FabulousFusionFood's Starters/Entrée Recipes Home Page
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 1141 recipes in total:
Page 1 of 12
| Abacate Recheado com Atum (Avocado Stuffed with Tuna) Origin: Guinea-Bissau | Another Receipt for Gravy Soup Origin: Britain | Baked Crab Rangoon Origin: America |
| Abrikossuppe (Apricot Soup) Origin: Denmark | Antipasto Chef's Salad Origin: Britain | Baked Stuffed Razor Clams Origin: Britain |
| Accras de Morue Origin: French Guiana | Antipasto di Funghi e Gamberetti (Mushroom and Prawn Antipasto) Origin: Italy | Balık °C7;orbası (Mackerel Soup) Origin: Turkey |
| Accras de Morue (Salt Cod Fritters) Origin: Saint Barthelemy | Antipasto Rice Origin: Italy | Balnamoon Skink Origin: Ireland |
| Accras de Morue (Salt Cod Fritters) Origin: Sint Maarten | Appetizer Pate Cheesecake Origin: American | Bamya °C7;orbası (Okra Soup) Origin: Turkey |
| Accras de Morue (Salt Cod Fritters) Origin: Saint-Martin | Apple Coleslaw Origin: Britain | Banana and Chickpea Vegan Sheek Kebab Origin: Britain |
| Ackee Dip Origin: Mexico | Apple, Cider and Onion Soup Origin: British | Bananes Plantain au Gari (Plantains with Gari) Origin: Togo |
| Aguají (Plantain Soup) Origin: Dominican Republic | Aquapatys Origin: England | Bantan (Flour Porridge and Meat Soup) Origin: Mongolia |
| Aijet Beythat (Spiced Eggs) Origin: Saudi Arabia | Arbroath Smokies Origin: Scotland | Barley Gruel Origin: England |
| Air Fryer Chicken Livers Origin: Britain | Arran Potato Salad Origin: Scotland | Barley Soup Origin: Scotland |
| Air Fryer Stuffed Mushrooms Origin: Britain | Artichauts camus sauce bretonne (Camus artichokes with Breton sauce) Origin: France | Barley, Mushroom and Spring Onion Soup Origin: Britain |
| Ajiaco Colombiano (Colombian Ajiaco) Origin: Colombia | Aruban Iced Coconut Soup Origin: Aruba | Bat Wing Soup Origin: American |
| Ajlouke de Carottes (Carrot Starter) Origin: Tunisia | Asharbal Leebia (Libyan Soup 2) Origin: Libya | Batinjaan Zalud (Moroccan Aubergine Salad) Origin: Morocco |
| Ajo Blanco (White Garlic Sauce) Origin: Spain | Asian-style Lettuce Wraps Origin: Fusion | Battered Dandelion Flowers Origin: Britain |
| Al-Motubug (Stuffed Pastry Squares) Origin: Saudi Arabia | Asian-style Onion Pancakes Origin: Fusion | Bayth Mashi (Stuffed Eggs) Origin: Saudi Arabia |
| Alcapurrias de Jueyes (Crab-Stuffed Fritters) Origin: Puerto Rico | Asparagus Salad Origin: Britain | Bayth Mashi (Stuffed Eggs) Origin: Lebanon |
| Alexanders Soup Origin: Britain | Asparagus Soup Origin: Britain | Bean and Almond Salad Origin: South Africa |
| Aliter Betas Elixas (Another: Stewed Beets) Origin: Roman | Atún Imperial (Imperial Tuna) Origin: Peru | Beanpot Chowder Origin: British |
| Aliter in Echino (Sauce for Sea Urchin) Origin: Roman | Athenian Cabbage Origin: Roman | Beef and Cabbage Soup Origin: Britain |
| Aliter In Echino (Sea Urchin, Another Way) Origin: Roman | Auld Alliance Origin: Scotland | Beef and Potato Soup Origin: South Africa |
| Aliter Ofellae (Starters, Another Way) Origin: Roman | Aurangabadi Naan Qaliya Origin: India | Belarusian Salad Origin: Belarus |
| Aliter Ofellae II (Starters, Another Way II) Origin: Roman | Avgolemono (Egg and Lemon Soup) Origin: Greece | Belfast Potted Herring Origin: Northern Ireland |
| Aliter Ofellae III (Starters, Another Way III) Origin: Roman | Bò Tái Chanh (Lemon-cured Beef with Rice Paddy Herb) Origin: Vietnam | Bermuda Fish Chowder Origin: Bermuda |
| Aliter Ofellas (Roast Morsels, Another Way) Origin: Roman | Baajiya (Somali Black-eyed Pea Fritters) Origin: Somalia | Bermuda Fish Chowder II Origin: Bermuda |
| Aliter porros (Boiled Leeks in Cabbage Leaf Salad) Origin: Roman | Baba Ghanoush Origin: Iraq | Bermuda Onion and Potato Salad Origin: Bermuda |
| Aliter porros II (Salad of Leeks Boiled with Juniper) Origin: Roman | Baba Ghanoush Origin: Egypt | Bermudan Fishcakes Origin: Bermuda |
| Aliter porros III (Salad of Leeks with Broad Beans) Origin: Roman | Baba Ghanoush Origin: Jordan | Bermudan Spinach Salad Origin: Bermuda |
| Aljota (Fish Soup) Origin: Malta | Baba Ghanoush Origin: Turkey | Beurre de crevettes grises (Brown shrimp butter) Origin: France |
| Almogrote Gomero (Cheese and Tomato Paste) Origin: Spain | Baba Ghanoush Origin: Armenia | Bez perevoda (Green Borscht) Origin: Russia |
| Almondigas (Filipino Meatball Soup with Sotanghon Noodles) Origin: Philippines | Baba Ghanoush Origin: Lebanon | Biga Acida (Italian Sourdough Starter) Origin: Italy |
| Alu ko Achhar (Potatoes with Split Peas) Origin: Nepal | Baba Ghanoush Origin: Palestine | Biltong Pâté Origin: South Africa |
| Ancient Curd Cheese Origin: Britain | Bacon and Cabbage Soup Origin: Ireland | Bisgedi Ceirch (Oat Biscuits) Origin: Welsh |
| Angels on Horseback Origin: Britain | Bajiy (Red Lentil Fritters) Origin: Somalia | |
| Angels on Horseback with Prunes Origin: Britain | Bak Kut Teh (Spicy Sparerib Soup) Origin: Malaysia |
Page 1 of 12