Les Découpes de Fruits et Légumes - The French Cuts for Fruits and Vegetables

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

 
A few of the fruits and vegetables that may be on your menu.
Photograph courtesy of Fondation Louis Bonduelle
 

French culinary tradition includes naming the cuts used for the vegetables, fries, or fruits on menu listings. Nearly every English-speaking visitor to France will understand a menu offering Steak Frites, but Steak Frites Pont-Neuf is not so well known and won’t be fully translated by Google Translate. Equally, many visitors will know that saumon is salmon, but Microsoft Translator doesn’t help with Saumon et Brunoise de Légumes which the program translates as Salmon and Brunoise vegetables. That’s where this post from Behind the French Menu comes in. The list below describes most of the popular shapes and sizes for fruits and vegetables found on menu listings.

I have had years of enjoyable meals and knowledgeable French dining partners to guide me, and many well-informed people have answered my food-orientated questions. However, as I prepare this post, special thanks go to a very knowledgeable French ‘foodie’ Michel Masse. Michel made suggestions and corrections for this post and also convinced me to stop insulting the French language and change the proposed name of this post from Taillages to Les Découpes. 

Allumettes – Matches. The name is used for a cut of very thin vegetables, usually potatoes, that may be cut to the dimensions of a long matchstick. For potatoes, this cut is often called straw fries or shoestring fries in the USA. The size is about 0.03cm x 0.03cm x 7cm. 

 

Salade César aux Gambas Sauvages et Allumettes de Panisse – Caesar salad with wild shrimp and thin, matchstick like cuts of panisse.  

 

(A Caesar salad is not French, nor is it wholly Italian or Mexican. The salad was created in the 1920s by Caesar Cardini, an Italian restaurateur in Tijuana, Mexico. The original recipe was lettuce,  garlic, olive oil, salt, pepper, lemon juice, Parmesan cheese, croutons, Worcestershire sauce, and a coddled egg; additions such as anchovies, etc., came later. Now, Caesar salads vary a great deal from place to place. A coddled egg, which is a lightly-boiled egg, was an essential ingredient in the original Caesar salad, now it mostly has been replaced with a regular poached egg or sometimes a hard-boiled egg). 

 

Pommes Allumettes, also called Pommes Pailles – Straw fries. They are cut approximately 2-3 mm x 2-3 mm x 7 cm long. 


Onglet de Boeuf, Sauce au Poivre, Pommes Allumettes – A hanger or skirt steak served with a pepper sauce and French fries, allumettes

 

Tartare de Boeuf Maison, Pommes Pailles - Beef Tatare prepared as the restaurant chooses and served with French Fries, pailles.

 


How to prepare Pommes Allumettes
Photograph and instructions courtesy of Meilleur du Chef

Bâtonnets – The word Bâtonnet means a small stick and may be used for any vegetable cut into small stick shapes, small batons. Bâtonnets will be crisply fried vegetables such as bâtonnets de courgette, crisply deep-fried courgette sticks (zucchini in the USA), or breaded cheese. Most of us find crispy and crunchy bâtonnets extremely tasty; if you begin picking at them, you often find that you cannot stop; you have been warned! For most vegetables, "en bâtonnet" should be 4-5 mm x 4-5 mm thick and 4-5 cm long. 

Your menu may also offer chicken, meats, and fish cuts as bâtonnets, and for those, there are no official measurements, but the shape of a small stick should still be visible in the final product. Bâtonnets will often be on children's menus; no knife or fork required, and then don’t be surprised if the English word fingers is used.


Bâtonnets de Courgettes Panés au Parmesan – Breaded, deep-fried courgettes flavored with Parmesan.

 
Bâtonnets de Courgettes au Parmesan
Le Journal des Femmes – Cuisine
Les Recettees de Nathou

Bâtonnets de Pommes de Terre - Usually, these are regular French fries that have been breaded and flavored. However, on one occasion, when a friend ordered them, the Bâtonnets de Pommes de Terre arrived as tasty, deep-fried sticks of mashed potatoes, flavored with herbs and cheese. 

