Zealand, named after Russian ballet dancer Anna 
Pavlova. 
• Baklava- Turkish rich, sweet pastry made of layers of filo pastry 
filled with chopped nuts such as pistachios or walnuts and 
sweetened with flavoured syrup or honey.
12) Savoureux (savouries) 
On lunch and dinner menu savoury is served 
as an alternative to sweet, while in a banquet 
it may be a course on its own coming between 
the sweet and the dessert. In an à la carte 
menu the savouries are listed in a section on 
their own.
Savouries may be served on toast, in tartlettes, 
barquettes, in bouchées,flans, omelettes or 
soufflé. Fromage (Cheese) is an alternative to 
the savoury course, and may be served before or 
after the sweet course, in a side plate with a 
side knife & sweet fork. It is usually served with 
cruet, butter, castor sugar (for cream cheeses) 
crackers and occasionally watercress, spring 
onions, radishes, celery. Gouda, Camembert and 
Cheddar are some examples of cheese.
Savouries 
• Cover, Accompaniments & Service 
• Cold/warm fish plate, side knife, sweet fork 
• Cruet, cayenne pepper, peppermill, worcester 
sauce(for meat savouries) 
• Serve cold items first, then warm. 
• Bouchées:Small pastry cases, a larger version is 
called vol-au-vent 
• Eg Bouchée Indienne- curried shrimps, chutney
Examples of savouries 
• Savouries on toast- anchovies, sardines, roe, 
haddock, marrow, mushrooms 
• Welsh rarebit-Seasoned bechamel, beer, cheddar 
cheese & egg yolk sauce poured over toast 
fingers and glazed. When garnished with poached 
egg it is a Buck rarebit 
• Savoury pie/flan- Quiche lorraine 
• Savoury soufflé-mushroom, spinach, sardine, 
salmon, anchovy, haddock, avocado, cauliflower, 
cheese 
• Omelettes- parsley, anchovy, cheese, fines herbes
Examples of canapés 
• Baron- sliced fried mushrooms, grilled bacon, poached bone 
marrow 
• Ritchie- creamed haddock, slices of hard boiled egg 
• Quo Vadis- grilled roes garnished with mushroom heads 
• Nina- half small grilled tomato, mushroom head, pickled walnut 
• Charlemagne- shrimps in curry sauce 
• Ivanhoe- creamed haddock on toast garnished with pickled walnut 
• Angels on horseback- poached oysters wrapped in streaky bacon, 
grilled on skewer 
• Devils on horseback- stoned, cooked prune, stuffed with chutney, 
sprinkled with cayenne, wrapped in streaky bacon, grilled on 
skewer, aka Toast Menelik
Examples of croûtes 
• Derby-spread with ham puree and garnished with 
pickled walnut 
• Windsor- spread with ham puree and garnish 
with small grilled mushroom 
• Diane- fried chicken livers wrapped in streaky 
bacon, grilled on skewer 
• Scotch Woodcock- scrambled egg garnished with 
trellis of anchovy and studded with capers
Tartlets (round) & Barquettes (oval) of 
short crust pastry: 
• Charles V- soft roe mixed with butter, covered 
with cheese soufflé mixture & baked 
• Favorite: filled with cheese soufflé mixture & 
slices of truffle, garnished with slices of 
crayfish tails or prawns 
• Haddock- diced haddock in curry sauce, 
sprinkled with breadcrumbs & gratinated
13) Dessert 
Dessert is a course that typically comes at the 
end of a meal. The French word desservir means 
"to clear the table." This is the fruit 
course usually presented in a basket and placed 
on the table, as part of the table decor, and 
served at the end of the meal. All forms of fresh 
fruit and nuts may be served in this course: 
apples, pears, bananas, oranges, mandarins, 
tangerines, grapes, pineapples, figs, dates, 
almonds, walnuts, pistachios, brazil nuts, 
pecans, macadamia nuts
• Cover: 
• Dessert plate, fruit knife, fruit fork, finger 
bowl, napkin, spare side plate for peels & 
shells, nutcracker for whole nuts. A spare 
finger bowl may be offered for rinsing grapes 
• Accompaniments- salt for nuts, castor sugar 
dredger for fruit
Boisson (Beverage) 
• Includes non-alcoholic beverages. For formal 
meals coffee is served in the end. This is drunk 
from a demi-tasse. Confectionery known 
variously as petit four, friandise or mignardise; 
including cookies, meringues, macaroons, 
small iced cakes, dried sugared fruit & nuts, 
chocolates may be offered. Alcoholic 
beverages like fine old brandies and liqueurs 
may also be presented along with cigars & 
cigarettes.

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French classical menu

  • 2. Classical Menu Sequence 17 Courses 1. Hors d’oeuvre (appetizer) 2. Potage (soup) 3. Oeufs (eggs) 4. Farineux (rice & pasta) 5. Poisson (fish) 6. Entrée (entry of 1st meat course) 7. Sorbet (flavoured water ice) 8. Relevé (butcher’s joints-meats carved & served) 9. Rôti (roast poultry or game)
  • 3. 10. Légumes (vegetables) 11. Salades (salad)* 12. Buffet Froid (cold buffet)* 13. Entremet de sûcre (sweets) 14. Savoureux (savoury) 15. Fromage (cheese)* 16. Dessert (fresh fruits & nuts) 17. Boisson (beverages like tea, coffee)*
  • 4. • Hors-d’oeuvre : Traditionally this course consisted of a variety of simple salads but now includes items such as pâtés, mousses, fruit, cold meats and smoked fish. • Potages (Soup) : Includes all soups, both hot and cold. • Oeuf (Egg): There are a great number of egg dishes beyond the usual omelettes, but these have not retained their popularity on modern menus. • Farineux (Pasta, rice): Includes all pasta and rice dishes. • Poisson (Fish) : This course consists of fish dishes, both hot and cold. Fish dishes such as smoked salmon or seafood cocktails are mainly considered hors-d’oeuvre dishes and therefore would be served earlier in a meal.
  • 5. • Entrée: Entrées are generally small, well garnished dishes which come from the kitchen ready for service. They are usually accompanied by a rich sauce or gravy. Potatoes and vegetables are not usually served with this course if it is to be followed by a main course. • Sorbet : Traditionally sorbets were served to give a pause within a meal, allowing the palate to be refreshed. They are lightly frozen water ices, often based on unsweetened fruit juice, and may be served with a spirit, liqueur or even Champagne. • Relevé: This refers to main roasts or other larger joints of meat, which would be served together with potatoes and vegetables.
