FabulousFusionFood's Starters/Entrée Recipes 7th 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 996 recipes in total:

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Ova Elixa
(Boiled Eggs)
     Origin: Roman
Pâté breton
(Breton Pâté)
     Origin: France
Porc aux Choux de Chine
(Pork with Chinese Leaf)
     Origin: Madagascar
Ova Frixa
(Fried Eggs)
     Origin: Roman
Patina de Apua
(A Dish of Anchovies)
     Origin: Roman
Pork and Veal Terrine
     Origin: Britain
Oxeye Daisy Tabbolueh
     Origin: Fusion
Patinam Apicianam
(Apician Casserole)
     Origin: Roman
Pork and Wild Mustard Greens Wontons
     Origin: China
Oyster Croquets
     Origin: British
Patinam ex Lacte
(Milk Casserole)
     Origin: Roman
Pork Sparerib Soup
     Origin: Fusion
Oyster Mushroom Tom Yum
(Thai Hot and Sour Soup with Oyster
Mushrooms)
     Origin: Thailand
Pe ni lay hin cho
(Lentil Soup)
     Origin: Myanmar
Porotos con Riendas
(Bean and Pumpkin Soup)
     Origin: Chile
Oyster Stew
     Origin: Britain
Pea, Lettuce and Lovage Soup
     Origin: Britain
Porros Maturos Fieri
(Boiled Leek Salad)
     Origin: Roman
Oysters in Stout Batter with Carrageen
     Origin: Ireland
Peanut and Greens Soup
     Origin: African Fusion
Port of Spain Crabs and Dumplings
     Origin: Trinidad
Oysters on the Half Shell with
Mignonette Sauce

     Origin: France
Peapod Soup
     Origin: Scotland
Portable Soup
     Origin: Britain
Oysters Rockerfeller
     Origin: American
Peasant Soup
     Origin: Britain
Portuguese Percebes
     Origin: Portugal
Pâté Cregyn Gleision y
Fenai

(Menai Straits Mussel
Pâté)
     Origin: Welsh
Peixinhos da Horta
(Deep Fried Battered Beans)
     Origin: Portugal
Pot-cooked Chicken and Udon in Miso
Soup

     Origin: Japan
Pâté Nadolig
(Christmas Pâté)
     Origin: Welsh
Peli bara lawr, perlysiau a lemwn gyda
saws iogwrt

(Laverbread, Herb and Lemon Balls with
Yoghurt Sauce)
     Origin: Welsh
Potage au Vermicelle
(Vermicelli Soup)
     Origin: Britain
Pakistani Lamb Chops
     Origin: Britain
Pem Pem
     Origin: Gambia
Potage Bonne Femme
     Origin: France
Palpina
(Purslane and Lentil Soup)
     Origin: Iran
Pepones et Melones
(Water and Honey Melons)
     Origin: Roman
Potage Congolaise
(Congolese Soup)
     Origin: Congo
Pan-fried Squat Lobsters
     Origin: England
Pepre Watra
     Origin: Suriname
Potage Darblay
     Origin: Britain
Paneer 65
     Origin: Britain
Percebes Tapas
(Gooseneck Barnacles Tapas)
     Origin: Spain
Potage de Lombars
(Lombard Pottage)
     Origin: France
Panko Fried Oysters
     Origin: American
Perfect Cock-a-leekie Soup
     Origin: Scotland
Potage Madrilène
     Origin: Britain
Papaya and Orange Soup
     Origin: Anguilla
Perna Apruna ita Impletur Terentina
(Filled Gammon of Wild Boar Terentine)
     Origin: Roman
Potage Parabère
     Origin: France
Pappardelle with Slow-cooked Beef and
Mushrooms

     Origin: Britain
Pheasant Game Soup
     Origin: Britain
Potage St Germain
(Pea Soup St Germain)
     Origin: France
Papyns
(Poached Eggs in Golden Sauce)
     Origin: England
Pho Bo Noodle Soup
(Pho Bo Soup)
     Origin: Vietnam
Potatas a la Huancaína
(Huancaínan Potatoes)
     Origin: Peru
Paradise Salsa
     Origin: Cayman Islands
Picado de Rábano
(Radish Salad)
     Origin: Guatemala
Potato and Asparagus Salad
     Origin: Ireland
Parseli Ffilo Cennin a Chaws Caerffili
(Leek and Caerphilly Cheese Parcels)
     Origin: Welsh
Pickled Blackberries
     Origin: Britain
Potato and Mutton Soup
     Origin: Scotland
Parsley and Fennel Soup
     Origin: Britain
Pickled Bolete Mushrooms
     Origin: American
Potato Salad with Herb Sauce
     Origin: Ireland
Partan Bree
     Origin: Scotland
Picoroco Tempura
     Origin: Chile
Potato Salad with Thyme, Watercress
and Lovage

     Origin: Britain
Passatelli in Brodo
(Passatelli in Broth)
     Origin: Italy
Pigeon Breast with Red Wine Gravy,
Roast Leeks and Wild Mushrooms

     Origin: Britain
Potato Soup with Black Pudding
     Origin: Britain
Passatelli in Brodo
(Passatelli in Broth)
     Origin: San Marino
Pineapple Coleslaw
     Origin: Bahamas
Potato, Smoked Trout and Dill Salad
     Origin: Ireland
Pasta con Cece
(Pasta Soup with Chickpeas)
     Origin: San Marino
Piquant Tomato Soup
     Origin: Fusion
Potato, Tomato and Basil Soup
     Origin: Ireland
Pasta e Cece
(Pasta Soup with Chickpeas II)
     Origin: San Marino
Pissenlit au Lard
(Dandelion Salad with Bacon)
     Origin: France
Potes Cennin
(Leek Pottage)
     Origin: Welsh
Pasta Soup with Chicken Livers
     Origin: British
Pistachio Nut Pâté
     Origin: Spain
Potes Cennin a Thatws
(Leek and Potato Soup)
     Origin: Welsh
Pastechi di Tonijn
(Tuna Pastechi)
     Origin: Aruba
Pitche-Patche de Ostras
(Oyster and Rice Soup)
     Origin: Guinea-Bissau
Poto no Tucupi
(Brazilian Tucupi and Duck Soup)
     Origin: Brazil
Pastechi di Tonijn
(Tuna Pastechi)
     Origin: Curacao
Plain Scots Fish and Sauce Soup
     Origin: Scotland
Potted Hough
     Origin: Scotland
Pastechi Galiña
(Chicken Pastechi)
     Origin: Saba
Pokhlyobka
(Mushroom and Barley Soup)
     Origin: Russia
Potted Prawns
     Origin: Britain
Pastechi Galiña
(Chicken Pastechi)
     Origin: Aruba
Pokrzywa
(Polish Spring Nettle Soup)
     Origin: Poland
Potted Prawns II
     Origin: British
Pastechi Galiña
(Chicken Pastechi)
     Origin: Curacao
Poppadoms
     Origin: India
Pastechi Galiña
(Chicken Pastechi)
     Origin: Suriname
Poppadoms
     Origin: India

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