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French

Celery Root Rémoulade

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Caviar Puff-Pastry Stars

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Apple Galette with Orange

(GALETTE DE POMMES A L'ORANGE) A country-style fruit tart with a lattice top.

Brandade de Morue Canapes

(Roasted Potato Slices with Salt Cod Purée and Roasted Red Pepper)

Potato and Leek Purée

An infant version of vichyssoise, this is for the nine-month-old — and older — baby with a discriminating palate. It can be served warm or at room temperature.

Celery Root Salad

Tomato Tatins

Like the tarte Tatin, that famous French upside-down apple dessert created by the Tatin sisters, these savory stacks have a crispy top crust that ultimately becomes the bottom-perfect for sopping up the unctuous tomato juices and pesto. This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Pan Bagna

(Provençal Tuna and Vegetable Sandwich)

Strawberry Rhubarb Napoleons

We used a wire mesh cooling rack to form the decorative pattern on this pastry, but any metal cooling rack can be used. Also, if you have a small rack that cannot cover all the pastry at once, you will need to bake it in batches.

Glazed Jelly Crepes

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Coffee and Chocolate Paris-Brest with Warm Caramel Sauce

The espresso-flavored cream puff pastry and fluffy coffee and chocolate custard filling vary from the traditional plain pastry and praline buttercream. Delicious on its own, this is even better with the chocolate caramel sauce.

Aïoli

This recipe originally accompanied Grilled Lamb Sandwiches with Grilled Onions . Two easy sauces from a single recipe: plain aioli here and one with red bell peppers .

Champagne Americana

This Franco-American combination of bourbon and bubbles gives you another reason to be thankful. It doubles easily to accommodate the number of guests around your holiday table.

Isabelle's Semolina Cake

(Gâteau de Semoule d’Isabelle) A favorite on the Dugord farm in Normandy, this cake (which is really more of a pudding) wins with everyone. According to Isabelle Dugord, who convinced her grandmother to share the recipe, her family ate this all the time when she was growing up, and it's still her preferred sweet. Isabelle works part-time at a day-care center and always has the children make this at least once while they’re with her. "It's easy to make, healthy, and they all, down to the last child, just love it," she said. It can be served hot, lukewarm, or chilled, and is best the day it is made. Raisins are traditional, though dates or figs are luscious, too.
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