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Le Guide Culinaire (French pronunciation: [lə ɡid kylinɛːʁ]) is Georges Auguste Escoffier's 1903 French restaurant cuisine cookbook, his first. It is regarded as a classic and still in print. Escoffier developed the recipes while working at the Savoy, Ritz and Carlton hotels from the late 1880s to the time of publication.
Le répertoire de la cuisine is a professional reference cookbook written by Théophile Gringoire and Louis Saulnier and published in 1914; it has gone through multiple editions and been translated into multiple languages. It summarizes Le Guide culinaire by Auguste Escoffier, and adds a significant amount of Saulnier's own material.
Ma Cuisine (1934) Le Traité sur L'art de Travailler les Fleurs en Cire (Treatise on the Art of Working with Wax Flowers) (1886) Le Guide Culinaire (1903) Les Fleurs en Cire (new edition, 1910) Le Carnet d'Epicure (A Gourmet's Notebook), a monthly magazine published from 1911 to 1914; Le Livre des Menus (Recipe Book) (1912) L'Aide-memoire ...
Larousse Gastronomique (pronounced [laʁus ɡastʁɔnɔmik]) is an encyclopedia of gastronomy [2] first published by Éditions Larousse in Paris in 1938. The majority of the book is about French cuisine, and contains recipes for French dishes and cooking techniques.
Le guide culinaire, aide-mémoire de cuisine pratique [The Culinary Guide, practical kitchen cheat sheet] (in French) (2nd ed.). Paris : Colin. Escoffier, Auguste (1912). Le Guide Culinaire: aide-mémoire de cuisine pratique [The Culinary Guide, practical kitchen cheat sheet] (in French) (3rd ed.). Gallica. Archived from the original on 21 ...
Menon, La nouvelle cuisine (1742) The term nouvelle cuisine has been used several times in the history of French cuisine, to mark a clean break with the past. In the 1730s and 1740s, several French writers emphasized their break with tradition, calling their cooking "modern" or "new". Vincent La Chapelle published his Cuisinier moderne in 1733 ...
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The book was a guide to running a Victorian household, with advice on fashion, child care, animal husbandry, poisons, the management of servants, science, religion, and industrialism. [ 27 ] [ 28 ] Despite its title, most of the text consisted of recipes, such that another popular name for the volume is Mrs Beeton's Cookbook .