FabulousFusionFood's Starters/Entrée Recipes 4th Page

Four different soups. A range of cold starters/entrées.
Welcome to FabulousFusionFood's Starters/Entrée Recipes Page — A starter, also synonymous with entrée, in modern French table service and that of much of the English-speaking world, is a dish served before the main course of a meal. Outside North America and parts of English-speaking Canada, it is generally synonymous with the terms hors d'oeuvre or appetizer. It may be the first dish served, or it may follow a soup or other small dish or dishes.


The word entrée as a culinary term first appears in print around 1536 in the Petit traicté auquel verrez la maniere de faire cuisine, more widely known from a later edition titled Livre fort excellent de cuisine[b], in a collection of menus[c] at the end of the book. There, the first stage of each meal is called the entree de table (entrance to the table); the second stage consists of potaiges (foods boiled or simmered "in pots"); the third consists of one or more services de rost (meat or fowl "roasted" in dry heat); and the last is the issue de table (departure from the table). These four stages of the meal appear consistently in this order in all the books that derive from the Petit traicté.

The stages of the meal underwent several significant changes between the mid-16th and mid-17th century. Notably, the potage became the first stage of the service and the entrée became the second stage; and by 1650, the term "entrée" had lost its literal meaning and had come to refer to the stage of the meal after the potage and before the roast, entremets, and dessert.

The term "entrée" also came to refer to the dishes served at the entrée stage. While cookbooks and dictionaries of the 17th and 18th centuries rarely discuss the type of dishes appropriate to each stage of the meal with any specificity, entrées and the dishes of the other stages of the meal can be distinguished from each other by certain characteristics, such as their ingredients, cooking methods, and serving temperatures.[7] The distinct characteristics of the entrée were at first loosely observed, or perhaps more accurately, the "rules" were in a formative stage for several decades. By the early 18th century, though, certain ingredients and cooking methods were increasingly confined to the entrée stage of the meal.

Distinctions between the various types of entrées (grosses, grandes, de broche, relevé) had largely fallen out of use by the end of the 19th century, and menus of the first half of the 20th century routinely include entrées but not relevés. In France, the entrée slowly came to be associated primarily with its position in the meal rather than the composition of its dishes. Despite the objections of various food authorities who insisted on retaining the classical meaning of the word,[29] the term entrée came to refer to the first course of the meal, a small dish that precedes the main course (plat principal) in a three-course meal. The "new" use of the term, now common almost worldwide, is a return to the literal meaning of the word and a partial return to the medieval arrangement of the meal.


The alphabetical list of all the starters/entrée recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 887 recipes in total:

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Fish Tikka
     Origin: Britain
Ground Elder Soup
     Origin: Britain
Ifisashi
(Bean Leaves with Peanuts)
     Origin: Zambia
Fish-Stuffed Mushrooms
     Origin: Britain
Grouse Game Soup
     Origin: Britain
In Echino
(Of Sea Urchins)
     Origin: Roman
Fisk och paprikasoppa
(Fish and Bell Pepper Soup)
     Origin: Sweden
Gustum de Holeribus
(Vegetable Relish)
     Origin: Roman
In Echino Salso
(Salted Sea Urchins)
     Origin: Roman
Fiskgryta
(Fish Stew)
     Origin: Sweden
Gustum de praecoquiis
(Starter with Apricots)
     Origin: Roman
In Mitulis
(Of Mussels)
     Origin: Roman
Fisksoppa
(Swedish Fish Soup)
     Origin: Sweden
Gustum Versatile
(Turnover Antipasto)
     Origin: Roman
In ovis hapalis
(Boiled Eggs and Pine-nuts)
     Origin: Roman
Flowers and Greens Salad
     Origin: Britain
Gutweed Salad with Fennel and Orange
     Origin: Britain
In Ovis Hapalis
(Of Soft-boiled Eggs)
     Origin: Roman
French Onion Soup
     Origin: France
Hairst Bree
(Harvest Broth)
     Origin: Scotland
Indian Chilli Dipping Sauce
     Origin: Britain
Fresh Tomato Salsa
     Origin: Spain
Ham Mousse
     Origin: Britain
Ingelegde Vis II
(Pickled Fish)
     Origin: South Africa
Fried Cod Roe
     Origin: Scotland
Harees
     Origin: United Arab Emirates
Insalata con Fiori di Malva e
Salicornia

(Mallow Flower and Marsh Samphire
Summer Salad)
     Origin: Italy
Fried Dandelion
'Mushrooms'

