Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (2024)

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Warm up with wild mushrooms, gooey gratin, and slow-simmered meats, and more.

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Updated on January 3, 2024

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Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (1)

As temperatures drop, there's nothing quite like a warm and comforting meal. French cuisine is known for its rich flavors and hearty dishes, making it a cozy choice for cold winter nights. In this list, you'll find a selection of classic French recipes, from a light Cheese Soufflé to a hearty Boeuf Bourguignon, that are sure to bring a touch of warmth to your home.

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Boeuf Bourguignon

Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (2)

This recipe for the decadent beef stew comes from Jacques Pépin. He doesn't use stock, demi-glace, or even water in his stew, relying on robust red wine for the deep-flavored sauce.

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02of 11

Gateway Cassoulet

Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (3)

By cooking several recipe components separately in the same pot before combining them all to meld in the oven, Sylvie Bigar reduces the active cooking time for cassoulet to a little over an hour, while retaining the long-cooked, richly developed flavor of the traditional recipe.

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03of 11

Best-Ever Cheese Soufflé

Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (4)

This light and airy soufflé boasts both Parmigiano-Reggiano and Gruyère cheeses and gets a little sharp complexity from Dijon and dry mustard. Wrap the ramekins with tin foil to keep them from overflowing.

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04of 11

Sauvignon Blanc-Steamed Mussels with Garlic Toasts

Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (5)

Toasted garlic bread and mussels steamed in Sauvignon Blanc come together in this recipe. You can use this recipe to make the classic version with wine and butter, or customize the flavors in your pot of mussels by swapping out the white wine in favor of clam broth, sake, or lager.

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05of 11

Caramelized Onion and Bread Soup with Brûléed Blue Cheese

Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (6)

In this vegetarian version of classic French onion soup, blue cheese and oloroso sherry add depth and layers of flavor. Notes of toasted nuts and fruit compote in the sherry pair well with caramelized onions, and its briny acidity cuts through the richness of the cheese.

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06of 11

Seared Scallops with Pomegranate and Meyer Lemon

At Bavel in Los Angeles, chef Ori Menashe serves shallow bowls of scallop aguachile, and diners can't get enough. Our riff on his raw dish sends scallops to the skillet for a quick sear before serving them with fresh lemon, orange, and pomegranate juices and serrano chile to bring heat and fresh, fruity flavor to sweet scallops.

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07of 11

Roasted "Reblochon"

Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (8)

In the French Alps, Reblochon, a bloomy-rind cow's milk cheese, is melted in a special brazier for reblochonnade — a meal of the melted cheese served with roasted sausages, boiled potatoes, and other bites. While unpasteurized Reblochon isn't imported to the United States, there are many American farmhouse cheeses (such as Jasper Hill Farm Little Hosmer or Sweet Grass Dairy Green Hill) that make wonderful substitutes for this reblochonnade.

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08of 11

Coq au Vin

Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (9)

This classic French dish translates to "rooster in wine," and is a celebration of rich, hearty flavors, with tender chicken braised in a flavorful red wine sauce with bacon, mushrooms, and onions. The result is a mouthwatering and comforting meal that is perfect for a special occasion or a cozy night in.

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09of 11

Creamy Chicken-and-Mushroom Fricassee

Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (10)

This is a classic French recipe that combines tender chicken, earthy mushrooms, and a rich, creamy sauce to create a mouthwatering meal.This recipe is perfect for a special occasion or a cozy night in and can be served with a side of mashed potatoes or rice to soak up all of the delicious sauce.

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Warm Camembert with Wild Mushroom Fricassee

Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (11)

Daniel Boulud makes this oozy appetizer with Vacherin Mont-d'Or, a creamy cheese sold at cheese shops. Camembert is as rich and runny as Vacherin Mont-d'Or, but much easier to find.

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Cauliflower Gratin

Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (12)

Gratins are the gooiest way to cook vegetables with "loving care," as Julia Child once said. This cheesy casserole gets spice from a pinch of nutmeg and white pepper. This outrageously rich sauce, flavored with salty, nutty Manchego, gets poured over sautéed cauliflower and baked until it's golden and bubbling.