 

Billes  Balls. Ball-shaped cuts of vegetables and fruits. Theoretically they should be the size of marbles which is the real meaning of billes,

 

Billes de Melon Caramélisées – Caramelized melon balls.

 

                        

Melon balls

Melon Salad, Mint and Cranberry Vinaigrette

Photograph courtesy of Charles Haynes

www.flickr.com/photos/haynes/929715808/

Boules – Balls; the term often used for ice-cream servings.

Coupe de Glace 2 Boules (or 3 Boules) aux Choix - A bowl of ice cream with two or three scoops of your choosing.

 
Glace 2 Boules
Two scoops of  ice cream.
Photograph courtesy of Alpha
https://www.flickr.com/photos/avlxyz/3128041016/

Boulettes, Polpettes – Meatballs

Brunoise – A cut in which the food item is first julienned into long thin strips (see Julienne) and then diced into small cubes about 2 mm x 2mm x 2mm. 

 

Joue de Cochon Braiséeen Vinaigrette de Riesling, Brunoise de Légumes  – Braised pig’s cheeks served in a Reisling vinaigrette with a mixed vegetable brunoise.

 

 
Brunoise
Photograph courtesy of Cristiano Cardoso
https://www.flickr.com/photos/139971667@N08/25990177904/

 

Chiffonnade - A technique seen with many leafy vegetables and meats that can be thinly sliced; often cured ham, smoked salmon, salami type saucissons, and cold meats.

 

A chiffonade cut also works well with herbs and vegetables that you will eat fresh, like basil and lettuce; it shows thinly cut, curly food strips. Chiffonade leaves are thinly cut or sliced; however, no chef would cut these leaves one by one, so they will either be rolled and then cut or cut in bunches.

 

Chiffonnades are often used to decorate or give a subtle taste where a large piece might take over the flavor. When you find very thin vegetable strips floating in your soup or on a serving of fish, that is the reason. 

 

Les Coquilles Saint Jacques Rôties au Beurre, Chiffonnade de Poireaux King scallops roasted in butter and served on the shell with thinly cut leeks.

 

A chiffonnade of lettuce.

Photograph courtesy of Meilleur du Chef

 

Ciselér or Ciselée – A fine cut, usually slices referring to the way herbs are prepared. (For meats and fish, the same word will be used for small cuts made in the skin of a fish or meat, for stuffing with herbs).

 

Poisson Cisselér

Photograph courtesy of Anaca3

Contisées  Similar to the Cisselér cut, but filled with a vegetable or other flavoring.


Les St Jacques Contisées a la Truffe de Bourgogne – The meat of the King Scallop sliced and stuffed with shavings from the Burgundy truffle.

Émincé – Sliced. Dishes that include slices of chicken, veal or beef. Part of a menu listing, similar to the two below. Émincer – Slice. A cut used for curly or curved vegetables such as cabbage, mushrooms, onions where long straight flat slices used for julienne cuts cannot be made. Émincer may be in recipes but not on the menu.


Émincé de Bœuf Mariné aux Épices et Légumes du Moment – Sliced, marinated beef flavored with spices and the season’s vegetables.


Emincé de Veau à la Sauce à la Crème et Champignons de Paris, Purée de Pommes de Terre – Slices of veal in a cream sauce with button mushrooms and accompanied by pureed potatoes.

 

 

Emincé de Boeuf aux Champignons

Sliced beef with button mushrooms

Photograph and recipe courtesy of CuisineAZ

 

Jardinière or Jardinière de Legumes - A dish or serving of diced cooked vegetables, such as a garnish accompanying the main course. Originally this was a cut used for carrots, and turnips cut 4 – 5 mm long by about 3 cm across. Today a Jardinière de Legumes is often seen with other vegetables, including green beans and potatoes.

The word Jardinière is an old French word for garden vegetables, and it remains in use to indicate freshness. You will also see other uses of the word Jardinière on menus, including a Jardinière de Fruits, choice fruits from the garden served as a fruit salad. 


Pigeonneau Rôti au Four, Purée de Pommes de Terre et Jardinière De Legumes – A young, oven-roasted pigeon, (a squab) served with mashed potatoes accompanied by small-cuts of mixed  vegetables.

