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Belgian cuisine is widely varied among regions, while also reflecting the cuisines of neighbouring France, Germany and the Netherlands. It is characterised by the combination of French cuisine with the more hearty Flemish fare. Outside the country, Belgium is best known for its chocolate, waffles, fries and beer.
Belgian food writers (1 P) French fries (29 P) L. ... Traditional Speciality Guaranteed products from Belgium (3 P) W. Waffles (19 P) Pages in category "Belgian cuisine"
Couques de Dinant are fairly large. Here a smallish one is shown with a 1 euro coin for scale. The design is a view of Dinant. Due to their extreme hardness and fairly large size, couques de Dinant are not intended to be bitten into directly.
Fries with mayonnaise or one of a wide variety of other typical Belgian sauces is a fast food classic in Belgium, often eaten without any side orders. Prior to 1960, the choice of accompanying items was limited to a pickled herring , a large, cold meatball boulet or red-coloured garlic sausage cervela , or a beef or horsemeat stew.
Flemish stew, [1] known in Dutch as stoofvlees (pronounced [ˈstoːfleːs] ⓘ) or stoverij and in French as carbon(n)ade flamande, [2] [3] and also known as "grandma's stew", is a Flemish beef (or pork) and onion stew popular in Belgium, the Netherlands, Aosta Valley (Italy) and French Flanders.
Although moules-frites are popular in many countries, it is thought that the dish originated in Belgium. [4] It is likely that it was originally created by combining mussels, a popular and cheap foodstuff eaten around the Flemish coast, and fried potatoes, which were commonly eaten around the country in winter when no fish or other food was available.
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Paling in 't groen or Anguilles au vert [1] is a Belgian dish, mainly from the Flemish Region along the river Scheldt, between Dendermonde and Antwerp.The Dutch name (literally 'Eel in the Green') refers to freshwater eel in a green herb sauce.