European cuisine
European or western cuisine is the cuisines of Europe and other Western countries, including the cuisines brought to other countries by European settlers and colonists. Sometimes the term "European", or more specifically "continental" cuisine, is used to refer more strictly to the cuisine of the western parts of mainland Europe.
East Asians contrast Western cuisine with Asian styles of cooking, the way Westerners refer to the varied cuisines of East Asia as Asian cuisine.
The cuisines of Western countries are diverse, although there are common characteristics that distinguish them from those of other regions. Compared with traditional cooking of East Asia, meat is more prominent and substantial in serving size. Steak and cutlet in particular are common dishes across the West. Western cuisines also emphasize grape wine and sauces as condiments, seasonings, or accompaniments. Many dairy products are utilised in cooking. There are hundreds of varieties of cheese and other fermented milk products. White wheat-flour bread has long been the prestige starch, but historically, most people ate bread, flatcakes, or porridge made from rye, spelt, barley, and oats. The better-off also made pasta, dumplings and pastries. The potato has become a major starch plant in the diet of Europeans and their diaspora since the European colonisation of the Americas. Maize is much less common in most European diets than it is in the Americas; however, corn meal is a major part of the cuisine of Italy and the Balkans. Although flatbreads and rice are eaten in Europe, they are only staple foods in limited areas, particularly in Southern Europe. Salads are an integral part of European cuisine.
Formal European dinners are served in distinct courses. European presentation evolved from service à la française, or bringing multiple dishes to the table at once, into service à la russe, where dishes are presented sequentially. Usually, cold, hot and savoury, and sweet dishes are served strictly separately in this order, as hors d'oeuvre or soup, as entrée and main course, and as dessert. Dishes that are both sweet and savoury were common earlier in ancient Roman cuisine, but are today uncommon, with sweet dishes being served only as dessert. A service where the guests are free to take food by themselves is termed a buffet, and is usually restricted to parties or holidays. Nevertheless, guests are expected to follow the same pattern.
Historically, European cuisine has been developed in the European royal and noble courts. European nobility was usually arms-bearing and lived in separate manors in the countryside. The knife was the primary eating implement, and eating steaks and other foods that require cutting followed. In contrast in the Sinosphere, the ruling class were the court officials, who had their food cut ready to eat in the kitchen, to be eaten with chopsticks. The knife was supplanted by the spoon for soups, while the fork was introduced later in the early modern period, ca. 16th century. Today, most dishes are intended to be eaten with cutlery and only a few finger foods can be eaten with the hands in polite company.
Central European cuisines
All of these countries have their specialities. Austria is famous for their Wiener Schnitzel - a breaded veal cutlet served with a slice of lemon, the Czech Republic for their world renowned beers. Germany for their world-famous wursts, Hungary for their goulash. Slovakia is famous for their gnocchi-like Halusky pasta. Slovenia for their German and Italian influenced cuisine, Poland for their world-famous Pierogis which are a cross between a Ravioli and an Empanada. Liechtenstein and German speaking Switzerland are famous for their Rösti and French speaking Switzerland for their fondue and Raclettes.- Ashkenazi cuisine
- Austrian cuisine
- * Viennese cuisine
- Czech cuisine
- German cuisine
- * Baden cuisine
- * Bavarian cuisine
- * Hamburg cuisine
- * Hessian cuisine
- * Lower Saxon cuisine
- * Palatine cuisine
- * Pomeranian cuisine
- * Saxon cuisine
- ** Ore Mountain cuisine
- * Swabian cuisine
- Hungarian cuisine
- Polish cuisine
- Liechtensteiner cuisine
- Slovak cuisine
- Slovenian cuisine
- Swiss cuisine
Eastern European/Caucasian cuisines
- Armenian cuisine
- Azerbaijani cuisine
- Belarusian cuisine
- Bulgarian cuisine
- Georgian cuisine
- Kazakh cuisine
- Moldovan cuisine
- * Gagauzian cuisine
- Romanian cuisine
- Russian cuisine
- * Bashkir cuisine
- * Komi cuisine
- * Mordovian cuisine
- * North Caucasian cuisine
- ** Chechen cuisine
- ** Circassian cuisine
- * Tatar cuisine
- * Udmurt cuisine
- * Yamal cuisine
- Soviet cuisine
- Ukrainian cuisine
- * Crimean Tatar cuisine
Northern European cuisines
- Danish cuisine
- * New Danish cuisine
- Estonian cuisine
- Faroese cuisine
- Finnish cuisine
- Icelandic cuisine
- Latvian cuisine
- Lithuanian cuisine
- Livonian cuisine
- Norwegian cuisine
- Sami cuisine
- Swedish cuisine
Southern European cuisines
- Albanian cuisine
- Bosnian cuisine
- Byzantine cuisine
- Catalan cuisine
- Croatian cuisine
- Cypriot cuisine
- Gibraltarian cuisine
- Greek cuisine
- * Ancient Greek cuisine
- * Cretan cuisine
- * Greek Macedonian cuisine
- * Ionian cuisine
- Italian cuisine
- * Abruzzian cuisine
- * Ancient Roman cuisine
- * Apulian cuisine
- * Arbëreshë cuisine
- * Lombard cuisine
- * Neapolitan cuisine
- * Roman cuisine
- * Sardinian cuisine
- * Sicilian cuisine
- * Tuscan cuisine
- * Venetian cuisine
- Macedonian cuisine
- Maltese cuisine
- Montenegrin cuisine
- Ottoman cuisine
- Portuguese cuisine
- Sammarinese cuisine
- Serbian cuisine
- * Kosovan cuisine
- Spanish cuisine
- * Andalusian cuisine
- * Aragonese cuisine
- * Asturian cuisine
- * Balearic cuisine
- * Basque cuisine
- * Canarian cuisine
- * Cantabrian cuisine
- * Castilian-Leonese cuisine
- * Castilian-Manchego cuisine
- * Extremaduran cuisine
- * Galician cuisine
- * Menorcan cuisine
- * Valencian cuisine
- Turkish cuisine
Western European cuisines
- Belgian cuisine
- British cuisine
- * English cuisine
- ** Cornish cuisine
- ** Devonian cuisine
- ** Dorset cuisine
- * Northern Irish cuisine
- * Scottish cuisine
- * Welsh cuisine
- Dutch cuisine
- French cuisine
- * Corsican cuisine
- * Haute cuisine
- ** Cuisine classique
- ** Nouvelle cuisine
- Irish cuisine
- Luxembourgian cuisine
- Monégasque cuisine
- Occitan cuisine