 

  

La Jardinière de Legumes

Photograph courtesy of Sylvain Torchet

https://www.flickr.com/photos/135631483@N07/22366011744/

Julienne – On your menu, the word Julienne will indicate vegetables cut into long and thin shapes. Julienne vegetables are around 1mm x 1-2 mm x 2 mm x 5-7 cm long. 

 

Dorade Royale, Julienne de Légumes à la Crème de Champagne – Gilthead sea bream served with a julienne of vegetables accompanied a by a cream of Champagne sauce.

 
Cucumbers Julienne
Photograph courtesy of Stacy Spensley
https://www.flickr.com/photos/notahipster/4670390442/

Macédoine – Vegetables and occasionally fruit cut to one of the French sizes for finely cut vegetables. A macédoine should be cubes about 1 cm by 1 cm by 1 cm or less. Great importance is given to uniformity. 

 

Chair de Crabe, Macédoine de Légumes – Crab meat accompanied by a macédoine of mixed vegetables.

 

 
 Macédoine de Légumes
Photograph courtesy of marmiton

 

Mirepoix or Matignon - The Mirepoix cut is for small cubes cut close to 5 mm 5 mm x 5 mm x 5mm for both fruit and vegetables, Mirepoix is usually added to complement other dishes. (Historically a mirepoix made with vegetables only was a mirepoix au maigre, a lean mirepoix. A mirepoix with ham was called a mirepoix au gras, a fatty mirepoix. Most dishes made today with Mirepoix on your menu will not be specific but usually include onions, carrots, and celery, possibly with added lardons). Despite that, do not be surprised if your menu offers a mirepoix aux fruits; that would be finely cut fruits. (There is a pretty town called Mirepoix in the department of Ariege, but I am not aware of any connection. However, if your visiting Mirepoix in August they have an annual international festival of the art of the Marionette).

 

Filet de Dorade Grise à la Vapeur, Jus de Crustacés et Mirepoix de Legumes – A filet of steamed black seabream prepared with a sauce made from the juices of crustaceans and served a mirepoix of mixed vegetables.

 

Flan Caramel-coco, Mirepoix de Fruits Frais- A flan flavored with caramel and coconut served with a mirepoix of fresh fruits.

 


A Mirepoix in preperation
Photograph courtesy of Desi
https://www.flickr.com/photos/desiitaly/1323634996/

 

Paysanne – In the manner of the country, the countryside. (Some menus translate paysanne as “in the manner of a peasant"). Vegetables cut into thin slices with shapes that correspond best to the form of the vegetable. For example, carrots may be thinly sliced into circular button shapes or half-round buttons, thus utilizing all vegetables as effectively as possible for the dish being prepared. 

 

 
Salade Paysanne
Photograph courtesy of Trip Advisor

Pommes Frites or just Frites. French fries or chips can be a culinary feast on their own. The ideal French fry has no fixed size, though most French schools of the culinary arts teach their would-be chefs to cut them 5mm x 5 mm thick and 5 or 6 cm long. An excellent French fry is crispy and slightly crunchy on the outside; it will be colored a golden brown, and on the inside, it will be cooked and tender.  

 

Steak FritesSalade Verte, Verre De Bordeaux ou Galopin De Biere – Steak with French fries and a green salad served with a glass of Bordeaux wine or a galopin, 125 ml of beer.

 

 
Pommes Frites
Photograph courtesy of cyclonebill
https://www.flickr.com/photos/cyclonebill/2222767350

Pommes Pailles and Pommes Allumettes – See Allumettes: Pommes Allumettes above.

Pomme de Terre a l'Anglaise – Potatoes in the English manner. While these potatoes will always be boiled, there is a shape associated, with these potatoes, somewhat like a chicken's egg. An exact size is not too important, but your ideal Pomme de Terre a l'Anglaise will be about 5 cm long with a 2.5-3 cm diameter.