  • 6. • Rôti (Roast): This term usually refers to roasted game or poultry dishes. • Légume (Vegetables) : Apart from vegetables served with the roast courses, certain vegetables (e.g. asparagus and artichokes) may be served as a separate course. • Salade (Salad) :The salad course refers to a small plate of salad that is taken after a main course (or courses) and is quite often a green salad and dressings.
  • 7. • Buffet froid(Cold buffet) : This course includes a variety of cold meats and fish, cheese and egg items together with a range of salads and dressings. • Fromage (Cheese):This course includes a range of cheeses and various accompaniments, including biscuits, bread, celery, grapes and apples. This course can also refer to cheese based dishes such as soufflés. • Entremet de sucre (Sweet) Hot and cold sweets
  • 8. • Savoureux (Savoury): Sometimes simple savouries, such as Welsh Rarebit or other items on toast, or in pastry, or savoury soufflés, may be served at this stage. • Dessert : Fresh fruit, nuts and sometimes candied fruits. • Beverages : Traditionally this referred to coffee but nowadays includes a much wider range of beverages being generally available, including tea, tisanes and chocolate.
  • 9. 1) Hors D'oeuvre (Appetizer) • Being highly seasoned and piquant in nature, this course is used to stimulate the appetite for the meal. The term “hors d’oeuvre variés froides” applies to the service of assorted cold salads and morsels of anchovy, sardines, olives, prawns, pickled vegetables etc from a rotating trolley or tray. There are also many items served hot, such as bouchées, croquettes, fritters, etc., and these are known as hors d’oeuvres chauds (warm appetisers). • The course also covers whatever items are served before the soup (hors d’oeuvre substitutes). • Cover: Cold half plate, fish knife, fish fork • Accompaniments: Oil and vinegar cruet
  • 10. Vegetarian assorted hors d’oeuvres Artichoke à la grècque— cooked in water, lemon juice and oil with fennel, bay leaf, thyme and coriander and serve with some of the cooking liquid. Beetroot Normande—Cut into batons, mix with French dressing and garnish with batons of apple Pickled red cabbage/olives/mushrooms/beetroot Cole slaw—shredded cabbage, vinaigrette/mayo Carrots Jardinière—marinated cooked batons of carrots , French dressing.
  • 11. Vegetarian assorted hors d’oeuvres Cauliflower Portugaise—cauliflower florets, chopped onions and diced tomatoes in oil with thyme and bay leaf Celery a la Russe-- celery batons with grated horseradish cream and mustard Marinated mushrooms—cooked in a mixture of vinegar, oil, garlic, thyme, bay leaf, fennel and coriander and serve with some of the liquid Pimento salad—green yellow and white pimentos and mix with batons of tomato flesh and vinaigrette dressing Russian salad-diced vegetable, mayonniase Tomato salad
  • 12. Non-vegetarian assorted horsd’oeuvres • 1. Bismark Herring- They are soused boned herring usually purchased ready for use. 2. Roll Mops- Roll fillets into paupiettes, pack in jars, cover with vinegar and white wine, flavour with onion rings, bayleaf and keep refrigerated for 3 to 4 days before serving. 3. Herring à la Russe- Cut smoked fillets of herrings into thin slices, arrange on sliced cooked potatoes and sprinkle with chopped chervil, shallots, fennel, oil and vinegar. 4. Kilkis- These are Norwegian anchovies that are served as purchased. 5. Sardines a la crème- Sardines coat with mustard flavored acidulated cream. Egg based- 1. Egg Aurore- Fill halves of hard boiled eggs with yolk made into a puree with béchamel and coat with cocktail sauce. 2. Egg mayonnaise- Arrange sliced, halved or quartered egg on shredded lettuce and mask with mayonnaise, garnish to choice. • Examples of assorted cold hors d’oeuvre: • Anchovies, Potato & sausage salad, fish mayonnaise, cocktail sausages.
  • 13. Non-vegetarian classical horsd’oeuvres Smoked salmon (Saumon fumé), - cayenne pepper, peppermill, lemon segments, brown bread & butter Smoked trout (Truite fumé) Smoked eel (Anguille fumé) Accompaniments same as above, also horseradish sauce Snails (Escargots)- brown bread & butter Oysters (Huîtres)- Half lemon, brown bread & butter, oyster cruet: cayenne pepper, peppermill, chilli vinegar, Tabasco Caviar (Caviare) Ham mousse (Mousse de jambon) Potted shrimps Fresh prawns (Crevettes roses) Gull’s/ plover’s eggs (Oeufs de mouette) Shrimp, Prawn or Lobster Cocktail (Cocktail de crevettes) Pâté of Goose Liver (Pâté de Foie Gras) Taramasalata
  • 14. Vegetarian classical hors d’oeuvres Chilled Melon (Melon Frappé)- ground ginger, castor sugar Grapefruit (Pamplemousse)- castor sugar Avocado (Avocado vinaigrette/aux crevettes)-brown bread & butter Globe artichoke (Artichaut au beurre fondu/hollandaise/ à la vinaigrette) Citrus Fruit Cocktail (Coupe Florida) Asparagus (Asperges au beurre fondu/hollandaise/à la vinaigrette) Corn on the cob ( Maïs naturel)- beurre fondu Tomato juice (Jus de tomate)- Worcester sauce Fruit juice (Jus de fruit)- castor sugar
  • 15. 2) Potage (soup) The French have various words for soup. 1) Consommé is a clear, thin clarified meat broth and is listed before other soups on the menu. 2) A bouillon is similar to consommé but unclarified. 3) Soupe refers to a thick, hearty mélange with chunks of food. 4)A potage is usually puréed and is often thick, well-seasoned meat or vegetable soup, usually containing barley or other cereal or a pulse (e.g. lentils). Today, the words soupe and potage are often used interchangeably.
  • 16. Thick soups can be crème, velouté, purée or bisque. 5)A crème soup is based on bechamel or finished with cream, a velouté is based on roux, stock, egg yolk and cream. 6)A purée is made from processed starchy vegetables 7)A bisque is based on shellfish-shrimp, lobster, crayfish and rice. 8) Brown soups are mainly of British origin and are usually prepared from a base of roux diluted with stock and cooked with the addition of vegetables and meat. They are passed and are usually garnished.
