European cuisine
{{Short description|Cuisine indigenous to Europe}}
Image:Eq it-na pizza-margherita sep2005 sml.jpg. Pizza is considered one of the national dishes of Italy and its variants are among the most popular foods in the world.]]
European cuisine (also known as Continental cuisine) comprises the cuisines originating from the various countries of Europe.{{cite book|title=Culinary Cultures of Europe: Identity, Diversity and Dialogue|publisher=Council of Europe}}
The cuisines of European countries are diverse, although some common characteristics distinguish them from those of other regions.Kwan Shuk-yan (1988). Selected Occidental Cookeries and Delicacies, p. 23. Hong Kong: Food Paradise Pub. Co. Compared to traditional cooking of East Asia, meat holds a more prominent and substantial role in serving size.Lin Ch'ing (1977). First Steps to European Cooking, p. 5. Hong Kong: Wan Li Pub. Co. Many dairy products are utilised in cooking.Kwan Shuk-yan, pg 26 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.Alfio Cortonesi, "Self-sufficiency and the Market: Rural and Urban Diet in the Middle Ages", in Jean-Louis Flandrin, Massimo Montanari, Food: A Culinary History from Antiquity to the Present, 1999, {{isbn|0231111541}}, p. 268ffMichel Morineau, "Growing without Knowing Why: Production, Demographics, and Diet", in Jean-Louis Flandrin, Massimo Montanari, Food: A Culinary History from Antiquity to the Present, 1999, {{isbn|0231111541}}, p. 380ff Those better-off would also make 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 (polenta or mămăligă) is a major part of the cuisine of Italy and the Balkans. Although flatbreads (especially with toppings such as pizza or tarte flambée) and rice are eaten in Europe, they are only staple foods in limited areas, particularly in Southern Europe. Salads (cold dishes with uncooked or cooked vegetables, sometimes with a dressing) 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 (appetizer) 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 (cutlery), and eating steaks and other foods that require cutting followed. This contrasted with East Asian cuisine, where the ruling class were the court officials, who had their food prepared 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.
History
=Medieval=
{{Main|Medieval cuisine}}
File:Fortezza Verrucole Archeopark interno.jpg, Tuscany, Italy]]
File:Antica trattoria Bagutto.jpg in Milan, Italy, the oldest restaurant in Italy and the second in Europe]]
In medieval times, a person's diet varied depending on their social class. However, cereal grains made up a lot of a medieval person's diet, regardless of social class. Bread was common to both classes; it was taken as a lunch for the working man, and thick slices of it were used as plates called trenchers.{{Cite web|title=British Library|url=https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.bl.uk|archive-date=31 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220731152358/https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|url-status=dead}} People of the noble class had access to finely ground flours for their breads and other baked goods. Noblemen were allowed to hunt for deer, boar, rabbits, birds, and other animals, giving them access to fresh meat and fish for their meals.{{Cite web|title=Middle Ages Food and Diet|url=https://www.lordsandladies.org/middle-ages-food-and-diet.htm|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.lordsandladies.org|archive-date=21 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211221160029/https://www.lordsandladies.org/middle-ages-food-and-diet.htm|url-status=live}} Dishes for people of these classes were often heavily spiced.{{Cite web|title=British Library|url=https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.bl.uk|archive-date=31 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220731152358/https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|url-status=dead}} Spices at that time were very expensive, and the more spices used in dishes, the more wealth the person needed to purchase such ingredients. Common spices used were cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, pepper, cumin, cloves, turmeric, anise, and saffron.{{Cite web|title=Middle Ages Food and Diet|url=https://www.lordsandladies.org/middle-ages-food-and-diet.htm|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.lordsandladies.org|archive-date=21 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211221160029/https://www.lordsandladies.org/middle-ages-food-and-diet.htm|url-status=live}} Other ingredients used in dishes for the nobility and clergy included sugar, almonds and dried fruits like raisins.{{Cite web|title=British Library|url=https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.bl.uk|archive-date=31 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220731152358/https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|url-status=dead}} These imported ingredients would have been very expensive and nearly impossible for commoners to obtain. When banquets were held, the dishes served would be very spectacular: another way for the noblemen to show how rich they were. Sugar sculptures would be placed on the tables as decoration and to eat, and foods would be dyed vibrant colors with imported spices.{{Cite web|title=British Library|url=https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.bl.uk|archive-date=31 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220731152358/https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|url-status=dead}}
