Crevettes and Gambas - Shrimps and Prawns. Shrimps in French Cuisine.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

Shrimp on the menu.
Photograph courtesy of stu_spivack
www.flickr.com/photos/stuart_spivack/4978036874/
.  
Crevettes and gambas on French menus
     
In France, the word crevettes may be used for any shrimp or prawn, with the Spanish word gamba being used to suggest larger sizes.  A marine biologist will tell you that shrimps and prawns are two quite distinct species; however, who is going to spend the time to re-educate me, other diners around the world, as well as the chefs. When in France and you want to order shrimp or prawns in a restaurant, a fishmonger, or a supermarket, just order crevettes or gambas.  N.B.:  In this post, where possible, I am only using the word shrimps; that may avoid some of the confusion in English. (The Dublin Bay Prawn, in France called the langouste, is neither a shrimp nor a prawn.  See the post Langoustine).

     
Traditional shrimp fishing with horses, Belgium.
  
Shrimps on the menu.
      
French chefs create wonderful dishes with shrimp and in French seafood restaurants, you may order a number of different shrimps. Two of the shrimps offered will be the two most popular pink or red shrimps; a third will be the smaller but very tasty crevette gris, a gray or brown sand shrimp. After these popular three, there are many others, with the crevette géante tigrée, the giant tiger shrimp, leading the popularity stakes. Other shrimps may be on the menu using local or traditional names. Do not be surprised if confusion with some shrimp names occasionally reaches your menu.
   
Shrimps in a seafood market in Avignon, France.
www.flickr.com/photos/string_bass_dave/34017890395/
               
Shrimp dishes on French menus:
  
Brochettes de Crevettes Grillées -  Skewers of grilled shrimps.           
       
Cocktail de Crevettes or a Cocktail aux Crevettes - A shrimp cocktail.  French shrimp cocktails will usually have a fresh mayonnaise or a Sauce Rosé also called a Sauce Calypso or Sauce Cocktail.  They will not be served with American cocktail sauce; the European taste for seafood cocktails does not include horseradish. The basic recipe for this sauce is mayonnaise, ketchup, and Worcestershire Sauce or Tabasco, sometimes with added cognac. 
   
Shrimp and avocado salad.
www.flickr.com/photos/foodista/14320970230/
  
 Crevettes Décortiquées – Peeled shrimps.
    
Crevettes Ail et Persil a la Plancha – Shrimps flavored with garlic and parsley, cooked on a plancha.  The plancha is a solid, thick, flat sheet metal cooking plate and achieves a cooking taste somewhere between grilling and frying.  The plancha may look something like the flat cooking plate of a fast food restaurant; however,  a real plancha has three times the thickness and that gives a very even heat. The Basques claim ownership, as do the Spanish. In the Basque language, a plancha is called a planxa and that name will be on many South-Western French menus.  
                 
The most popular shrimps on French menus:
  
Crevette gris:
    
Crevette gris, crevette boucot, crevette boucard or sauterelle  The sand shrimp, or gray or brown sand shrimp. These are small but very tasty, small, shrimps. When on the menu a sand shrimp cocktail beats a regular shrimp cocktail hands- down. These shrimps, like others, turn pinkish after cooking.
   
Plenty of sand shrimp
    
La Bisque de Crevettes Grises  – A sand shrimp bisque. For more about bisques click here.
  
Croquettes de Crevettes Grises aux Fine Herbes    Round or log shaped chopped sand shrimps, flavored with France’s favorite herb group, Les Fines Herbes, covered in breadcrumbs and deep-fried. Delicious.
  
Crevettes Gris de Zeebrugge  The same sand shrimp as elsewhere; however, here the menu is telling you that these were caught off the coast of Zeebrugge, the port and seaside resort of Brugge, Belgium. There are places at sea considered uniquely special for the fish and seafood caught there. Provenance at sea can affect your wallet as much as it does on land. If you can taste the difference, you will have to pay for it.
               
Tartare d'Avocats aux Crevettes Grises et PamplemousseA tartar of avocado, sand shrimps, and grapefruit.
  