  • 17. • Florentine-spinach • Dubarry-cauliflower • Doria-cucumber • Clamart-peas • Portugaise-tomatoes • Princesse-asparagus tips • Argenteuil-asparagus puree
  • 18. • Palestine-Jerusalem artichoke • Washington-corn • Gumbo-okra • Creçy-carrots • Parmentier-potatoes • Nesselrode-Chestnut puree • Bresani-pumpkin • Soubise-onion puree
  • 19. Classic soups • Consommé julienne- garnish of strips of vegetables • Consommé en gelée- cold jellied consommé • (Lobster, shrimp, prawn, crayfish) bisque • Cream of tomato, mushroom, broccoli, celery, chicken, asparagus. Crème de tomate is the only cream soup served with croûtons • Chicken or veal velouté • Potage St Germain- Green pea soup, garnish croûtons • Potage Germiny- Consommé thickened with egg yolks & cream, garnish cheese straws
  • 20. Popular regional soups • A chowder is an American thick soup containing fish or shellfish, especially clams, and vegetables, such as potatoes and onions, in a milk or tomato base. • Bortsch is a Russian or Polish duck or beef and beetroot soup, served hot or cold. Garnished with diced meat & turned vegetables. Served with sour cream, beetroot juice & bouchées filled with duck paste • A Gazpacho is a cold pureed tomato, garlic and breadcrumbs soup from Spain . • Avgolemono is a soup made in Greece and Cyprus with chicken, rice, egg and lemon.
  • 21. Popular regional soups • Cock-a –leekie is a leek and potato soup from Scotland is made with chicken stock, from Scotland. • A Goulash is a Hungarian soup made with beef, pork, paprika, peppers, tomato, potato and onion. • A Gumbo is a traditional Creole soup from the American South, thickened with okra pods and filé powder. • Minestrone is an Italian vegetable soup with pasta and cheese. Served with grated parmesan & grilled flutes • Mulligatawny is an Anglo-Indian soup with meat, vegetables and spices.
  • 22. Popular regional soups • A Vichyssoise is a French inspired American creamy potato and leek soup, served with chives. • Bouillabaisse is a hearty Mediterranean French fish stew, served with thin slices of French bread dipped in oil & grilled. • A Waterzooi Belgian fish or chicken and vegetables soup. • French Onion soup is a broth made with onions and beef, often topped with croutons and cheese. • Petite Marmite is a French beef, chicken & vegetable broth garnished with turned root vegetables and diced meat, served in an earthenware crock. Served with grated parmesan, grilled flutes, poached bone marrow
  • 23. Cold soups • Ajo blanco (white gazpacho)- Spanish cold soup made of bread, crushed almonds, garlic, water, olive oil, salt and sometimes vinegar, usually served with grapes or slices of melon. Spain • Borscht- duck consommé garnished with meat and turned vegetables. Russia/Ukraine • Chlodnik Botwina- beetroot greens, beetroot, and radishes in a sour cream and yoghurt base with hard-boiled eggs. Polish • Cucumber soup (Ogórkova)- Polish soup of pickled cucumbers & potato • Fruit soups (based on berries)- Cherry soup, Norwegian fruktsuppe, Kissel, Bärsoppa, Nyponsoppa (Swedish rosehip soup, Russian Kissel,
  • 24. Cold soups • Gazpacho- Tomatoes, cucumber, peppers. Spain • Okroshka- cucumbers and spring onions, boiled potatoes, eggs, and a cooked meat such as beef, veal, sausages, or ham with kvass, garnished with sour cream. Russia • Pistou- white beans, green beans, tomatoes, summer squash, potatoes, and spaghetti. Southern France • Salmorejo- tomatoes, bread, oil, garlic and vinegar. Garnished with ham & hard-boiled eggs. Spain • Sorrel soup- sorrel leaves, egg yolks , potatoes, carrots, parsley root, and rice. Russia, Eastern Europe • Sour cherry soup- sour cherry, sour cream & sugar • Tarator-yogurt, cucumber, garlic, walnut, dill, vegetable oil, and water. Albania/Bulgaria • Vichysoisse- cold chicken stock, potato, onion, cream and leek. US
  • 25. 3) Oeuf (Egg) Oeufs are the dishes made from egg. Preparations include boiled, en cocotte, baked, poached, scrambled and omelettes. This course is not usually included in the dinner menu.
  • 26. Egg dishes • Omelette fines herbes- Savoury herb omelette • Omelette Espagnole- flat omelette with onions, peppers and tomato • Omelette parmentier- Omelette with diced potatoes & chopped parsley • Eggs en cocotte a la crème
  • 27. • Eggs en cocotte a la reine- eggs cooked over a base of creamed minced chicken, topped with fresh cream • Stuffed eggs Chimay- Hard boiled eggs filled with mixture of yolks and duxelle, coated with mornay sauce, sprinkled with grated cheese and glazed in hot oven • Eggs sur le plat Bercy-Baked eggs garnished with chipolata sausage and tomato sauce
  • 28. • Poached eggs florentine- poached eggs on a bed of spinach, coated with cheese sauce and gratinated • Frittata- Italian dish made with eggs, vegetables, cheese, similar to a tortilla or spanish omelette • Scotch eggs- boiled eggs covered with savoury minced meat, crumbed, deep fried and served with tomato sauce
  • 29. 4) Farineux (pasta & rice) This is Italy's contribution to the courses of the menu. It includes different kinds of rice and pasta eg: spaghetti, lasagne and gnocchi. Pasta is made from durum wheat semolina or milled durum wheat dough. It can cooked and sauced in various ways. Risotto is a rice dish based on a short grained rice such as arborio, cooked with various ingredients.