Milan in Italy is home to the oldest restaurant in Italy and the second in Europe, the Antica trattoria Bagutto, which has existed since at least 1284.{{Cite web|url=http://www.localistorici.it/it/Schede/view/tipo/locali-storici/categorie/per-anno-di-fondazione_1200-1299/slug/antica-trattoria-bagutto|title=Antica trattoria Bagutto|access-date=29 November 2020|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130430180217/http://www.localistorici.it/it/Schede/view/tipo/locali-storici/categorie/per-anno-di-fondazione_1200-1299/slug/antica-trattoria-bagutto|archive-date=30 April 2013|language=it}} The diet of a commoner would have been much simpler. Strict poaching laws prevented them from hunting, and if they did hunt and were caught, they could have parts of their limbs cut off or they could be killed.{{Cite web|title=Middle Ages Food and Diet|url=https://www.lordsandladies.org/middle-ages-food-and-diet.htm|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.lordsandladies.org|archive-date=21 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211221160029/https://www.lordsandladies.org/middle-ages-food-and-diet.htm|url-status=live}} Much of the commoners' food would have been preserved in some way, such as through pickling or by being salted.{{Cite web|title=British Library|url=https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.bl.uk|archive-date=31 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220731152358/https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|url-status=dead}} Breads would have been made using rye or barley, and any vegetables would likely have been grown by the commoners themselves.{{Cite web|title=Middle Ages Food and Diet|url=https://www.lordsandladies.org/middle-ages-food-and-diet.htm|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.lordsandladies.org|archive-date=21 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211221160029/https://www.lordsandladies.org/middle-ages-food-and-diet.htm|url-status=live}} Peasants would have likely been able to keep cows, and so would have access to milk, which then allowed them to make butter or cheese.{{Cite web|title=Middle Ages Food and Diet|url=https://www.lordsandladies.org/middle-ages-food-and-diet.htm|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.lordsandladies.org|archive-date=21 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211221160029/https://www.lordsandladies.org/middle-ages-food-and-diet.htm|url-status=live}} When meat was eaten, it would have been beef, pork, or lamb. Commoners also ate a dish called pottage, a thick stew of vegetables, grains, and meat.{{Cite web|title=British Library|url=https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|access-date=13 January 2022|website=www.bl.uk|archive-date=31 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220731152358/https://www.bl.uk/the-middle-ages/articles/the-medieval-diet|url-status=dead}}
=Early modern era=
{{Main|Early modern European cuisine}}
File:CLAESZ Still life with a peacock pie.jpg, showing various dishes from the 17th century including roast meat, breads, nuts, wine, apples, dried fruits, along with an elaborate meat pie decorated like a peacock. While common in the warmer climates of Southern Europe, lemons would have been a relatively new introduction to the Netherlands, requiring growing in a orangery.]]
The cuisine of early modern Europe (c. 1500–1800) was a mix of dishes inherited from medieval cuisine combined with innovations that would persist in the modern era.
The discovery of the New World, the establishment of new trade routes with Asia and increased foreign influences from sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East meant that Europeans became familiarized with a multitude of new foodstuffs. Spices that previously had been prohibitively expensive luxuries, such as pepper, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and ginger,{{Cite book | last1 = Grendler | first1 = Paul F. | title = The Renaissance : an encyclopedia for student | url = https://archive.org/details/renaissanceencyc04publ_306 | url-access = limited | year = 2004 | publisher = Charles Scribner's Sons | location = New York | isbn = 978-0684312835 | page = [https://archive.org/details/renaissanceencyc04publ_306/page/n94 90]}} soon became available to the majority population, and the introduction of new plants coming from the New World and India like maize, potato, sweet potato, chili pepper, cocoa, vanilla, tomato, coffee, and tea transformed European cuisine forever.
Though there was a great influx of new ideas, an increase in foreign trade and a scientific revolution, preservation of foods remained traditional: preserved by drying, salting, and smoking or pickling in vinegar. Fare was naturally dependent on the season: a cookbook by Domenico Romoli called "Panunto" made a virtue of necessity by including a recipe for each day of the year.Romoli, La singolar dottrina, Venice, 1560. Everywhere both doctors and chefs continued to characterize foodstuffs by their effects on the four humours: they were considered to be heating or cooling to the constitution, moistening or drying.
