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Pain de campagne ("country bread" in French), also called "French sourdough", [1] is typically a large round loaf ("miche") made from either natural leavening or baker's yeast. Most traditional versions of this bread are made with a combination of white flour with whole wheat flour and/or rye flour, water, leavening and salt.
The pan bagnat (pronounced [pɑ̃ baˈɲa]) (pan bagna, and alternatively in French as pain bagnat) [2] [3] [a] is a sandwich that is a specialty of Nice, France. [5] The sandwich is composed of pain de campagne, a whole wheat bread, enclosing a salade niçoise, [6] a salad composed mainly of raw vegetables, hard boiled eggs, anchovies and/or tuna, and olive oil, salt, and pepper.
Pain de campagne – French for "country bread", and also called "French sourdough", [5] it is typically a large round loaf (miche) made from either natural leavening or baker's yeast. Most traditional versions of this bread are made with a combination of white flour with whole wheat flour and/or rye flour, water, leavening and salt.
Pain de campagne; Pain de mie; Pain petri This page was last edited on 20 May 2020, at 16:25 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
Coq au vin (chicken braised in red wine, lardons and mushrooms) Escargots de Bourgogne (snails baked in their shells with parsley butter) Gougère (cheese in choux pastry) Jambon persillé, also known as Jambon de Pâques (a marbled ham with parsley) Oeufs en meurette (poached eggs in a red wine and pepper reduction sauce)
Brioche, along with pain au lait and pain aux raisins—which are commonly eaten at breakfast or as a snack—form a leavened subgroup of Viennoiserie. Brioche is often baked with additions of fruit or chocolate chips and served on its own or as the basis of a dessert, with many regional variations in added ingredients, fillings, or toppings.
Campagne, Oise, in the Oise department; Campagne, former commune of the Somme department, now part of Quesnoy-le-Montant; Campagne-d'Armagnac, in the Gers department; Campagne-lès-Boulonnais, in the Pas-de-Calais department; Campagne-lès-Guines, in the Pas-de-Calais department; Campagne-lès-Hesdin, in the Pas-de-Calais department
In ancient Rome, panis focacius was a flatbread baked in the ashes of the hearth (focus in Latin). [1] This eventually became a diverse variety of breads that include focaccia in Italian cuisine, hogaza in Spain, fogassa in Catalonia, fugàssa in Ligurian, pogača in the Balkans, pogácsa in Hungary, fougasse in Provence (originally spelled fogatza), and fouace or fouée in other regions of ...