  • 30. • Spaghetti bolognaise-sauce with shallots, garlic, minced beef, tomatoes & demi-glace • Spaghetti napolitaine- sauce with garlic, tomato concassé, topped with grated parmesan. Variation arrabiata sauce- spicier version (with cayenne) of napolitaine • Canneloni milanaise-stuffed with napolitaine sauce to which add julienne of ham, tongue, mushrooms, and truffles
  • 31. • Macaroni au gratin-mixed with mornay sauce, sprinkled with cheese and gratinated • Ravioli florentine-filled with spinach, shallots, garlic & egg yolk mixture, coated with mornay sauce, grated parmesan and glazed • Gnocchi romaine- pasta made with semolina, milk, garlic, egg yolk then tossed in butter, mornay sauce, sprinkled with parmesan and browned
  • 32. • Gnocchi piedmontaise- gnocchi made from mashed potatoes, cooked chicken puree, flour, egg yolks, poached, tossed with butter and sprinkled with parmesan cheese • Penne carbonara- penne tossed in butter, garlic, bacon and cream, topped with parmesan • Risotto milanese- saffron risotto with mushrooms & tomato concassé
  • 33. 5) Poisson Poisson are the dishes made from fish. Fish, being soft-fibred, prepares the palate for the heavier meats that follow. Deep-fried or grilled fish dishes do not generally occupy a place on the “classical dinner menu,” but are freely offered on the shorter-coursed luncheon menu. This also applies to the coarser members of the fish family, and the dinner menu is usually comprised of the finer fish prepared and cooked in the more classical manners. Ideal fish for dinner menu compilation are: Sole, Salmon, Halibut, Escallops, etc. Rarely seenon a menu for the evening meal are: Cod, Bass, Haddock, Brill, Hake, and Plaice.
  • 34. • Sole menuière- dredged in flour, shallow fried in butter, sprinkled with lemon juice. Belle meunière indicates addition of soft roes as garnish • Sole véronique-white wine sauce, garnish of skinned muscat grapes • Sole cubat-poached, dressed on a mushroom puree and coated with cheese sauce • Sole colbert-crumb fried and served with tartare sauce or colbert butter
  • 35. • Sole bonne femme-in white wine veloute sauce with mushrooms • Lobster Thermidor- lobster, white sauce, mustard, egg yolks, brandy, stuffed into a lobster shell topped with cheese and grilled. • Lobster Newburg- lobster served with sauce based on fish stock, cream, eggs, brandy, wine, cayenne pepper and butter • Fried fillet of plaice, tartare sauce
  • 36. • Poached salmon, hollandaise sauce • Grilled darne of salmon, béarnaise sauce • Grilled herring, mustard sauce • Pomfret Orly-batter fried and served with tomato sauce • Truite au bleu- fresh trout dipped in vinegar, simmered in stock, garnished with parisienne cut boiled potatoes, served with melted butter and hollandaise sauce
  • 37. Pomfret/sole recipes • bretonne-baked, with white sauce • au beurre noisette/noir- with nutty stage/black butter • Duglère-white wine and tomato veloute sauce • Florentine-poached, dressed on spinach, coated with Mornay sauce and glazed • St Germain-dipped in butter, bread crumbed, grilled, served with bearnaise sauced and noisette potatoes • Grillé- grilled
  • 38. • Mornay-poached, coated with cheese sauce and glazed • Otero- paupiette of sole mornay served in half baked potato shell • Dieppoise-cooked with fish veloute, white wine, mussels, shrimp tails, shallots, mushrooms, cream, butter • Bercy-poached in white wine and fumet with chopped shallots and parley, glazed with butter • Waleska- Baked in oven with Mornay sauce topped with lobster tail, truffle
  • 39. 6) Entreé This is the first of the meat courses on a menu. It is always a complete dish in itself. It is despatched from the kitchen garnished and sauced in the manner in which it is intended to be served. The “entrée” is always cooked and garnished in an artistic manner and usually served with a rich sauce. The “entrée” can be devised of almost anything light. This course consists of all the small cuts of butcher’s meats, usually sautéed.
  • 40. Rump, Entrecote and Tournedo Beefsteaks, Filet Mignons · Lamb Chops, Lamb cutlets, Lamb noisettes · Pork Chops, Pork cutlets · Escallops, Granadins, Medallions, and Cotes of Veal · Hot Souffles or Mousses (with meat) · Bouchées (containing meat) · Pilaf and Risottos (containing meat) · Small cuts or portions of poultry, individually cooked, are also served as entrées. In first-class hotels and restaurants, all entrées are cooked, garnished and presented for service by the sauce cook (saucier).
  • 41. The following offal items, with their appropriate garnishes and sauces, can also be successfully served as entrées. · Brains (Cervelles)eg Brain cutlets · Liver (Foie) eg Grilled liver · Oxtail (Queue de Boeuf) · Kidneys (Rognons) eg Steak & kidney pie, Sautéed kidneys, Devilled kidneys · Calves Head (Tête de Veau) • Trips (Tripes) eg Haggis (Scottish national dish of stuffed sheep stomach) • Sweetbreads(thymus gland of veal/lamb)
  • 42. Entrées • Entrecôte bordelaise- Sirloin steak with a red wine sauce • Steak Diane- Steak sautéed with onion, mushrooms & cream • Steak au poivre- sauted steak served wit a pan sauce of cracked peppercorns, shallots, cognac, butter and cream • Steak & kidney pie • Carpetbag steak- steak stuffed with oysters • Beef Wellington- traditional English preparation of beef tenderloin coated with liver pâté and duxelles, which is then wrapped in puff pastry and baked, served with Madeira sauce • Porterhouse steak- part sirloin, part fillet steak grilled • Chicken Tetrazzini-mushrooms, and almonds in a butter/cream and parmesan sauce flavored with wine, over spaghetti • Rognons sauté turbigo- sautéed kidneys in a rich brown sauce garnished with chipolata sausages • Côtelettes d’agneau réforme- Lamb cutlets in a rich brown sauce, garnished with chopped ham, tongue, mushrooms • Grilled lamb/pork chops
  • 43. Sautéed chicken dishes • Chicken chasseur (Poulet sauté chasseur) - sautéed, with demi-glace, mushrooms, tomatoes, shallots • Chicken cacciatore (hunter’s style)-Italian recipe, sautéed chicken with garlic, onion, tomato, mushroom, olives and wine • Chicken Maryland- Crumb fried chicken served with raifort (horseradish) sauce, corn pancakes, croquette potatoes, grilled bananas, tomatoes, bacon rashers • Chicken Marengo- served with sauce of white wine, garlic, parsley, tomato concasse, demi-glaze, garnished with mushrooms, crayfish, olives, fried eggs & toast
  • 44. Sautéed chicken dishes • Chicken Kiev- boneless chicken breast pounded and rolled around cold garlic butter with herbs, then breaded and fried. • Chicken a la King- diced chicken in a cream sauce, with sherry, mushrooms, and pimentos, served over rice, pasta, or buttered toast. • Chicken cutlets Pojarski- Patties made of ground chicken, mushrooms, bread & cream breaded and fried in butter • Chicken stroganoff- diced chicken (or beef) in a creamy mushroom sauce served over flat noodles or buttered rice