There was a very great increase in prosperity in Europe during this period, which gradually reached all classes and all areas, and considerably changed the patterns of eating. Nationalism was first conceived in the early modern period, but it was not until the 19th century that the notion of a national cuisine emerged. Class differences were far more important dividing lines, and it was almost always upper-class food that was described in recipe collections and cookbooks.
Central European cuisines
{{See also|Alpine cuisine|Central European cuisine}}
- Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Austria}} Austrian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Vienna}} Viennese cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Croatia}} Croatian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Czech Republic}} Czech cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Moravia}} Moravian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Germany}} German cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Baden}} Baden cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Bavaria}} Bavarian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Berlin}} Berliner cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Brandenburg}} Brandenburg cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Franconia}} Franconian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Hamburg}} Hamburg cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Hesse}} Hessian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Lower Saxony}} Lower Saxon cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Mecklenburg}} Mecklenburg cuisine
- Palatine cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Pomerania}} Pomeranian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Saxony}} Saxon cuisine
- Ore Mountain cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Schleswig-Holstein}} Schleswig-Holstein cuisine
- Swabian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Hungary}} Hungarian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Liechtenstein}} Liechtensteiner cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Lithuania}} Lithuanian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Poland}} Polish cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Lublin}} Lublin cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Opole Voivodeship}} Opole cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Podlaskie}} Podlaskie cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Silesia}} Silesian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Świętokrzyskie}} Świętokrzyskie cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Slovakia}} Slovak cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Slovenia}} Slovenian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Switzerland}} Swiss cuisine
{{Gallery
| width = 190
| height = 190
| Image:Challah Bread Six Braid 1.JPG|Ashkenazi Jewish challah bread
| Image:Teiglach, Traditional Ashkenazi Holiday Dish.jpg|Ashkenazi Jewish Teiglach
| Image:Apple Strudel.png|Austrian strudel
| Image:Wiener-Schnitzel02.jpg|Austrian Wiener Schnitzel
| Image:Licitar1.jpg|Croatian Licitar
| Image:Štrukli iz Okrugljaka.jpg|Croatian Zagorski štrukli
| Image:SMAZENY_SYR_2020.jpg|Czech Smažený sýr
| Image:Svíčková na smetaně.JPG|Czech Svíčková
| Image:德國油煎香腸Bratwurst.jpg|German bratwurst
| Image:Neujahrsbrezelmittel.JPG|German pretzel
| Image:Sauerbraten with potato dumplings.jpg|German Sauerbraten
| Image:Mađarski gulaš.jpg|Hungarian goulash
| Image:Hortobagy palacsinta.JPG|Hungarian hortobágyi palacsinta
| Image:Rheintaler_Ribelmais_traditionell_zubereitet.jpg|Liechtensteiner Rheintaler Ribelmais
| Image:Cepelinai Sauce.JPG|Lithuanian cepelinai
| Image:Lurid borscht.jpg|Lithuanian šaltibarščiai
| Image:Bagel-Plain-Alt.jpg|Polish bagel
| Image:Bigos (1).jpg|Polish bigos
| Image:Ruskie.jpg|Polish pierogi
| Image:Bryndzové halušky so slaninou.jpg|Slovak Bryndzové halušky
| Image:Ajdovi zganci.JPG|Slovenian Ajdovi žganci
| Image:Zlikrofi_with_gulasch.jpg|Slovenian Idrijski žlikrofi
| Image:Cordon-bleu-2.jpg|Swiss cordon bleu
| Image:Swiss fondue.jpg|Swiss fondue
}}
Eastern European cuisines
{{See also|Eastern European cuisine|List of dishes from the Caucasus}}
- {{Flagicon|Armenia}} Armenian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Azerbaijan}} Azerbaijani cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Belarus}} Belarusian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Bulgaria}} Bulgarian cuisine
