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Mendiant – Traditional French confectionery [4] Mont Blanc – Chestnut-based dessert; Norman Tart – French almond dessert; Opera cake – French almond cake with chocolate and coffee fillings; Pain d'épices – French quick bread
The thirteen desserts in the Provence Les 13 desserts de la tradition de Noël en Provence. The thirteen desserts (Occitan: lei tretze dessèrts) are the traditional dessert foods used to celebrate Christmas in the French region of Provence. The "big supper" (le gros souper) ends with a ritual 13 desserts, representing Jesus Christ and
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A Taiwanese sweet traditional pastry and dessert containing butter, flour, egg, sugar, and pineapple jam or slices. Pionono: Hispanic: May refer to several varieties of pastry popular in Spain, Latin America and The Philippines. Pictured are pionono in Málaga, Spain. Pithivier: France (probably Pithiviers)
Produced in numerous sizes, they can be consumed for breakfast, for snacks, and as a dessert depending in some measure on size. [3] Canelés can be paired with red wine [5] and many other beverages. Traditionally, "canelés" or "cannelés of Bordeaux" [9] are generally sold in bunches of 8 or 16.
Clafoutis (French pronunciation:; Occitan: clafotís or [kʎafuˈtiː]), sometimes spelled clafouti in Anglophone countries, is a French dish of fruit, traditionally unpitted black cherries, arranged in a buttered dish, covered with a thick but pourable batter, then baked to create a crustless tart.
A Yule log or bûche de Noël (French pronunciation: [byʃ də nɔɛl] ⓘ) is a traditional Christmas cake, often served as a dessert, especially in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Vietnam, [1] and Quebec, Canada. Variants are also served in the United States, United Kingdom, Cambodia, Scandinavia, Portugal, Spain, and Japan.
Mont Blanc's Italian name "montebianco" as a dessert (not the mountain), is a loan translation from the French term "mont-blanc ". [31] The term was in use as early as 1900. [32] The Swiss German word "Vermicelles" , a loanword from French, refers to a dessert of chestnut puree. [33]