  • 45. Meat stews • Blanquette –stew of veal or chicken in white stock, onions, mushrooms, carrot & thickened with liaison of egg yolk & cream • Boeuf a la mode- beef stewed in red wine, vegetables & herbs, served hot or cold in its own jelly • Boeuf bourguignonnne- beef stewed in red wine with onions & mushrooms • Carbonnade of beef- steak stewed with beer, onions & brown stock • Cassoulet- meats braised with haricot beans • Coq au vin- chicken in red wine sauce with onions & mushrooms • Daube- a method of cooking meat by braising slowly in wine & meat stock with vegetables & herbs • Fricassé- white stew of veal or chicken • Goulash- Hungarian beef stew with diced onions , tomato purée, potatoes, white stock & paprika, served with caraway dumplings • Irish stew- stew of lamb, celery, onions, cabbage, leek, potatoes
  • 46. Meat stews • Lamb curry (Kari d’agneau)- lamb curried with onions and brown stock • Lancashire hotpot- lamb, kidney, sliced potatoes, onions & seasoning • Navarin-brown stew of lamb/mutton with onions, carrots, turnips & potatoes • Pot au feu- soup/stew of meat & root vegetables, leeks, cabbage, potatoes, etc • Ragoût- rich, well seasoned meat stew • Salmis- rich game stew in which the meat is first partially roasted, divided and then simmered in wine sauce, eg salmis de bécasse- woodcock stew
  • 47. Savoury pies • Steak/ Steak and kidney pie/Steak & oyster pie • Quiche lorraine • Chicken and mushroom pie • Beef Wellington • Chicken/Lamb vol au vent • Stargazy pie (sardines) • Lamb/Beef empanada • Shepherd’s pie • Spanakopita • Cornish pasty
  • 48. Cold buffet • Cold salmon (Saumon poché froid) • Cold turbot in aspic (Turbot farci en aspic) • Beef galantine (Galantine de boeuf) • Cold ox-tongue (Langue de boeuf froide) • Cold supreme of chicken (Supreme de volaille en chaud-froid) • Chicken galantine/ballotine (Galantine / Ballotine de volaille) • Chicken mayonnaise(Mayonnaise de volaille) • Ham soufflé (Soufflé de jambon espagnole) • Salmon/Chicken/Ham/Seafood terrine (Terrine de saumon/volaille/jambon/ fruits de mer • Home style liver pâté - Pâté de foie maison
  • 49. Accompaniments to entrées • Meat curry (Kari de viande)- Popadums, Bombay ducks, mango chutney, curry tray-apples, sultanas, sliced bananas, desiccated coconut • Boiled mutton-Caper sauce • Salt beef (silverside)- turned root vegetables, dumplings, natural cooking liquor • Boiled fresh mutton- turned root vegetables, natural cooking liquor, rock salt, gherkins
  • 50. • Calf’s head- boiled bacon, parsley sauce, brain sauce, sauce vinaigrette • Mixed grill and grilled steaks- French and English mustard, maître d’hôtel butter, straw potatoes, watercress • Irish stew- Worcester sauce, pickled red cabbage
  • 51. 7) Relevé • This is the main meat course on the menu, and is commonly known as the “piece de resistance.” It may consist of joint of any of the following: Lamb (Agneau) Chicken (Poulet) Beef (Boeuf) Duckling (Caneton) Veal (Veau) Fowl (Poulard) Ham (Jambon) Pork (Porc)
  • 52. • These joints would be cooked by the sauce cook in a first class hotel or restaurant, by any method except roasting. They are usually cooked on casserole, braise or poêle. Generally cooked in a sauce and served with it.
  • 53. • Joints suitable for roasting include: • (Beef) • Fillet (filet de boeuf) • Fore ribs (premier côte) • Middle ribs (Côte de boeuf) • Sirloin (aloyeau) • Topside (tranche tendre) • Rump(culotte de boeuf) • Wing end (Côte de boeuf)
  • 54. • (Pork) • Leg (cuisse de porc) • Loin (longe de porc) • Shoulder (épaule de porc) • (Lamb & Mutton) • Best end (carré) • Leg (gigot) • Saddle (selle) • Shoulder (épaule) • Each dish is accompanied with its own particular sauce and salad.
  • 55. • Accompaniments to roasted meats: • Beef: french and english mustard, yorkshire pudding, horse-radish sauce • Lamb- Mint sauce or mint jelly • Mutton saddle or leg- red currant jelly • Mutton shoulder- onion sauce • Pork- sage and onion stuffing, apple sauce
  • 56. Vegetarian entrées (often contain legumes, lentils, beans, nuts & edible seeds, cheese, tofu, mushrooms, meat analogues to compensate for meat) Eggplant Parmesan Eggplant, zucchini, parmesan lasagna Barley, beans and feta cheese stuffed artichokes Walnut broccoli pesto penne Fennel, roasted red pepper and goat cheese flan Lentil almond loaf Butternut squash macaroni and cheese
  • 57. Vegetarian entrées Roasted nut loaf/ Nut vegetable roast Ratatouille with rice/pasta Turkish Imam bayildi- braised stuffed eggplant Spanakopita-Greek spinach feta in phyllo pastry Chili sin carne-made with beans instead of meat Chile relleno- chile pepper stuffed with cheese, deep-fried Stuffed- onions, tomatoes, peppers, zucchini, eggplant, courgette, cabbage, vine leaves Flans, quiches, vol au vents, pies, pastas, rice with vegetarian ingredients
  • 58. Vegetable accompaniments to meats • Eggplant- egyptienne, fried, Provencal • Broccoli- buttered, amandine • Brussels sprouts-anglaise, buttered • Carrots- buttered, glazed, creamed • Cauliflower-creamed, au gratin, Milanese, polonaise • Courge (Vegetable marrow)- stuffed, Provencal • Cucumbers- stuffed, creamed
  • 59. • French beans- buttered • Peas- buttered, flamande, française • Pimentos (bell peppers)- stuffed, sautéed • Spinach- creamed, au gratin, • Braised- celery, cabbage, endive, onions, leeks • Grilled-mushrooms, tomato, • Sauté- Brussels sprouts, onions, mushrooms, spinach
  • 60. Potatoes to accompany meats • Parsley, matchstick, Anna, straw, boulangère, brioche, château, chips, croquettes, Dauphine, fondantes, gaufrette, gratin savoyarde, lorette, maître d’hôtel, marquise, mint, noisette, parisienne, robert, St Florentine, soufflé
  • 61. • Allumettes- match size, deep fried • Anna- sliced, pressed, baked in mould • Au four- Baked in their skins • Boulangère- sliced, with sliced onions, moistened with stock & baked • Château- turned to olive size, blanched & roast in butter • A la crème- diced potatoes cooked in milk & butter • Dauphine- choux paste & duchesse potato mixture shaped between spoons & deep fried • Delmonico- raw diced potatoes cooked in milk, browned with breadcrumbs • Duchesse- pureed with egg yolk & piped out • En purée- mashed • Flamande- shaped as chateau, cooked with small onions & carrots in white stock
  • 62. • Hongroise- paprika flavoured roundels with sweated, chopped onion cooked on consommé, finished with chopped parsley • Lyonnaise- Sautéed with onions • Macaire- puree from jacket potatoes, shaped like fish cakes and shallow-fried • Marquise- duchesse potatoes flavored with tomatoes • Paille- straw potatoes, deep-fried • Parmentier- cubed, blanched & roasted • Persillées-Steamed or boiled, tossed in butter with chopped parsley • Pont-neuf- thick-cut, deep fried • Soufflées- rectangular slices deep fried twice to balloon them up • Vapeur- turned to château size & steamed
  • 63. 8) Sorbet This course is a rest between courses. It counteracts the previous dishes, and rejuvenates the appetite for those that are to follow. Normally served between the releve and the rôti. It is a frozen dessert made primarily of fruit juice, sugar, and water, and also containing milk, egg white, or gelatin. Russian or Egyptian cigarettes are often passed around during this course.