- Cossack cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Georgia}} Georgian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Kazakhstan}} Kazakh cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Moldova}} Moldovan cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Gagauzia}} Gagauz cuisine
- {{Flagicon|North Ossetia–Alania}} {{Flagicon|South Ossetia}} Ossetian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Romania}} Romanian cuisine
- {{Flagicon image|Flag of Transylvania Saxons.svg}} Transylvanian Saxon cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Russia}} Russian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Bashkortostan}} Bashkir cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Chechnya}} Chechen cuisine
- {{Flagicon image|Circassian flag.svg}} Circassian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Kalmykia}} {{ill|Kalmykian cuisine|ru|Калмыцкая кухня}}
- {{Flagicon|Komi Republic}} Komi cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Mordovia}} Mordovian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Tatarstan}} Tatar cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Udmurtia}} Udmurt cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Ukraine}} Ukrainian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Crimea}} Crimean Tatar cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Odesa}} Odesite cuisine
{{Clear}}
{{Gallery
| width = 190
| height = 190
| Image:Barbecue Armenian.jpg|Armenian khorovats
| Image:Гюрза.jpg|Azerbaijani Gürzə
| Image:Echpochmak-wiki.jpg|Bashkir and Tatar Öçpoçmaq
| Image:Th babka.jpg|Belarusian potato babka
| Image:Banitsa borzo.jpg|Bulgarian banitsa
| Image:Haleva.jpg|Circassian Haliva
| Image:Ayran+Çibörek.jpg|Crimean Tatar chiburekki
| Image:Old_Tbilisi,_Georgian_khachapuri,_Georgia.jpg|Georgian khachapuri
| Image:Satsivi (2).jpg|Georgian satsivi
| Image:Beshbarmak, national dish (3991850909).jpg|Kazakh beshbarmak
| Image:Tochitura-moldoveneasca.jpg|Moldovan Tochitură
| Image:MamaligaBranza.JPG|Romanian mămăligă
| Image:Pastrami.jpg|Romanian pastrami
| Image:Beef_Stroganoff-02_cropped.jpg|Russian beef Stroganoff
| Image:Piroshki.JPG|Russian pirozhki
| Image:Pelmeni Russian.jpg|Russian pelmeni
| Image:Borscht served.jpg|Ukrainian borscht
| Image:Pampushky-plain.jpg|Ukrainian pampushka
| Image:Martiniouk Paska.JPG|Ukrainian paska
}}
Northern European cuisines
- {{Flagicon|UK}} British cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Guernsey}} {{Flagicon|Jersey}} Channel Islands cuisine
- {{Flagicon|England}} English cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Cornwall}} Cornish cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Devon}} Devonian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Dorset}} Dorset cuisine
- Victorian cuisine
- Northern Irish cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Scotland}} Scottish cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Wales}} Welsh cuisine
- Cuisine of Carmarthenshire
- Cuisine of Ceredigion
- Cuisine of Gower
- Cuisine of Monmouthshire
- Cuisine of Pembrokeshire
- Cuisine of the Vale of Glamorgan
- {{Flagicon|Denmark}} Danish cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Faroe Islands}} Faroese cuisine
- New Nordic Cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Estonia}} Estonian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Finland}} Finnish cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Iceland}} Icelandic cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Ireland}} Irish cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Latvia}} Latvian cuisine
- {{Flagicon image|flag of Livonia.svg}} Livonian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Norway}} Norwegian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Sápmi}} Sami cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Sweden}} Swedish cuisine
{{Clear}}
{{Gallery
| width = 190
| height = 190
| Image:Ålandspannkaka.jpg|Åland pancake
| Image:A_plate_of_sausage_mash_onions_and_peas_Epping_Essex,_England.jpg|British bangers and mash
| Image:Full_English_breakfast.jpg|British full breakfast
| Image:Sunday_roast_-_roast_beef_1.jpg|British Sunday roast
| Image:Smørrebrød_at_Kastrup_IMG_8275_C.JPG|Danish Smørrebrød
| Image:Fish_and_chips_blackpool.jpg|English fish and chips
| Image:Trifle-w.jpg|English trifle
| Image:Kamadessert i Palmse.JPG|Estonian kama dessert
| Image:Tvost og spik.jpg|Faroese tvøst og spik
| Image:Salmon_soup_at_Löyly,_Helsinki_(52890138067).jpg|Finnish Lohikeitto
