I Know How to Cook by Ginette Mathiot

    • Categories: French; Vegan; Vegetarian
    • Ingredients: shallots; tarragon
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Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Eggs with cheese (Oeufs au fromage)

    • snarkattack on February 23, 2013

      I love this because a) it encourages me to use up leftovers and b) it reminds me that poaching eggs is not as hard as I think for a kitchen dumbo like me! However, I do prefer it as brunch/breakfast rather than a main.

  • Onion soup (Soupe à l'oignon au potage Parisien)

    • eatdrinkstagger on August 18, 2022

      used leftover rice instead of suggested vermicelli

  • Onion soup gratin (Soupe gratinée)

    • eatdrinkstagger on July 27, 2022

      sprinkled some leftover fresh thyme over the top just before serving

  • Tournedos

    • treay on March 02, 2025

      This recipe is a combination of two recipes, the main tournedo recipe and the Tournedo Rossini. For this recipe, you wrap a slice of pancetta around the steak and season with salt & pepper. You then pan-fried for about 5 minutes on each side and put them on top of a toasted slice of crusty bread cut the same size as the steak with some pate on top. (The actual recipe uses foie-gras and truffle). It's usually served with some sauce, the traditional one being Madeira, but I made a creamy mushroom sauce with some brandy and Dijon mustard. It's a really outstanding recipe, but I only make it once or twice a year, when I find the fillet steak on special.....

  • Braised celery (Céleri au jus)

    • eatdrinkstagger on October 22, 2022

      this recipe is missing some pretty significant ingredients in its index - butter, onion, stock, juices from roast meat or similar

    • ellabee on October 22, 2022

      @eatdrinkstagger: See https://support.eatyourbooks.com/hc/en-us/articles/360039093454. They can be indexed as 'Store-cupboard ingredients' if they make up a majority of the ingredients. I'd agree about the inclusion of broth (or more specifically jus or roast meat juices, which exist as ingredient listings), because it's in the recipe title; that's just about the strongest standard for ingredient inclusion in EYB indexing. The answer might be that it's not in the English title.

  • Red cabbage with bacon (Chou rouge au lard)

    • Globegal on August 13, 2017

      This tastes good & is easy to make. Has a lot of fat. Think it would be better to use wine in place of water to braise the cabbage to perhaps cut the taste of the fat a little. It says it is 6 servings but the heaviness of the fat means it makes probably twice that. Will make again but cut it by 1/3. Nice use of extra red cabbage.

  • Duchesse potatoes (Pommes de terre duchesse)

    • eatdrinkstagger on October 27, 2022

      you also need: eggs, egg yolks, flour, butter

  • French toast (Pain perdu)

    • christopher_l6hth4 on May 03, 2026

      I used three eggs and added a teaspoon of vanilla extract.

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  • ISBN 10 071485736X
  • ISBN 13 9780714857367
  • Linked ISBNs
  • Published Sep 30 2009
  • Format Hardcover
  • Page Count 992
  • Language English
  • Edition US ed
  • Countries United States
  • Publisher Phaidon Press
  • Imprint Phaidon Press Ltd

Publishers Text

Ginette Mathiot's I Know How to Cook has been the cookery bible to three generations of French families. I Know How to Cook is to French cooking what The Silver Spoon is to Italian cuisine. First published in 1932, it has been regularly revised and updated and continues to be the customary gift for anyone setting up a new home, thus making it a best-seller and an essential fixture on the counters of French kitchens for over 75 years.

French food is recognized as the foundation of all good cooking, and Mathiot guides the reader through all the basics of cuisine with over 1,400 easy-to-use recipes, from simple omelets to beef bourguignon and creme brulee. Learn how to cook the French way and you'll know how to cook.

Read author and food blogger Clotilde Dusoulier on how it felt to translate a French icon in an article on the Phaidon website.

Read an interview with Clotilde Dusoulier about this book in Publishers Weekly



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