خمسة من أعظم الطهاة الفرنسيين الحائزين على نجمة ميشلان يشيدون بمنتجي الطعام المحليين ويكشفون أسرار مطبخهم. في هذه الرحلة إلى أركان فرنسا الستة، يظهر لنا كل طاهٍ منطقته وأجمل مشاهدها والنساء والرجال (الصيادين، مربي الماشية، البستانيين، صانعي الجبن، الخبازين…) الذين يقدمون له المنتجات المتميزة. مع إضافة المطبخ الفرنسي مؤخرًا إلى قائمة التراث العالمي غير المادي، يشيد هذا الفيلم بالأشخاص الذين يساعدون في الحفاظ على سمعته. اشترك في wocomoCOOK: اتبع wocomo على الفيسبوك: |عرب اورج
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39 تعليق
At 23:45 the fish seems more "stressed" by his intrusive fingers… that he thinks !
Thank you for uploading this !
A lot of smooth cream!
The chiefs gave away no secrets except that they travel hundreds of miles to find the best product.
Pomp ego and limted reservations…
The passion and vigor these people have, both the chefs and farmers, is so inspiring. They deserve to be prosperous as they are 🌻
So, the secret of great French chefs is get to know your producers and their products.
No wonder there are few fat Frenchmen and women. They walk everywhere, and food is art, unlike here, where too much of what we eat is dumped out in great quantities.
Excellent Kerala spaces from India 🇮🇳 🙏🏻💕💐
What is the music at the end? Can anyone tell the name?
Hilarious how the food is of such pristine in France then a stones throw away in England it just turns to utter shit.
Marseille n'est pas en Côte d'Azur, mais en Provence….Make all the difference…
This happens everywhere in the US on the coasts to get dining. Everyone uses fresh and locally sourced ingredients. It’s not special to France and I would argue we do it better. They have coasts that they can no longer fish because they have depleted them. Also we love the French but they have killed and exploited much of Africa. So stfu
“It’s selective fishing it’s done anywhere else in the world”. The whole US fishing industry is done this way. We fish as lakes, streams, rivers and oceans and it’s regulated to size and count and season. We do it better than anyone else. The French think they invented food and fishing. They depleted almost everything in the ocean and their country side. If they disagree I will fight them and I know they will give up
Butter and cheese
✨
AMAZING CHEFS
The real secret of French cuisine. Butter. Butter. Butter.
they keep talking about pigs and ducks as "produce" wtf
Это не Украина, а россия
Если вы мне не заплатите то я не буду больше показывать фильм🎥🎬👀 и я не секс 👮 семенякольга александровна дизайнер цвета автор. Последний раз.
На мою карту денег платить 💰за фильм🎥🎬👀
Путин не президент и не продюсер подонок вор это семенякольга александровна дизайнер цвета автор и продюсер.
Хозяйка🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋 квартиры семенякольга александровна дизайнер цвета автор🗞.
Является одной мне нужно платить💰 налоги кредит💳 семенякольга александровна🙋⌚💳 дизайнер💳🆗⌚ цвета автор🗞🚔🚁 семенякольга🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋🍋💳🌐 семенякольгадизайнерцвета🇷🇺⌚ России📡⌚🇷🇺президент России семенякольга Александровна⌚💳🙋 дизайнер цвета автор. Я не можаева не Нина не алексейне хозяен моего акаунта.
🩸🙋Является одной уши семенякольга голос☑ озвучка смотреть⌚ не бесплатно.
Use subtitles, all the lovely French…
Those ducks were scared of the feeder guy
Come here after watching first episode of La Grande Maison Tokyo
Very good ❤❤❤👍👍👍
thank you for this great video ..
ITALIAN INFLUENCE ON FRANCE – The Medici influence on French Culinary Art; Italy has been called the mother of the Western cuisines, and perhaps its greatest contribution was its influence on France.
During the 15th and 16th centuries the French were influenced by the progressing culinary arts in Italy. Much of this happened because of Catherine de' Medici (a Florentine princess). Italian cooks were light years ahead of French culinary specialists.
Her impact was notably felt in the French royal kitchens.
The influential Italian is attributed for many gastronomical introductions between France and Italy — including bringing many Florentine dishes to the attention of Renaissance France.
Catherine, the great-granddaughter of Lorenzo the Magnificent, brought with her a cortege of Florentine chefs. These chefs were trained in the intricacies of Renaissance cuisine — experts in preparing Italian delicacies that are now considered the hallmark of French culture.
Elegance and design
Before Caterina came to France, French table manners were still fairly simple compared to Italy. Forks were not commonly used. Knives, spoons and finger-food were the norm. Food served was easily speared on the point of a knife, eaten by hand, or placed on a slice of bread and gulped down. Utensils and cups were shared, and soups and stews were drunk straight from the bowl.