Sand shrimps in the languages of France’s neighbors:  
(Catalan - gamba d'esquer), (Dutch - noordzeegarnaal or grijze garnaal), (German – sandgarnele), (Italian - gamberetto grigio or gambero  grigi),  (Spanish – camarón gris, gamba  gris, quisquilla gris).         
    
Crevette Rose 
 
Crevette Rose or Crevette Bouquette – The common prawn, the pink shrimp; one of the two most popular shrimps on French menus. These shrimps can be up to 10 cms long. They will be part of many recipes and nearly always part of a seafood platter. These shrimps are a favorite for shrimp cocktails. N.B.: The pink shrimp on French menus is not the same as the North American pink shrimp.
    
Shrimp buffet
www.flickr.com/photos/inra_dist/25605258181/
           
Cocktail de Crevettes Rose à l'Avocat – A  pink shrimp served in half an avocado.  Fresh mayonnaise or Sauce Calypso (Sauce Marie Rose), will accompany the serving.
 
Crevettes Roses Grillées au Beurre à l'Ail – Pink shrimps grilled with garlic flavored butter.
        
Flan d'Endives aux Crevettes Rose, Sauce Moutarde – A flan or tart made with Belgian endives.  Here the pink shrimp will be cooked together with the endives and when ready placed on the flan and served with a mustard sauce.
   
Pink shrimps in the languages of France’s neighbors:
(Catalan -pandàlids), (German - tiefseegarnele), (Italian – gambero rosso), (Spanish - camarón, rosado).

Crevette Nordique:
  
Crevette Rouge, Crevette Nordique The Northern shrimp, the Norwegian wild prawn, the Northern pink shrimp, the Deep-Water prawn.  These shrimps are almost always part of a shellfish platter. N.B. The Northern pink shrimp on French and other European menus is not the same as the North American pink shrimp.
                                     
Salade de Crevettes Nordiques et Artichaut aux Agrumes  - A salad of the northern pink shrimps served with artichokes and citrus fruits.

The crevette rouge, the Northern shrimp.
 
Filet de Lotte avec Crevettes Nordiques – A filet of monkfish tail served with northern pink shrimps.
  
Tagliatelle aux Crevettes Nordiques et au Pineau des Charentes The northern pink shrimp served with tagliatelle and flavored with Pineau de Charentes. Pineau de Charentes is a unique and popular aperitif from  France’s Cognac region. For more about Pineau de Charentes click here.
 
Northern pink shrimps in the languages of France’s neighbors:  
(Catalan - gamba boreal), (German -  eismeergarnele, nordmeer or nordische garnele), (Italian -, gamberetto boreali), (Spanish – camarón norteño).
   
Crevette Géante Tigrée 
                                
Crevette Tigrée or Crevette Géante Tigrée  - The tiger shrimp, giant tiger shrimp,  the jumbo tiger prawn, the black giant tiger shrimp. This large shrimp originated in Asia and while giant tiger shrimps are caught in the wild most come from shrimp farms. The stripes gave the shrimp the tiger in its name.  Caveat emptor: Other large shrimp from the Mediterranean and shrimp farms are also called tiger shrimps.  If you really want the giant tiger shrimp, check with the server if the menu listing is for the crevette géante tigrée. 
       
Tiger prawns
www.flickr.com/photos/mysterybee/141083247/
      
Crevettes Géante Tigrée Flambées Rhum, Ananas, Piments d'Espelette – Giant tiger shrimps prepared with pineapples and Espelette Peppers flambéed in rum. Espelette AOP peppers have been grown in France for hundreds of years. The town of Espelette is in the French Basque Country and its peppers are part of many Basque and Basque-influenced French dishes. In season, the houses in and around Espelette may be seen covered in drying peppers.   
     
Crevettes Tigrées Géantes et Pétoncles Sautés de l’Atlantique Nord dans Notre Sauce Rosée – Giant tiger shrimps and queen scallops from  the North Atlantic served with our sauce rose.
  
Giant tiger shrimps in the languages of France’s neighbors:
(Dutch - grote tijgergarnaal or reuzen-tijgergarnaal), (German – riesengarnele), (Italian - gambero tigre gigante), (Spanish - camarón tigre gigante, langostino jumbo).

