You Are Here: Home - Learn Home Cooking > French Cooking

French Cooking

Coq au VinFrench food is always elegant and refined. The masterpieces of royal cooks have become a signature in French cooking. The world’s greatest chefs were masters of French cooking or cuisine. French cuisine is also noted for the diverse food preparation coming from the 26 different French regions. French cooking and techniques have greatly influenced European cuisine. Schools that teach cooking techniques use the standards and recipes of French cooking as the basics for other forms of cooking especially western cuisine.

The approach to food in French cooking reflects the French love of dining, appreciation of fresh ingredients, and ingenuity in the use of available ingredients in the different territories. Each region has a special dish for each season and occasion. The different seasons has also challenged the ingenuity of the French in coming up with varied dishes using basic ingredients that are plentiful. In summer, salads and fruit dishes give the refreshing and healthful respite from the winters. When summer is gone, mushrooms are plentiful in the countrysides and appear in tasty stews. Venison highlights the well-prepared table during the hunting season that starts from September and runs until February. In spring, French cooking is spiked with oysters. Hence, French cooking is an art and has introduced gustatory delights to the commoner’s table.

The major tastes and flavors of French cooking were invariably influenced by their proximity to other countries. Alsace, which is near Germany, has sausages, salted pork, raisin cakes, and potatoes as the main ingredient in their robust meals for all occasions. In the Alps region – cheese reigns in almost all its provincial dishes. The Artois-Picardy provinces in the northern regions have fish dishes and terrines. The bouillabaisse a stew of fish, tomatoes and herbs is a favorite starter to any meal and a well-loved dish in the Cote d Azure and Provence areas. Britanny has made use of fruits in seasons in crepes; they also have the tasty flat crusty cakes (galletes) and dumplings. Burgundy made edible snails an exotic dish and the southwest regions gave the world cuisine pate foie gras – a dainty dish of liver from forced-fed ducks.

Many French cookbooks make French cooking difficult. However for the time-harassed French food enthusiast, there are now cookbooks that make French cooking easier and fun to prepare. Not to mention the fact that you can impress your friends with food, the names of which they cannot pronounce.

  • History of French Cooking
    French cooking history considered greatest chefs, like Bocuse, Carême, Escoffier, Fernand Point, La Varenne, and Taillevent to be masters of French cuisine.
  • French Cooking Methods
    French cuisine is one of the world's most elegant styles of cooking, and is prominent for both its conventional ("haute cuisine") or grande cuisine and provincial techniques.
  • French Cooking Techniques
    French cooking techniques are aplenty. Practically, French cooking techniques are simply the basic things we do in our kitchen only with a French twist.
  • French Cooking Terms
    Learning French cooking terms may be one of the harder things that you have to do when you enroll in French cooking school. Learning them is a very important part of actually getting your degree, though.
  • French Cooking Recipes
    French cooking recipes are often recipes that people stay away from those that do not have a culinary background in French cuisine. This is usually due to the fact that it seems very different than the culture that you are aware of.
  • French Cooking Holidays
    French cooking holidays are a different world from that of other cultures. Like other cultures, the French like to enjoy family and friends at those special times of the year that bring back memories and provide everyone with a time to relax.

Learn Home Cooking E-book
If you've ever wished that you could provide a "company perfect" meal without embarrassing yourself with burned roasts or undercooked chicken, this is the book for you.

You will learn...
  • how to read a recipe
  • where to find the ingredients for a recipe
  • how to use spices to enhance flavor
  • how to make a basic sauce
  • how to skin a tomato
  • and much more

  • Read more

    Recipes   |   Articles   |   Videos   |   Contact Us   |   Privacy Policy   |   Resources   |   Site Map
    www.learnhomecooking.com ©2008.
    Every effort has been made to ensure that the information contained in this site is accurate but there is no warranty, express or implied, that the said information is entirely accurate, complete or up to date. No liability will be accepted for any errors or omissions in the site's content. Please review the Terms of Use before using this site. Your use of the site indicates your agreement to be bound by the Terms of Use.