     Origin: Britain
Harira Bidaouia
     Origin: Morocco
Insalata di Riso
(Rice Salad)
     Origin: Italy
Fried Fish Roe
     Origin: Saint Lucia
Harira Mauritanienne
(Mauritanian Harira)
     Origin: Mauritania
Intuba
(Endive)
     Origin: Roman
Frikadelu Zupa
(Meatball Soup)
     Origin: Latvia
Harvest Soup
     Origin: American
Irish Farm Broth
     Origin: Ireland
Frumente yn lentyn
(Frumenty in Lent)
     Origin: England
Hebridean Dulse Broth
     Origin: Scotland
Irish Kidney Soup
     Origin: Ireland
Gabon Cucumber Salad
     Origin: Gabon
Hedgerow Salad
     Origin: Ancient
Irish Potato and Parsley Soup
     Origin: Ireland
Game Terrine
     Origin: Britain
Herbae Rusticae
(Country Herbs)
     Origin: Roman
Irish Potato Soup
     Origin: Ireland
Garden Vegetable Soup
     Origin: British
Herbed Gorgonzola Cheesecake
     Origin: American
Irish Sorrel Soup
     Origin: Ireland
Garlic Soup
     Origin: France
Hinbeh B'zeit
(Dandelion Greens with Caramelized
Onions)
     Origin: Lebanon
Irish Vegetable Soup
     Origin: Ireland
Gaspachio
     Origin: Monaco
Hlelim
(Pasta, Meat and Vegetable Soup)
     Origin: Tunisia
Irn-Bru Pakoras
     Origin: Scotland
Gazpacho Soup
     Origin: Spain
Holisera in Fasciculum
(Horse Parsley)
     Origin: Roman
Isicia Omentata
(Roman Burgers)
     Origin: Roman
Gehackte Herring
     Origin: South Africa
Honey-glazed Prawns
     Origin: Roman
Island Fish Tea
     Origin: Bahamas
Gehiecks
(Offal Soup)
     Origin: Luxembourg
Hong Kong Snake Soup
     Origin: Hong Kong
Ius in lacertos elixos
(Boiled Mackerel with Sauce)
     Origin: Roman
Gem Squash Starter
     Origin: South Africa
Horta Vounou Salata
(Wild Greens Salad)
     Origin: Greece
Ius in thynno elixo
(Salt Tuna with Sauce)
     Origin: Roman
Ginger, Chicken and Coconut Soup
     Origin: Fusion
Hot and Sour Soup
     Origin: China
Jacket Potato Salad
     Origin: Ireland
Ginger, Pork and Mushroom Soup
     Origin: Korea
Hot Blood Soup
     Origin: Britain
Jani me Fasul
(Bean Jahni Soup)
     Origin: Albania
Gode Broth
(Basic Medieval Broth)
     Origin: England
Hotch Potch
     Origin: Scotland
Jeera Chicken
     Origin: Britain
Gooseberry Spiced Atchar
     Origin: South Africa
Houbova Polevka Myslivecka
(Hunters' Mushroom Soup)
     Origin: Czech
Jeerjeer Salata
     Origin: Sudan
Goosegrass and Wild Greens Soup
     Origin: Britain
Huîtres à la laitue de
mer

(Oysters with Sea Lettuce)
     Origin: France
Jibna Salata
     Origin: Sudan
Graubünden
(Barley Soup)
     Origin: Switzerland
Huîtres Chaudes au Curry, étuvée de
Choux

(Baked Oysters with Curried Cabbage)
     Origin: France
Jubnyeh
(Sweet Cheese Fritters)
     Origin: Somalia
Green Mix with Indian Ocean Seafood
     Origin: Tanzania
Huîtres sauce échalote
(Oysters with shallot sauce)
     Origin: France
Jusshell Enforced
     Origin: England
Grewel Forced
(Meat Gruel)
     Origin: England
Humarsúpa
(Creamy Icelandic Langoustine Soup)
     Origin: Iceland
Kachumbar
(Spiced Indian Salad)
     Origin: Britain
Grilled Figs in Prosciutto
     Origin: British
Hummus with Muqmad
     Origin: Djibouti
Kadhi
     Origin: India
Grilled Porcini
     Origin: Britain
Hummus with Oodkac
     Origin: Somalia
Karrísúpa
(Icelandic Curry Soup)
     Origin: Iceland
Gromperenzopp
(Potato Soup)
     Origin: Luxembourg
Iced Coconut Soup
     Origin: Cayman Islands
Gronden Benes
(Ground Beans)
     Origin: England
Iced Curry Soup
     Origin: Britain

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