 

Truite Meunière Entière aux Amandes Effilées, Pommes de Terre à l'Anglaise – A whole trout prepared in a Sauce Meunière (butter, parsley  and lemon) with added flaked almonds accompanied by boiled potatoes. (For more about Sauce Meunière see the post: Sole Française - Dover Sole in French Cuisine: Sole Meunière).


Pommes de Terre Anglaise.
Photograph and instructions courtesy of La Cuisine d’Annie.

Pommes de Terre Mignonnette - Large French fries cut approximately 5mm x 5mm x 5 cm long. 

Pommes Pont-Neuf, Pommes de Terre Pont-Neuf, on many menus just as Pont-Neuf  Large French fries also called Frites Parisienne. From my experience the name doesn't come with a fixed size, just large fries; just poetry on the menu for large fries. The owner of the name is the Ponte Neuf Bridge; the oldest existing bridge in Paris. When they began to sell large size fries from pushcarts in the 1830s and continued for over 100 years ago the bridge’s name became part of the fries’ name. The Pont Neuf is the oldest existing bridge in Paris. Some menus listings use the name Pont Neuf for cuts of deep-fried vegetables.

 

Filet de Bœuf aux Girolles Copeaux de Foie Gras et Pommes Pont Neuf Maison – fillet steak prepared with the wild girolle, chanterelle mushroomsshavings of fattened duck liver, accompanied by the restaurant’s take on Pont Neuf fries.

 


Pommes Pont-Neuf
Photograph courtesy of Secret de Chef.

Pommes Gaufrette – Potato crisps or potato chips shaped with a lattice-like decoration that looks like a tiny Belgium waffle, fried to a crisp. Your French-English dictionary may translate gaufre as a waffle. However, as you have probably already discovered, few French chefs pay much attention to English-French-English dictionaries and a gaufrette in English is a wafer, and a gaufre is a waffle. So, don’t expect your pommes gaufrette to always look like British wafers.


Côtes de Cochon Fermier, Mousseline De Pomme de Terre, Pommes Gaufret – Pork chop from a farm-raised pig served with a potato mousse and pommes gaufret.

 

 

Pommes Gaufret

Photograph and instructions courtesy of Chef Simon

Tagliatelle – Read your menu carefully when tagliatelle is mentioned. Tagliatelle in France does not only indicate a particular pasta; it often indicates cuts of long ribbons of vegetables. Vegetable tagliatelle may be made with courgettes (zucchini), carrots, and more.

 

Filet de Lieu Jaune, Tagliatelles de Courgettes Réduction

au Sancerre - Pollack is a member of the cod family, with similar white, flaky meat. Here, the fish is accompanied by courgettes (the American Zucchini), sliced in long ribbons like tagliatelle and served with a Sancerre wine sauce. Pollack grow quite large, with many fish weighing in over 8 kilos (18 lbs.), so you will nearly always be served a fillet. 

  


Tagliatelles de Courgettes au Poulet et Noix de Cajou
Courgette (Zucchini) tagliatelle with chicken and cashew nuts
Photograph courtesy of  Les Fruits et Legumes Frais.

Tournés and Tourner – Vegetables cut into barrel shapes, mostly about 3 cm or 4 cm long; some vegetables such as potatoes have different rules and maybe larger. (There are other barrel cuts with different names).

 

Râble de Lapin et Ses Petits Legumes Tourné– Saddle of rabbit, served with small, barrel-shaped vegetables. The saddle is the meatiest part of a rabbit.

 

 
Legumes Tourner
Photograph and instructions courtesy of Bases de la Cuisine

 

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

 

Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
a French menu?

 

Just add the word, words, or phrase that you are searching for to the words "Behind the French Menu" (best when including the inverted commas), 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 posts that include over 4,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations.

 

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman 
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com 
Copyright 2010, 2022, 2023.

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Dining in Avignon, France. The Papeton d'Aubergine, the Châteauneuf-du-Pape Wine, and the Vaucluse Truffle.

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


Papeton d'Aubergine.
Aubergines/eggplants in the manner of the Pope's Hat.
Photograph courtesy of Cuisine Actuelle

Papeton d'Aubergine originated in Avignon and is served a pate, as an entrée (the French starter). Apart from eggplant, most French recipes include tomatoes, onions, and eggs flavored with garlic,  parsley, thyme, and bay leaves. (Avignon was home to seven popes from 1309 to 1379. The area around Avignon that the popes ruled was called Comtat Venaissin).

