<< Chapter < Page Chapter >> Page >

Section 2: reading

1. Pre-reading

Discuss the questions with your friends.

  • What kinds of food should be included in a menu? In what order?
  • How many kinds of menu do you know? What are they?
  • How is a menu formatted?
  • What are the basic rules for organizing a menu?

2. Reading

The menu

Offering the right varieties, combinations, and preparations of foods is a basic requirement for a restaurant's commercial success, but what will work for each restaurant differs from case to case. The reading selection below gives you a basic insight of a menu composition.

The classical menu structure

A successful menu depends upon composition-the right combination of foods, prepared perfectly. So claimed Antonin Careme (1784-1833), the French chef who is considered the founder of classical cuisine. A table d'hote or a part menu is a predetermined succession of courses, offered at a set price. Today the a la carte menu, from which guests choose from a variety of courses and foods at different prices, is also popular.

The classical French menu contains thirteen courses. Today, a menu of this size is hardly ever offered. But even today's shorter menus follow the structure of the classical French menus as far as succession of courses is concerned. They always start with something light to stimu­late the appetite, build up to the main course, and then become lighter toward the end of the meal.

The Thirteen Courses of the Classic Menu for French Cuisine

Course English Example
1. Cold appetizer Melon with port
2. Soup Consomme brunoise
3. Hot appetizer Morels on toast
4. Fish Fillet of sole Joinville
5. Main course Saddle of Iamb
6. Intermediate course Sweetbreads with apparagus
7. Sorbet Champagne sorbet
8. Roast with salad Guinea hen stuffed with goose liver, salad
9. Cold roast Game terrine
10. Vegetable Braised lettuce with peas
11. Sweet Charlotte russe
12. Savory Cheese fritter
13. Dessert Jellied fruit

Short menus

The following examples of five-course, four-course, and three-course menus illustrate that even today's short menus follow the same se­quence based on the classical thirteen-course French menu. The individ­ual courses, however, have been merged in many cases. The original main course consisted of an entire, uncarved poultry, meat, or game animal - a whole prime rib of beef, for example. Today the entree has merged with the main course. The vegetable, at one time a separate course, today is served as a side dish with the main course. Cold appetizers are always served before the soup. Hot appetizers are served after the soup.

4-course Menu

Course Examples
Cold appetizer Melon with port
Soup -
Warm appetizer Fillet of sole JoinvilleSteamed rice
Main course Chicken breast with trufflesSteamed riceBraised lettuce with bacon
Dessert Hazelnut cream

4-course Menu

Course Examples
Cold appetizer -
Soup Consomme with marrow
Warm appetizer Gnocchi, Parisian style
Main course Roast PheasantWilliamspotatoes Red cabbage with chestnuts
Dessert Peach Melba

The menu format

In many cases, especially in restaurants serving haute cuisine, the a part or table d'hote menu is beautifully handwritten to emphasize the tradi­tional character of the restaurant. In less fancy restaurants, a modern variant that is similar but simpler is often used: the blackboard, on which are written recommendations concerning the day's specialties.

Get Jobilize Job Search Mobile App in your pocket Now!

Get it on Google Play Download on the App Store Now




Source:  OpenStax, English for tourism. OpenStax CNX. Aug 13, 2009 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10770/1.2
Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google Inc.

Notification Switch

Would you like to follow the 'English for tourism' conversation and receive update notifications?

Ask