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Cozy French Recipes for Chilly Winter Nights (2024)

FAQs

What do French eat during winter? ›

  • Gooey Croque Monsieurs. There's a reason why croque monsieurs are a staple in French food culture – they're decadent, they're satisfying, and they're super easy to make. ...
  • Cassoulet. ...
  • Soupe à l'Oignon. ...
  • Cheese Fondue. ...
  • Auvergne-Inspired Aligot. ...
  • Tartiflette. ...
  • Alsatian Flammekueche. ...
  • Boeuf Bourguignon.

What is French comfort food? ›

A quintessential French comfort food that embodies warmth and tradition is "Coq au Vin." This hearty dish features chicken slow-cooked in red wine, often Burgundy, along with mushrooms, onions, and bacon. The rich and savory flavors develop as the ingredients meld together during the slow simmering process.

What food is most eaten in winter? ›

Winter Seasonal Food List
  • mushrooms, “wild”
  • nuts (chestnuts, walnuts, pecans)
  • potatoes.
  • root vegetables (carrots, parsnips, yams, turnips, etc.)
  • squashes, winter (acorn, pumpkin, butternut, etc. ...
  • sunchoke (jerusalem artichoke)
  • canned, dried and frozen vegetables you bought in the summer and fall for winter meals.
Jan 13, 2015

What is the most French thing to eat? ›

Most common French dishes in a nutshell:
  • Moules frites. This dish consists of mussels and French fries. ...
  • Cassoulet. Cassoulet is a dish that originates from Southwestern France. ...
  • Steak-frites. Steak-frites consists of a piece of steak served with French fries. ...
  • Boeuf Bourguignon. ...
  • Raclette. ...
  • Coq au Vin. ...
  • Pot au feu. ...
  • Salade Niçoise.

What are the top five comfort foods? ›

Become a Jetsetter
  • 1 Chicken and Waffles.
  • 2 Spaghetti and Meatballs.
  • 3 Chicken Fried Steak.
  • 4 Mac and Cheese.
  • 5 Hotdish.
  • 6 Chicago Deep Dish Pizza.
  • 7 Grilled Cheese and Tomato Soup.
  • 8 Matzo Ball Soup.
Mar 1, 2020

What is the ultimate comfort food? ›

For instance, the flank steak with cheesy hash brown waffles will be an immediate favorite, along with the pierogi and meatball skillet, French bread pizzas, and creamy cauliflower soup. For Ree Drummond, chicken pot pie is the one comfort food that just can't be beat.

What are the 4 French meals? ›

Repas et cartes
  • 1) Petit-déjeuner – Breakfast. In France, breakfast might be smaller than what you're used to. ...
  • 2) Déjeuner – Lunch. Traditionally, lunch was eaten at home en famille (as a family), which was easy enough for most people thanks to a 2-hour midday work break. ...
  • 3) Dîner – Dinner. ...
  • Goûter – Snack.

What is France's signature dish? ›

Pot-au-Feu, France's National Dish | History Today.

What is a classic French dinner? ›

Here, we've gathered a sampling of our traditional French favorites: the wine-braised chicken stew coq au vin, the Provençal fish stew bouillabaisse, a vegetable-based take on French onion soup, and more. Pour yourself a glass of wine and enjoy cooking your way through these classics.

What do French people eat in January? ›

In January make it about carrots and langoustine

And if possible, buy ones that come with the Label Rouge, a stamp awarded to only the best produce. Langoustines are also at their best seasonal eating in January. The waters around Brittany give up one of the most treasured seasonal produce in France now.

What food do French people eat at Christmas? ›

Christmas Dinner

Dishes might include roast turkey with chestnuts or roast goose, oysters, foie gras, lobster, venison and cheeses. For dessert, a chocolate sponge cake log called a bûche de Noël is normally eaten. Another celebration, in some parts of France, is that 13 different desserts are eaten!

What do French people do in the winter? ›

Winter in the mountains

Millions of people come to France in Winter as the country has some of the world's top resorts. A wide range of activities are possible: downhill skiing, cross-country skiing, snowboarding, snowshoeing, dog sledging, ice climbing and ice rappelling.

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