| Image:Guernsey_Bean_Jar.jpg|Guernsey Bean Jar
| Image:Hákarl2.jpg|Icelandic hákarl
| Image:Bacon_and_Cabbage_in_Ireland.jpg|Irish bacon and cabbage
| Image:Breakfast_Roll.jpg|Irish breakfast roll
| Image:Jersey_wonders.jpg|Jersey wonders
| Image:19-07-09-Karjalanpaisti-IMG_20190709_180453.jpg|Karelian hot pot
| Image:Līgo_pīrādziņi.jpg|Latvian speķrauši
| Image:Gravlax de saumon, auberge des Tilleuls, monts du Beaujolais (août 2019).jpg|Swedish gravlax
| Image:Får_i_kål.jpg|Norwegian fårikål
| Image:Lutefisk.jpg|Norwegian lutefisk
| Image:Poronkäristys.jpg|Sami Sautéed reindeer
| Image:Haggis with a CC license.jpg|Scottish haggis
| Image:Kanelbulle.jpg|Swedish cinnamon roll
| Image:Swedish buffet-Smörgåsbord-01 (cropped).jpg|Swedish smörgåsbord
| Image:Surströmming.jpg|Swedish surströmming
| Image:Cawl_Cymreig.jpg|Welsh cawl
}}
Southern European cuisines
{{See also|Balkan cuisine|Mediterranean cuisine}}
- {{Flagicon|Albania}} Albanian cuisine
- {{Flagicon image|Aromanian flag.svg}} Aromanian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Cyprus}} Cypriot cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Gibraltar}} Gibraltarian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Greece}} Greek cuisine
- Ancient Greek cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Byzantine Empire}} Byzantine cuisine
- {{Flagicon image|Flag_of_Cretan_State.svg}} Cretan cuisine
- Epirotic cuisine
- {{Flagicon image|Flag of Greek Macedonia.svg}} Greek Macedonian cuisine
- {{Flagicon image|Flag_of_the_United_States_of_the_Ionian_Islands.svg}} Ionian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Italy}} Italian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Abruzzo}} Abruzzian cuisine
- Ancient Roman cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Apulia}} Apulian cuisine
- Arbëreshë cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Liguria}} Ligurian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Lombardy}} Lombard cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Mantua}} Mantuan cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Basilicata}} Lucanian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Campania}} Neapolitan cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Piedmont}} Piedmontese cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Rome}} Roman cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Sardinia}} Sardinian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Sicily}} Sicilian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Veneto}} Venetian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Kosovo}} Kosovar cuisine
- {{Flagicon|North Macedonia}} Macedonian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Malta}} Maltese cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Montenegro}} Montenegrin cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Ottoman Empire}} Ottoman cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Portugal}} Portuguese cuisine
- {{Flagicon|San Marino}} Sammarinese cuisine
- Sephardic Jewish cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Serbia}} Serbian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Spain}} Spanish cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Andalusia}} Andalusian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Aragon}} Aragonese cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Asturias}} Asturian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Balearic Islands}} Balearic cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Menorca}} Menorcan cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Basque Country}} Basque cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Canary Islands}} Canarian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Cantabria}} Cantabrian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Castile and León}} Castilian-Leonese cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Valladolid}} Vallisoletano cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Catalonia}}{{Flagicon|Andorra}} Catalan cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Castile-La Mancha}} Castilian-Manchego cuisine
- Deconstructed cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Extremadura}} Extremaduran cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Galicia}} Galician cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Madrid}} Madrilenian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Valencia}} Valencian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Turkey}} Turkish cuisine
{{Clear}}