  • 64. Rôti (Roast poultry • Roast accompaniments besides roast gravy: • bread sauce, parsley and thyme stuffing, bacon rolls, game chips, watercress • Duck- sage & onion stuffing, apple sauce, watercress • Goose- sage & onion stuffing, apple sauce • Turkey- cranberry sauce, bread sauce, chestnut stuffing, chipolatas, game chips, watercress
  • 65. Roast game Game birds- Woodcock, pheasants, grouse, partridge, wood pigeon, black grouse, thrush, black bird, ortolan bunting, plover, wild turkey etc. Game animals-roebuck, reindeer, wild boar • Wild duck- orange salad, acidulated cream dressing • Hare- heart shaped croûtes, forcemeat balls, red currant jelly • Venison- Cumberland sauce, red currant jelly • Partridge/grouse/pheasant-fried breadcrumbs, hot liver paste spread on a croûte, bread sauce, game chips, watercress (Cumberland sauce combines redcurrant jelly, port wine, orange juice & lemon juice)
  • 66. 10) Legume These are vegetable dishes that can be served separately as an individual course or may be included along - with the entrée, relevé or roast courses. Some examples are • Cauliflower mornay/polonaise • Asparagus with beurre fondu/hollandaise • Steamed corn on the cob with beurre fondu • Baked jacket potato • Eggplant parmesan
  • 67. Classic salads • à la française- lettuce hearts, beetroot, tomatoes, hard boiled eggs, tarragon vinaigrette • Allemande- diced apples, potatoes, gherkins, smoked herrings, onion, chopped parsley, beetroot, vinaigrette • Archiduc- julienne of beetroot, endive, truffle, potato, vinaigrette • Augustin- Cos lettuce heart, french beans, quartered tomatoes, hard-boiled eggs, green peas, mayonnaise • Carmen- pimentoes, diced chicken, peas, rice, mustard & tarragon vinaigrette
  • 68. • Chicago- tomatoes, asparagus tips, French beans, sliced foie gras, carrot julienne, mushrooms, mayonaisse • Cressonière- Sliced potatoes, hard-boiled egg, watercress, chopped parsley, mayonnaise • Dalila-Bananas, apples, celery julienne, mayonnaise • Demi-deuil- lettuce hearts, strips of truffle & potato, vinaigrette • Elenora- cos lettuce heart, artichoke bottom, asparagus points, mayonnaise
  • 69. • Eve- scooped apple filled with dices of apple, pineapple, banana, acidulated cream dressing • Fanchette- chicken & truffle julienne, mushrooms, chicory, vinaigrette • Florida- lettuce hearts, orange quarters, vinaigrette • Gauloise- cos lettuce hearts with strips of nuts, mayonnaise • Indienne- rice, asparagus, pimento julienne, diced apples, curried cream dressing • Japonaise- diced fresh fruit, fresh lettuce in half orange, acidulated cream
  • 70. • Jockey-Club- asparagus tips, truffle julienne, lettuce hearts, mayonnaise thinned with vinaigrette • Légumes- diced potato, chopped french beans, green peas, cauliflower, vinaigrette • Lorette- lamb’s lettuce, beetroot strips, celery root, vinaigrette • Louisette- cos lettuce heart, quartered tomato, skinned pipped grapes, vinaigrette • Mimosa- lettuce hearts, orange fillets, grapes, bananas, acidulated cream
  • 71. • Niçoise- french beans, tomatoes potatoes, anchovies, olives, capers, lettuce, vinaigrette • Rachel- celery, potato, truffle, artichoke bottoms in srtips, asparagus points, mayonnaise • Salade à la russe/Salade Olivier/Macedoine mayonnaise- diced potato, carrots, turnips, french beans & peas in mayonnaise • Mesclun- traditionally chervil, arugula, leafy lettuces and endive in equal proportions • Coleslaw- shredded raw cabbage, carrot (optional), vinaigrette
  • 72. International salads • Waldorf(US)- diced celeriac or celery, apples, walnuts, mayonnaise • Caesar(US)-Romaine lettuce, garlic croutons, egg, parmesan cheese, olive oil, lemon juice • Caprese(Italy)-Slices of tomato & buffalo mozzarella, basil, olive oil
  • 73. • Panzanella(Italy) sliced bread and fresh tomatoes flavored with basil, olive oil, and vinegar • Greek salad (Horiatiki)- wedges of tomatoes, cucumber, green bell peppers, red onion, sliced or cubed feta cheese, and kalamata olives, olive oil.