   


Papeton d'Aubergine
Photographcourtesy of Cuisine Actuelle.

Over the years, chefs have adjusted the Papeton recipe, with some claiming the original version used corn (USA maize) and not eggplant. I tend to doubt the use of corn as it arrived in Avignon about one hundred years after Columbus returned from the Americas, and by then, the popes had left the city! Despite the possible historical confusion when I have ordered Papeton d'Aubergines, all my memories of the dish have been good ones. Nevertheless, there are now more claimants for the authentic recipe than there were popes who ruled from Avignon.


Avignon
Photograph courtesy of jean-louis Zimmermann
https://www.flickr.com/photos/jeanlouis_zimmermann/5031941811/

Where did the eggplant, the aubergine, come from?

The eggplant came from somewhere in Asia, with China being the first country known to have cultivated the plant. How and when the eggplant arrived in Europe is not very clear, and while the usual suspects, the Ancient Greeks, and Romans, who both have long histories tying them to France, have any recipes that include eggplants. Epicurious's online magazine (Condé Nast) focuses on food and cooking-related topics and suggests that the eggplant came to Europe from India sometime around the eighth century, possibly with seeds carried by Jewish merchants. (Epicurious's recipe includes cheese, an addition not usually seen in France).


Eggplants/Aubergines
Photograph courtesy of Håvar og Solveig
https://www.flickr.com/photos/seenful/3826712768/
 

Where is Avignon

The city of Avignon is in the prefecture, the regional capital of the department of Vaucluse in the region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. The region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur includes about half of France's Mediterranean coast from the Camargue to the Italian Mediterranean border. Avignon is just 40 km (25 miles) from the city of Arles, which borders the Camargue.  Nimes is 45 km (28 miles) from Avignon and Saint-Rémy-de-Provence is 25 Km (15 miles) while Nice is 270 km ( 168 miles).

The tourist information office of Avignon has an English-language website:

https://avignon-tourisme.com/en/   

 


Find Avignon on the map.
Photograph copyright Google.

You may wonder what the Popes of Rome were doing in Avignon.

Historically, a disagreement between King Philip IV of France and the papacy created the background for change, but it was the refusal of Pope Clement V in 1305 to move to Rome when he was elected pope that caused a breach in the church. Clement V ruled the Roman Catholic world from Avignon; then the capital of a Papal State called Comtat Venaissin, with its capital in Avignon, as did another six popes. However, it is impossible to be sure that the Avignon popes ever tasted any version of Papeton d'Aubergines. (Comtat Venaissin had become a papal territory in 1274 and only returned to France with the French Revolution).

The wine called Châteauneuf-du-Pape


Châteauneuf-du-Pape 2009
From the winerery named after Pierre Le Roy de Boiseaumarié
Photograph courtesy of Jameson Fink
https://www.flickr.com/photos/jamesonfink/5593290096/

While the popes were in Avignon, they enjoyed fine wines and influenced the growth of the vineyards around the summer palace they were building.  The results are the often outstanding red and white wines called Châteauneuf-du-Pape. The wine comes from grapes that grow near the village of  Châteauneuf-du-Pape, where the popes had built their summer palace, 12 km (7 miles) from Avignon. This specific appellation produces more wine than the whole of the Northern Rhone region. That's what you call a popular wine! Much of the investment in the local wine industry owes its growth to the popes of Avignon.


The village of Châteauneuf-du-Pape
and the remains of part of the castle's keep.
Photograph courtesy of Cycletours Holidays
https://www.flickr.com/photos/cycletours_holidays/50293529717/

Châteauneuf-du-Pape set the AOC/AOP standard.