{{Gallery
| width = 190
| height = 190
| Image:Elbasan_tavë_me_mish_qengji.jpg|Albanian Tavë kosi
| Image:Μετσοβόνε 6304.jpg|Aromanian Metsovone
| Image:Ensaimada_DSCN0885.jpg|Balearic ensaïmada
| Image:Taloa.jpg|Basque talo
| Image:Bosnian-cevapi-with-kajmak-and-onion.jpg|Bosnian ćevapi
| Image:Papasarrugadas.jpg|Canarian Papas arrugadas
| Image:Pan_tumaca_cortado.jpg|Catalan pa amb tomàquet
| Image:Koukouvagia.jpg|Cretan Dakos
| Image:Afélia.jpg|Cypriot Afelia
| Image:Bistecca_alla_fiorentina-01.jpg|Florentine bistecca alla fiorentina
| Image:Japonesa_on_a_plate_2.jpg|Gibraltarian japonesa
| Image:Pita giros.JPG|Greek gyros
| Image:Spanakopita.jpg|Greek spanakopita
| Image:Souvlaki in Athens.JPG|Greek souvlaki
| Image:Jota_02.JPG|Istrian stew
| Image:Gelato.jpg|Italian gelato
| Image:Bucatini allamatriciana.jpg|Italian amatriciana
| Image:Flickr_-_cyclonebill_-_Ravioli_med_skinke_og_asparges_i_mascarponecreme.jpg|Italian ravioli
| Image:Redaktionsvortreffen EuT 2 ossobuco 16.04.2011 22-59-12.2011 22-59-12.jpg|Lombard Ossobuco served with {{lang|it|risotto alla milanese}}
| Image:Селско Месо.jpg|Macedonian selsko meso
| Image:Грав во тава(тафче гравче) (3).jpg|Macedonian Tavče gravče
| Image:Bocadillo_de_calamares_y_caña.jpg|Madrilenian squid sandwich
| Image:Malta_Rabbit_fried_with_wine_and_garlic.JPG|Maltese Stuffat tal-Fenek
| Image:Njeguški Pršut - Apparently Montenegrian Prust is the best - Budva (14810108030).jpg|Montenegrin njeguški pršut
| Image:Bacalhoada.jpg|Portuguese bacalhau
| Image:Cozido a portuguesa 1.JPG|Portuguese Cozido à portuguesa
| Image:Espaguetis_carbonara.jpg|Roman carbonara
| Image:Bustrengo.jpg|Sammarinese Bustrengo
| image:PastaWithPesto.JPG|Liguarian {{lang|it|Linguine with pesto}}
| Image:Pleskavitsa.JPG|Serbian Pljeskavica
| Image:Cannoli siciliani (7472226896).jpg|Sicilian cannoli
| Image:Hot,_Hot_(15720034638).jpg|Spanish churro
| Image:Tortilla_de_patatas.jpg|Spanish omelette
| Image:TapasenBarcelona.JPG|Spanish tapas
| Image:Baklava(1).png|Turkish baklava
| Image:Döner_and_pide_(+_parsley).jpg|Turkish doner kebab
| Image:Paella_en_Segorbe.jpg|Valencian paella
| Image:Carpaccio with cheese in Warsaw.jpg|Venetian carpaccio
}}
Western European cuisines
- {{Flagicon|Belgium}} Belgian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Netherlands}} Dutch cuisine
- {{Flagicon|France}} French cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Corsica}} Corsican cuisine
- Cuisine of Gascony
- Haute cuisine
- Cuisine classique
- Nouvelle cuisine
- Cuisine minceur
- {{Flagicon|Nord-Pas-de-Calais}} Cuisine and specialties of Nord-Pas-de-Calais
- {{Flagicon|Lyon}} Lyonnaise cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Picardy}} Picardy cuisine
- {{Flagicon image|Interfrisian_Flag.svg}} Frisian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Limburg (Belgium)}} {{Flagicon|Limburg (Netherlands)}} Limburgian cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Luxembourg}} Luxembourgian cuisine
- Mennonite cuisine
- {{Flagicon|Monaco}} Monégasque cuisine
- {{Flagicon image|Flag of Occitania.svg}} Occitan cuisine
{{Clear}}
{{Gallery
| width = 190
| height = 190
| Image:Moules Frites.jpg|Belgian moules-frites
| Image:Gaufre_de_Brussel.001_-_Brussel.jpg|Belgian waffle
| Image:Friteddi castagnini.jpg|Corsican fritelli
| Image:2015-12-20_Spitzkohlsalat_mit_Möhren_anagoria.JPG|Dutch coleslaw
| Image:Boerenkool stamppot.jpg|Dutch stamppot with rookworst
| Image:2018_01_Croissant_IMG_0685.JPG|French croissant
| Image:Restaurant Volga (Lyon) - pot au feu arménien.jpg|French pot-au-feu
| Image:Quiche.jpg|French quiche
| Image:Cheese_limburger_edit.jpg|Limburger cheese
| Image:Judd mat Gaardebounen.jpg|Luxembourgian Judd mat Gaardebounen
| Image:Barbaguiai.jpg|Monégasque Barbajuan
| Image:Bol_d'aligot.jpg|Occitan aligot
}}
See also
{{Portal|Europe|Food}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- {{cite book |title=Food in Early Modern Europe |last=Albala |first=Ken |year=2003 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=0313319626 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4f-l3-KG0LcC&q=european+cuisine |access-date=6 June 2017}}
- {{cite book |title=European Cuisine: The Best in European Food |author=R & R Publishing |year=2005 |publisher=Cpg Incorporated |isbn=1740225279 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A3JNAAAACAAJ&q=european+cuisine |access-date=6 June 2017}}
{{European topic|| cuisine}}
{{Western world}}
{{Cuisine}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:European Cuisine}}