  • 74. 11) Entremet de sucre Eggless sweets Apple/Pear/Cherry pie- shortcrust tart in which the principal filling ingredient is fruit. It is sometimes served with whipped cream or ice cream on top Apple/Pear crumble-stewed fruit topped with a crumbly mixture of butter, flour, and sugar Brown Betty- made with bread crumbs (or bread pieces, or graham cracker crumbs), and fruit, usually diced apples, in alternating layers & baked Cobbler- fruit filling poured into a large baking dish and covered with a batter, biscuit, or pie crust before being baked. Unlike a pie, cobbler does not contains a bottom crust. Gooseberry fool- English dessert generally made by mixing puréed fruit, whipped cream, sugar Summer/rice/tapioca pudding Blancmange- sweet made with milk or cream, sugar & cornstarch Peach Melba- peach halves on vanilla ice cream , coated with raspberry sauce. Created by Auguste Escoffier in 1892, named after Dame Nellie Melba, famous Australian opera singer (variation Peach Alexandra-substitute sauce with strawberry purée) Pear Belle Hélène- ice cream with poached pear and hot chocolate sauce & crystallised violets. It was created around 1864 by Auguste Escoffier and named after the operetta La belle Hélène by Jacques Offenbach Pears poached in red wine Rødgrød- Denmark/Germany - red summer berries cooked with sugar, potato starch, moulded, cooled and served with cream
  • 75. Flambé sweets Fruit flambé- banana, pear, peach, pineapple Cherries Jubilee- cherries and liqueur (typically Kirschwasser), which is subsequently flambéed, and commonly served as a sauce over vanilla ice cream. Strawberries Romanoff- strawberries steeped in orange juice, sometimes flamed with brandy or liqueur and served with cream or ice cream Bananas Foster- flamed bananas with vanilla ice cream, with the sauce made from butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, dark rum, and banana liqueur. Baked Alaska- Omelette surprise/norvégienne- sponge cake covered with ice cream, meringue & often flamed with alcohol before serving Crêpes suzette- thin pancakes in orange butter sauce, flamed with brandy and orange liqueur like Grand Marnier
  • 76. Sweets with egg Vanilla/Lemon/Pineapple/Chocolate soufflé- made lighter with stiffly beaten egg whites, dessert soufflés may be baked, chilled or frozen Pineapple upside-down cake Fruit and rice condé- rice, egg yolk, milk and cream pudding with fruit such as apricots or pears Charlotte- Bread, sponge cake or biscuits/cookies are used to line a mold, which is then filled with a fruit puree or custard. Cheesecake- dessert consisting of a topping made of soft, fresh cheese usually on a crust or base made from hard biscuits pastry or sponge cake and flavored or topped with fruit, nuts, fruit sauce. It may also be baked.
  • 77. British sweets • Queen of Puddings- traditional British dessert, consisting of a baked, breadcrumb-thickened mixture, spread with jam and topped with meringue • Bakewell pudding- English dessert commonly consisting of a flaky pastry base with a layer of sieved jam, topped with an egg and almond paste filling • Treacle sponge pudding- English dessert consisting of a steamed sponge cake with golden syrup cooked on top of it, sometimes also poured over it and often served with hot custard • Fruit trifle- English dessert made from thick custard, fruit, sponge cake, fruit juice or jelly, and whipped cream • Queen of Puddings- traditional British dessert, consisting of a baked, breadcrumb-thickened mixture, spread with jam and topped with meringue • Bakewell pudding- English dessert commonly consisting of a flaky pastry base with a layer of sieved jam, topped with an egg and almond paste filling • Treacle sponge pudding- English dessert consisting of a steamed sponge cake with golden syrup cooked on top of it, sometimes also poured over it and often served with hot custard • Bread and butter pudding- baked pudding of layers of sliced buttered bread in an oven dish into which an egg and milk/cream mixture is poured. • Fruit trifle- English dessert made from thick custard, fruit, sponge cake, fruit juice or jelly, and whipped cream
  • 78. French sweets • Gâteau Mont blanc- chestnut puree on top of meringues, finished with whipped cream • Gâteau St Honoré- named after the patron saint of French bakers and pastry chefs, it is a circle of puff pastry at its base with a ring of choux pasrty piped on the outer edge. After the base is baked small cream puffs are dipped in caramelized sugar and attached side by side on top of the circle of the pâte à choux. This base is traditionally filled with crème chiboust and finished with whipped cream using a special St. Honoré piping tip. • Gâteau Alcazar- almond & apricot cake • Chocolate éclair- oblong choux pastry filled with cream and glazed with chocolate • Tarte Tatin- upside down apple tart, created accidentally by French sisters Stephanie & Caroline Tatin in the 1880s. • Baba au rhum- cake leavened with yeast and soaked in a rum based syrup • Mousse au chocolat- chocolate mousse • Omelette a la confiture- Jam omelette • Omelette au rhum- omelette dredged with sugar & flamed with rum • Gâteau Mille feuille- literally “Thousand layer cake” 3 puff pastry layers sandwiched with pastry cream, whipped cream or jam, dusted with sugar on top • Paris-Brest is a French dessert, made of choux pastry and a praline flavoured cream • Clafoutis- baked French dessert of black cherries and batter, dusted with powdered sugar
  • 79. French sweets Crêpes Normande- filled with apple purée Oeufs à la neige- aka île flottante (floating island) meringue prepared from whipped egg whites, sugar and vanilla extract then quickly poached, floating on crème anglaise (a vanilla custard). Charlotte russe- Invented by the French chef Marie-Antoine Carême (1784–1833), who named it in honor of his former employer George IV's only child, Princess Charlotte , and his current, Russian employer Czar Alexander I (russe being the French word for "Russian"). It is a cold dessert of Bavarian cream set in a mold lined with sponge fingers Crème caramel (aka flan in Spanish)- custard dessert with a layer of soft caramel on top, cooked in a bain marie Crème brûlée- also known as burnt cream, crema catalana, or Trinity cream is a dessert consisting of a rich custard base topped with a contrasting layer of sugar burnt under a salamander or using a blowtorch Croquembouche (piece montee) traditional dessert in French cuisine, its name comes from the French words croque en bouche, meaning 'crunch in the mouth'. It's a form of choux pastry that is generally served as a high-piled cone of chocolate, cream-filled profiteroles all bound together with threads of caramel. It is also decorated with sugared almonds, chocolate, flowers, or ribbons. Sometimes it may also be covered in macaroons or ganache. It is traditionally served during wedding reception.