Caterina introduced cultural innovations from the Italian Renaissance that marked the beginning of a type of refinement in the culinary arts of France. She established all sorts of new dining practices including the use of plates, table decorations, and individualized cutlery. Napkins were also progressively utilized by the upper classes to protect the delicate tablecloths that decorated the tables, as well as their own clothes
Caterina decorated her tables with flowers, table ornaments and silver forks, (which had long been used in Florence, but were almost never found on French tables.) The use of forks (and Italian table manners) quickly spread to wealthy French families who were eager to adopt this new Italian trend.
The Italian princess also brought delicate crystal glasses, glazed plates, and embroidered tablecloths. Prior to Caterina — ladies only entered the dining room on special occasions. With her arrival, women became a part of the feast for the first time. Dressed in all their finery they enhanced the dining experience. Caterina created cuisine fads such as fruit sherbet (after they were served at her wedding banquet) ice-cream and sorbet.
The Italian princess introduced many flavors to the French menu.
She is said to have brought artichokes, cabbage, truffles, caviar, mushrooms, figs Italian wines and white beans to the French table. Her chefs shared their skills in making breads, cakes, and pastries — and how to prepare fresh vegetables.
La Varenne
Caterinas cousin ‘Marie de Medici’ married Henry IV of France, and her chef Varenne, took inspiration from the Italian kitchen. La Varenne wrote a famous book: Le Cuisinier Francaise, which discussed the culinary developments in France that had been made thanks to the Medici family’s culinary encouragement.
Italian inovation
With the arrival of Catherine, French cuisine slowly moved away from silk-road spices (cinnamon, ginger, cloves and nutmeg) and turned towards garden herbs (rosemary, sage, oregano, basil). Caterina recommended that savory and sweet flavors be separated (during medieval times, sweet and savory had shared the same plate) and rather than smothering food with spices, French cooks attempted to enhance natural flavors instead.
Soon, meat was served in its own juices and fish was served in sauces that were created with fish stock.Other Italian dishes that Caterina introduced to France include Spinach, Crêpes, Soup d’Oignon, Macaroons and Béchamel sauce.
Legend has it that Caterina loved spinach so much that she insisted it be included in every meal and even today, any dish with spinach in it has become known to the French as ‘Florentine style’.
Crêpes or Crespelle?
The famous French delicacy ‘Crêpes’ takes its name from the Crespelle alla Fiorentina — in Renaissance times it was known as pezzuole della nonne (literally, “grandmother’s cloth”) unlike the French habit of eating crêpes sweet — Italians stuffed them with Ricotta and (you guessed it) spinach!
Carabaccia was another of Caterina’s favorite Tuscan dishes. This unique onion soup is found in French cuisine today under the name ‘Soup d’Oignon’.
Duck à l’orange was much appreciated at the Medici court in Florence — Catarina’s chefs brought this dish with them from Italy. In Florence, the orange duck was known as Papero al Melarancio.
Macarons
Colorful, soft, and delicately flavored, macarons are perhaps one of the most famous and treasured French desserts. But these delicious treats are actually Italian!
Macarons were created by Italian monks in the Middle Ages. Caterina’s pastry chefs brought the Macaron to France from Italy, where they had been produced in Venetian monasteries since the 8th century.
Béchamel Sauce
Salsa Colla (“glue sauce”) was the Italian prototype of Béchamel Sauce. In Renaissance times, the common population did not have the luxury of modern refrigeration and therefore they rarely used milk in their recipes since it spoiled quickly. Only the noble-born families could use milk in their sauces, so it is very plausible that Caterina’s chefs did indeed bring Béchamel sauce to the French kitchen. During Caterina’s reign, bread was replaced as a thickener by the lighter roux, flour and butter combined with a meat stock. The roux still remains part of the repertoire of French chefs today.
The Italian princess Caterina di Medici is frequently (if not always accurately) credited with introducing Italian cuisine and dining innovations to France via the Italian cooks who followed her there.
How influential was Caterina?
While many historians argue as to whether Caterina was really that pivotal to furthering the evolution of French cuisine, it is not possible to deny the gastronomic mark she left on her adopted home countries culinary culture….
In addition to leaving her stamp on fashion and society (thanks to her we have high heels and underpants), Catarina’s philosophy of dining became wildly popular among the wealthy upper-classes, and her favorite ingredients (spinach, garlic, caviar and truffles) became central to the French palette…..
Caterina started a Renaissance trend of perfection in culinary service in France. Her court introduced refinements in table etiquette, sophisticated utensils, and a complex dining ritual that was further elaborated over the following centuries, turning the French dinner table into a mesmerizing art of beautiful presentation and contemporary flavors.
Also, the French Language is 90% word for word Italian Latin.
Nice your videos,. thanks for showing.
Soon any Michelin CLASS chef will develop/ create METHUSALEH Meals to live 969 years LIFESPAN
sorry but.. Fish paired with red wine? … what a bad joke
Very good nice I subscribed you
This is waste of 52:03 minutes.
Appreciate all the best secrets for last
How are the laws of physics defied lol
The last shefs words were so true and beautiful it made me cry. Amazing documentary