In the early 20th century, Châteauneuf-du-Pape was a much-appreciated wine, but it was plagued by wine fraud, with bottles from anywhere being labeled Châteauneuf-du-Pape. The anger and concern of the tricked public and the real vintners saw the first wine regulations produced, especially for Châteauneuf-du-Pape in 1923. Those rules provided the prototype for the subsequent AOC rules and became law in 1933. In 1936 Châteauneuf-du-Pape became the first wine to receive an AOC.  A local vintner Pierre Le Roy de Boiseaumarié, (1890-1967) of Château Fortia, was the principal architect of these early regulations as well as the future AOC and AOP regulations. The rules that include a minimum alcohol level for wines and limits on yields as well as the types of grapes can be grown.

For Châteauneuf-du-Pape, both a red and a white wine are allowed. Still, unlike the case with other appellations, the permitted grape varieties are not differentiated into principal and accessory varieties. So. theoretically, it is possible to produce varietal Châteauneuf-du-Pape from any one of the eighteen grapes allowed. In reality, most red Châteauneuf-du-Pape wines are blends dominated by Grenache, though the taste from different producers can vary. When you have found a Châteauneuf-du-Pape that you like, stay with that vintner. Only one of every 16 bottles of Châteauneuf-du-Pape is a white wine. Châteauneuf-du-Pape wines have high alcohol levels, typically 13-15%, and they must naturally be at least 12.5%.

La Truffe du Mont Ventoux et du Comtat Venaissin
The black truffle found in the department of Vaucluse.

A truffle is a subterranean fungus.  Truffles are appreciated for the way they accentuate the flavor of other foods, The best way to enjoy truffles is when they are served raw and shaved over warm foods that are not highly flavored. Truffle oil, if it is genuine, is made with truffles steeped in oil, usually olive oil.


Black Truffle Pasta
Photograph courtesy Cooking with Kerry

The black truffles of Mont Ventoux and the Comtat Venaissin are the tuber melanosporum. The same truffle as the Perigord Truffle, the black diamond, France's most famous and most expensive truffle. If you are visiting the area in the winter, there are several truffle markets that you can visit. The earliest truffle market of the year is in the town of Carpentras is 26 km (16 miles) from Avignon (from mid-November to mid-March, early on Friday mornings).


Toasts au Truffes
Black truffles on toast.
Photograph courtesy of J’MC

Œufs Brouillés aux Truffe Noir:

Œufs Brouillés aux Truffe Noir are scrambled eggs, with the black truffles. A brouillade is a light version of scrambled eggs that originated in Provence. The egg whites are beaten separately and only then mixed with the yolks; that provides a light and delicate form of scrambled eggs. I have tried this three times, and only once could I taste and enjoy the change that truffles make; then, the truffles were grated in front of me. The other times, the dishes had no truffle taste, just a few black dots and a hint of garlic, and that was it. Make sure that when you order black truffle dishes, the truffles are grated in front of you!  NB: Truffles, like virgin olive oils, lose their taste when cooked.


The flag of the Confrerie of the Vaucluse truffle.
Photograph courtesy of vpagnouf
https://www.flickr.com/photos/vpagnier/13348834865/

This Confrérie whos flag is shown above are a Brotherhood and Sisterhood, who work to protect and promote the good name of the truffle from Vaucluse and have the Comtat Venaissin insignia on their flag.

The black truffle - the Tuber Melanosporum, the Truffe du Mont Ventoux, the Truffe du Comtat Venaissin, and the Truffe du Périgord in the languages of France’s neighbors:
(Catalan -  tòfona negra), (Dutch - zwarte truffel ), (German -  Perigord-Trüffel, Schwarze Trüffel), (Italian -  tartufo nero), (Spanish -  trufa negra), ( Latin -  trufa negra).

The Aubergine or Eggplant in the languages of France’s neighbors:
(Catalan -   albergínia), (Dutch -   eggplant), (German - aubergine ), (Italian – melanzana), (Spanish - berenjena), (Latin -  solanum melongena).

 ------------------

Searching for the meaning of words, names or phrases
on
a French menu?

Just add the word, words, or phrase that you are searching for to the words "Behind the French Menu" (best when including the inverted commas), 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 posts that include over 4,000 French dishes with English translations and explanations.

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

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman 
behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com 
Copyright 2010, 2022, 2023

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

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