French Recipes
1129 recipes found

Brioche Apple Charlotte With Raspberry Sauce

Flammekueche (Thin-Crusted Cheese, Onion And Bacon Tart)

Acorn Squash With Polenta Soufflé and Pulled Pork

Warm Brioche Berry Shortcake

Savory Mini-Madeleines
A basket of warm mini-madeleines ends the meal at Rôtisserie Georgette in Manhattan. But in the summer of 2017, the owner Georgette Farkas challenged one of her chefs, Stephanie Abrams, to come up with a savory version to pair with a predinner drink. They’re easily made at home; the recipe produces a generous quantity. But they freeze beautifully and can be defrosted and warmed for about 20 minutes in a 325 degree oven.

Brioche Bread Pudding

Roasted Pork With Carrot Glaze, Polenta And Green Beans

Braised Stuffed Artichoke A la Barigoule

Summer Tomato Terrine
Some people might call my tomato terrine a tomato pudding, but it is more a salad, with very thin layers of highly seasoned tomato slices and bread. It's the perfect first course in summer. For this salad, the tomatoes have to be skinned. You can do this with a blowtorch, charring the skin until it can be slipped off, as we sometimes do, or you can blanch them in boiling water until the skins loosen and will easily slide off. Just don't put in more than two at a time, or the tomatoes will remain in the water so long that they will cook and turn mushy.

Le Grand Aioli
For those interactive group-gathering festive meals that first come to mind — fondue, say, or raclette — you either have to maintain a giant heated stone by an even larger roaring fire or a balance a pot of boiling oil, molten cheese or finicky chocolate over a live flame. Le grand aioli, by contrast, is a distinctly relaxing, convivial and participatory group meal that requires no dangerous apparatus: It’s just a vivid spread of vegetables, simply cooked, and a few pieces of steamed seafood to go with the large quantity of rather garlicky mayonnaise. Since the meal is served at room temperature – neither hot nor cold – it is one of those exceedingly-gentle-on-the-cook meals for which you can just sit down and stay down. The only exertion involved once you set it out is passing the cold wine.

Baked Lentils With Goat Cheese
The French green Le Puy lentils are smaller and firmer than brown lentils, but have the same type of earthy flavor. They lend themselves to dishes where you want the lentils to stay intact like salads and sides. "Beluga lentils" will also work for this salad.

Chicken Noelle (Chicken breasts with artichokes)

Lentil, Cabbage And Bacon Salad

Lentil Salad With Walnut Oil
This dish is inspired by a recipe from “The Paris Cookbook,” by Patricia Wells. I’d never thought about using walnut oil, which is high in omega-3 fats, with lentils. It’s a great combination. Be sure to keep walnut oil in the refrigerator once it’s opened.

Potatoes and Celeriac Au Gratin

Lentil Salad

Provençal White Wine Beef Daube
A classic Provençal beef daube, or slow-baked stew, is made with quantities of red wine, like the recipes that Julia Child often made in her house in Provence, La Pitchoune. Patricia Wells, a former New York Times food writer in Paris, also lives part-time in the South of France, and she has adapted the daube for white wine, which plays a more subtle part in flavoring the stew. The large amount of liquid makes a tender braise that can also be served as a sauce for pasta: penne, gnocchi and long noodles like tagliatelle are familiar in the region, which borders Italy on the east.

Broiled Duck With Orange-Glazed Turnips

Three Little Asparagus Soups For Spring
The most daunting aspect of serving three asparagus soups is finding 18 little bowls. But unless you're having Nathan Lane to dinner, who cares if they match? Coffee cups, old-fashioned glasses, mugs, pairs of cupped hands -- all are fine.

Chicken With Sausage

Fennel-Steamed Mussels Provencal

Provencal Fish Stew

Fillets of Sole Pavillon