  • 80. Italian sweets • Cannoli- (Italy)tube-shaped shells of fried pastry dough, filled with a sweet, creamy filling usually containing ricotta. • Zabaione- warm Italian dessert made with egg yolks, sugar & Marsala wine • Tiramisu- lit. "pick me up" or "lift me up") is an Italian dessert. It is made of sponge cake(Italian: Savoiardi) dipped in coffee, layered with a whipped mixture of egg yolks and mascarpone cheese, and flavored with Marsala wine and cocoa
  • 81. Austrian/German sweets • Sachertorte- chocolate Savoy cake filled or spread with apricot jam then covered with chocolate icing, traditionally served with whipped cream and a cup of coffee. Invented by Austrian Franz Sacher in 1832 for Prince Wenzel von Metternich in Vienna, Austria. • Linzertorte- Austrian short, crumbly pastry made of flour, unsalted butter, egg yolks, lemon zest, cinnamon and lemon juice, and ground almonds or hazelnuts or walnuts or almonds, covered with a filling of redcurrant jam • Apfelstrudel/Apple strudel - Of Austro-Hungarian origin, it consists of an oblong strudel pastry jacket with a filling of cooking apples, sugar, cinnamon, raisins, and bread crumbs. It is traditionally served in slices, sprinkled with powdered sugar • Black Forest cake- English names for the German Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte, consists of several layers of chocolate cake soaked with kirsch, with whipped cream and cherries between each layer. Then the cake is decorated with additional whipped cream, maraschino cherries, and chocolate shavings
  • 82. • Key Lime Pie- American dessert made of Florida Key lime juice, egg yolks, and sweetened condensed milk in a pie crust • Pumpkin pie- traditional pie filled with pumpkin based custard, eaten during the fall and early winter, especially for Thanksgiving and Christmas in the United States and Canada. • Pavlova- made by beating egg whites to a very stiff consistency before folding in caster sugar, white vinegar, cornflour, and sometimes vanilla essence, and slow-baking the mixture, similarly to meringue, topped with whipped cream and fresh fruit. Popular in Australia & New Zealand, named after Russian ballet dancer Anna Pavlova. • Baklava- Turkish rich, sweet pastry made of layers of filo pastry filled with chopped nuts such as pistachios or walnuts and sweetened with flavoured syrup or honey.
  • 83. 12) Savoureux (savouries) On lunch and dinner menu savoury is served as an alternative to sweet, while in a banquet it may be a course on its own coming between the sweet and the dessert. In an à la carte menu the savouries are listed in a section on their own.
  • 84. Savouries may be served on toast, in tartlettes, barquettes, in bouchées,flans, omelettes or soufflé. Fromage (Cheese) is an alternative to the savoury course, and may be served before or after the sweet course, in a side plate with a side knife & sweet fork. It is usually served with cruet, butter, castor sugar (for cream cheeses) crackers and occasionally watercress, spring onions, radishes, celery. Gouda, Camembert and Cheddar are some examples of cheese.
  • 85. Savouries • Cover, Accompaniments & Service • Cold/warm fish plate, side knife, sweet fork • Cruet, cayenne pepper, peppermill, worcester sauce(for meat savouries) • Serve cold items first, then warm. • Bouchées:Small pastry cases, a larger version is called vol-au-vent • Eg Bouchée Indienne- curried shrimps, chutney
  • 86. Examples of savouries • Savouries on toast- anchovies, sardines, roe, haddock, marrow, mushrooms • Welsh rarebit-Seasoned bechamel, beer, cheddar cheese & egg yolk sauce poured over toast fingers and glazed. When garnished with poached egg it is a Buck rarebit • Savoury pie/flan- Quiche lorraine • Savoury soufflé-mushroom, spinach, sardine, salmon, anchovy, haddock, avocado, cauliflower, cheese • Omelettes- parsley, anchovy, cheese, fines herbes
  • 87. Examples of canapés • Baron- sliced fried mushrooms, grilled bacon, poached bone marrow • Ritchie- creamed haddock, slices of hard boiled egg • Quo Vadis- grilled roes garnished with mushroom heads • Nina- half small grilled tomato, mushroom head, pickled walnut • Charlemagne- shrimps in curry sauce • Ivanhoe- creamed haddock on toast garnished with pickled walnut • Angels on horseback- poached oysters wrapped in streaky bacon, grilled on skewer • Devils on horseback- stoned, cooked prune, stuffed with chutney, sprinkled with cayenne, wrapped in streaky bacon, grilled on skewer, aka Toast Menelik
  • 88. Examples of croûtes • Derby-spread with ham puree and garnished with pickled walnut • Windsor- spread with ham puree and garnish with small grilled mushroom • Diane- fried chicken livers wrapped in streaky bacon, grilled on skewer • Scotch Woodcock- scrambled egg garnished with trellis of anchovy and studded with capers
  • 89. Tartlets (round) & Barquettes (oval) of short crust pastry: • Charles V- soft roe mixed with butter, covered with cheese soufflé mixture & baked • Favorite: filled with cheese soufflé mixture & slices of truffle, garnished with slices of crayfish tails or prawns • Haddock- diced haddock in curry sauce, sprinkled with breadcrumbs & gratinated
  • 90. 13) Dessert Dessert is a course that typically comes at the end of a meal. The French word desservir means "to clear the table." This is the fruit course usually presented in a basket and placed on the table, as part of the table decor, and served at the end of the meal. All forms of fresh fruit and nuts may be served in this course: apples, pears, bananas, oranges, mandarins, tangerines, grapes, pineapples, figs, dates, almonds, walnuts, pistachios, brazil nuts, pecans, macadamia nuts
  • 91. • Cover: • Dessert plate, fruit knife, fruit fork, finger bowl, napkin, spare side plate for peels & shells, nutcracker for whole nuts. A spare finger bowl may be offered for rinsing grapes • Accompaniments- salt for nuts, castor sugar dredger for fruit
  • 92. Boisson (Beverage) • Includes non-alcoholic beverages. For formal meals coffee is served in the end. This is drunk from a demi-tasse. Confectionery known variously as petit four, friandise or mignardise; including cookies, meringues, macaroons, small iced cakes, dried sugared fruit & nuts, chocolates may be offered. Alcoholic beverages like fine old brandies and liqueurs may also be presented along with cigars & cigarettes.