European cuisines: what to try in France, Belgium, Scandinavia and the Netherlands

A gastronomic guide to Western and Northern Europe: the most famous dishes, desserts, street food and drinks from France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and Norway. What to try — and why.

European cuisines: what to try in France, Belgium, Scandinavia and the Netherlands

France Key dishes

  • Baguette, croissant, brioche — symbols of French baking.
  • Cheeses — more than 400 varieties: Camembert, Brie, Roquefort, Comté, chèvre, Reblochon, Munster and more.
  • Bouillabaisse — Provençal fish soup with seafood and aromatic herbs.
  • Coq au vin — rooster braised in wine with vegetables and spices.
  • Ratatouille — vegetable stew of eggplant, zucchini, peppers, tomatoes, onion and garlic.
  • Quiche Lorraine — open pie with cream, eggs, bacon and cheese.
  • Cassoulet — slow-cooked dish of white beans, duck or pork, sausages and herbs.
  • Escargots de Bourgogne — snails in garlic-parsley butter.
  • Foie gras — a duck or goose liver delicacy, often served with fruit or jam.
  • Crêpes — thin pancakes with sweet or savory fillings.

Street food and snacks

  • Croque-monsieur — a hot ham and cheese sandwich.
  • Socca — a chickpea-flour pancake (Nice).
  • Galette — buckwheat pancakes with fillings (Brittany).
  • Tarte flambée (flammekueche) — an Alsatian open pie with cream, onion and bacon.

Desserts and pastries

  • Macarons — almond cookies with cream filling.
  • Éclair, mille-feuille, tarte Tatin, clafoutis, baba au rhum, canelé — classic French confectionery.
  • Crème brûlée — a custard dessert with a caramelized crust.

Drinks

  • Wine — Champagne, Bordeaux, Burgundy, Loire, Alsace and Provence wines.
  • Cider, Calvados, Armagnac, pastis — local alcoholic drinks.

Belgium Key dishes

  • Moules-frites — mussels in wine, cream or herbs with fries.
  • Carbonade flamande — beef stewed in dark beer with onions and mustard.
  • Waterzooi — creamy chicken or fish stew.
  • Stoemp — mashed potatoes with vegetables, often with sausage.
  • Chicons au gratin — endive wrapped in ham under béchamel.
  • Shrimp croquettes — with gray shrimp and creamy sauce.
  • Sole meunière — pan-fried sole with butter sauce.

Street food and snacks

  • Belgian fries — twice-fried potatoes with sauces.
  • Boudin blanc/noir — white and black sausages with sides.
  • Filet Américain — raw beef tartare with sauces on bread.

Desserts and pastries

  • Belgian waffles: Brussels (crispy), Liège (caramelized).
  • Chocolate — Belgian praline.
  • Tarte au riz, speculoos, marzipan.

Drinks

  • Beer — more than 1,500 varieties, including Trappist, lambic, gueuze, dubbel, tripel.
  • Jenever, cider, wine — regional drinks.

The Netherlands Key dishes

  • Chocomel — thick hot chocolate.
  • Hagelslag — bread with chocolate sprinkles.
  • Kibbeling — battered fried fish with sauce.
  • Haring — raw herring with onion.
  • Poffertjes — mini pancakes with powdered sugar.
  • Pannenkoeken — large pancakes with fillings.
  • Bitterballen, kroketten, frikandel — meat snacks.
  • Stamppot, erwtensoep — hot dinners.
  • Uierboord — pan-fried cow udder.

Street food and snacks

  • Patat — thick fries with sauces.
  • Kaassoufflé — breaded fried cheese.
  • Appelflap — apple turnover.
  • Stroopwafel, pepernoten, tompouce, appeltaart.

Denmark Key dishes

  • Smørrebrød — open-faced sandwiches with various toppings.
  • Frikadeller — meat patties.
  • Stegt flæsk med persillesovs — fried pork with parsley sauce.
  • Boller i karry — meatballs in curry sauce.
  • Flæskesteg — roast pork with crispy crackling.

Street food and snacks

  • Rød pølse — red sausage in a bun.
  • Leverpostej — liver pâté on bread.
  • Fiskefilet, sild — fried or pickled fish.

Desserts and pastries

  • Wienerbrød — Danish pastries with cream.
  • Æblekage, rødgrød med fløde — fruit desserts.
  • Risalamande, æbleskiver — festive sweets.

Drinks

  • Akvavit — strong herbal spirit.
  • Gløgg — Christmas mulled wine.

Sweden

Key dishes

  • Köttbullar — meatballs with mashed potatoes, gravy and lingonberries.
  • Inlagd sill, gravlax — pickled and cured herring and salmon.
  • Janssons frestelse — potato gratin with anchovies.
  • Falukorv — a thick sausage.
  • Pytt i panna, ärtsoppa, kroppkakor, raggmunk.
  • Smörgåstårta — sandwich cake.

Street food and snacks

  • Prinskorv, stekt strömming, tunnbrödsrulle.
  • Räksmörgås — open shrimp sandwich.
  • Köttbullesmörgås — meatball sandwich.

Desserts and pastries

  • Kanelbulle — cinnamon bun (the icon of fika).
  • Prinsesstårta, semla, kladdkaka, smulpaj, ostkaka.

Drinks

  • Akvavit, glögg, beer (Falcon, Omnipollo), cider (Kopparberg), punsch.

Norway

Key dishes

  • Fårikål — lamb with cabbage.
  • Lutefisk, rakfisk — traditional fish.
  • Fiskepudding, brislinger, laks.
  • Game — venison and moose with berries.

Street food and snacks

  • Lefse — flatbread with sweet or savory fillings.
  • Reker, boknafisk, sursild, caviar.
  • Barley and oat breads — a traditional staple.

Desserts and pastries

  • Krumkake, rømmegrøt, skillingsboller.
  • Lefse (sweet version), multekrem.

Drinks

  • Akevitt — the national spirit.
  • Brunost — caramel-like cheese served as a dessert.
  • Gløgg — Christmas mulled wine with spices.

Frequently asked

What should you absolutely try in France?

The regional classics: bouillabaisse (Provençal fish soup), coq au vin, ratatouille, quiche Lorraine, cassoulet and escargots de Bourgogne, with macarons, tarte Tatin and crème brûlée for dessert. A category of its own is cheese — over 400 varieties, from Camembert to Roquefort.

What is Belgian cuisine famous for?

Three things: moules-frites (mussels with fries), waffles in two styles — Brussels (crisp) and Liège (caramelised) — and beer, of which there are more than 1500 varieties, including Trappist, lambic and tripel. Plus carbonade flamande, beef braised in dark beer.

What do the Dutch eat besides cheese?

Street and home staples: haring (raw herring with onion), kibbeling (battered fish), bitterballen and kroketten (meat snacks), poffertjes (mini pancakes) and stroopwafel. There's also the oddity uierboord — fried cow's udder.

Which drinks are characteristic of Scandinavia?

The common denominator is akvavit (akevitt in Norway), a strong herbal spirit, and gløgg, hot spiced Christmas wine. In Norway dessert can even be brunost — a caramel-flavoured brown cheese.

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