Shrimps, when cooked, have meat that will be white, pinkish or bluish-white and firm when cooked.  If it you are served a shrimp that is soft or pasty then it is not fresh; do not eat it. Send it back. Do not eat pasty shrimps unless they are being sold as fish paste!

The general name for shrimps in the languages of France's neighbors:
(Catalan – gambe), (German – garnelen, krevette, crevetten), (Italian -gamberetti, gamberone), (Spanish – gamba).

Connected posts:
 
 
 
 
 
 




  

The King Scallop and the Queen Scallop. On French Menus the Saint-Jacque, the Coquilles Saint-Jacques, and the Vanneaux or Pétoncle.
  

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on
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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com 
Copyright 2010, 2012, 2015, 2018, 2024.
 

 


Filet de Veau - The Veal Tenderloin, or Veal Fillet.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

   

Veal fillet wrapped in Serrano cured ham
with Jerusalem artichokes,  black truffles, and porcini mushrooms.
www.flickr.com/photos/loustejskal/15425936620/

Filet de Veau is the fillet, the tenderloin; it is the most expensive and tenderest of all veal cuts. However, the fillet is not the tastiest in France and elsewhere cuts from a fillet of veal will be served with a sauce; it’s the texture that makes a filet de veau a so special. As with a beef fillet never order this cut well-done as it has little natural fat and would otherwise quickly dry out; bacon is often wrapped around grilled fillets. The French terms for how veal will be cooked are the same as for beef. 
 
Veal fillets on French menus:
      
Filet de Veau Poêlé et sa Fondue de Champignons - A fillet of veal lightly fried and served with button mushrooms that have been so well cooked so that they are practically a sauce.
  
Ris et Filet de Veau au Raifort, Minute de Pousses d’Épinards  -  A dual serving of veal sweetbreads and veal fillet flavored with horseradish, accompanied by lightly fried spinach shoots. The sweetbreads are very tender and light tasting meat.
  

Ris et Filet de Veau, Sauce Bearnaise.
www.flickr.com/photos/food-porn/36259352675/

Filet de Veau aux Herbes Fraîches Sauce Balsamique – A veal fillet cooked in fresh herbs and a balsamic vinegar sauce.

Filet de Veau de Nos Alpages, Sauce à l'Ail Noir et Échalotes Confites – A filler of veal from the herbs in our high pastures served with a black garlic sauce and a shallot  Confit, a jam. (The term alpage is used for the high pastures anywhere in France and not just near the Alps).
   

Veal fillet, the tenderloin, wrapped in ham.
www.flickr.com/photos/stuart_spivack/445549684/

Filet de Veau de Lait Grillé, Jus aux  Morillons Légèrement Crémé, Garniture – A grilled fillet of milk-fed veal served with a lightly creamy sauce prepared with the  “half-free morel” mushrooms accompanied by vegetables.  The half-free morel mushroom looks and tastes like the regular morel mushroom, but  with a smaller cap and a longer and edible stem.
  

The half-free morel mushroom
www.flickr.com/photos/artfarmer/5617844058/
 
Filet Mignon De Veau Charolaise, Son Jus Aux Escargots Du Brionnais Et Porto Rouge – A cut from a tenderloin of Charolais veal served with a sauce made from the natural cooking juices and farmed petit gris snails, from the Brionnaise area of the Saône and the Loire in South Burgundy, and a red Port wine sauce. The AOP Charolaise cattle were the third breed to receive an AOC to protect their provenance and unique qualities. The smallest part at the end of the fillet is the French Filet Mignon, the dainty fillet.   Nevertheless, cuts taken from here will, in France, only rarely be called Filet Mignon as the name is mostly associated with pork fillets.
  

Charolais cattle in the high pastures.
www.flickr.com/photos/hailemichaelfiseha/14894844210/

---------------------------------------------------

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2019.


-------------------------------------------------

Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
French menus?
      
Just add the word, words, or phrase that you are searching for to the words "Behind the French Menu" and search with Google. Behind the French Menu’s links include hundreds of words, names, and phrases that are seen on French menus. There are over 450 articles that include over 4,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations.
 
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