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Fine Dining Classics No Longer Found on Menus Today

Fine Dining Classics No Longer Found on Menus Today

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Coquilles St. Jacques

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Fricandeau of Veal

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Consommé

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Beef Tea

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Oxtail Soup

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Petite Marmite

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Terrapin à la Maryland

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Roasted Game Birds

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Lobster à l'Américaine

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Calf's Head Vinaigrette

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Duck Bigarade

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Chicken a la Maryland

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Mutton Chops

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Supreme of Chicken Gismonda

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Galantine of Chicken

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Braised Ox Tongue

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Ham Steak with Glazed Pineapple

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Broiled Mushrooms on Toast

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Cold Boned Capon Aux Truffes

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Deviled Lamb Kidneys on Toast

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Goose Feet à la Poulette

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Coquilles St. Jacques
Fricandeau of Veal
Consommé
Beef Tea
Oxtail Soup
Petite Marmite
Terrapin à la Maryland
Roasted Game Birds
Lobster à l'Américaine
Calf's Head Vinaigrette
Duck Bigarade
Chicken a la Maryland
Mutton Chops
Supreme of Chicken Gismonda
Galantine of Chicken
Braised Ox Tongue
Ham Steak with Glazed Pineapple
Broiled Mushrooms on Toast
Cold Boned Capon Aux Truffes
Deviled Lamb Kidneys on Toast
Goose Feet à la Poulette

If you've ever come across an old restaurant menu then you probably already know that it can be like reading a foreign language. Because, well, you really are reading a foreign language! Aside from the obscure French dishes, there are also a lot of old-school fine dining dishes that you'd be hard-pressed to find on a modern restaurant menu nowadays.

Fine dining has certainly changed a lot over the past 100 or so years. The finest restaurants of the day – like New York's Delmonico's – were elegant and highly polished affairs. They featured luxurious decor, highly professional uniformed waitstaff, and very formal table settings with crisp white linens and different silverware and glassware for different courses. Plenty of fine restaurants nowadays – especially the French ones with multiple Michelin stars – still have this same extremely high level of service, but things have definitely gotten less formal over the years.

While you won't see many diners donning their finest black tie to go out to dinner anymore, the most notable difference in fine dining over the years has been on the menu. Whereas menus nowadays tend to be divided into sections like appetizers, entrees, side dishes, and desserts (or in some instances, small plates and large plates), 100 years ago it wasn't unusual to find sections for oysters, soups, hors d'oeuvres, fish, entrees (fully composed dishes), roasts, cold buffet, salads, vegetables, desserts, cheeses, and fruits, with at least a half dozen or so options for each.

And, of course, fine dining was French dining. All the greatest chefs were trained to prepare French dishes in France, using French techniques and French recipes. Many dishes incorporated one of the French "mother sauces" (Béchamel, Velouté, Espagnol, Tomato, and Hollandaise) or a variation on it and French methods for roasting meats and vegetables. Reading these menus tended to take a bit of knowledge. Whereas nowadays most menus provide a basic description of most dishes, if you didn't know what "Côtelettes of Chicken, Pojarski" was back then, you were out of luck. (It's fried chicken cutlets in creamy paprika sauce, by the way).

Many of these dishes have disappeared because dining habits have changed. No restaurant needs six different types of game birds on their menu these days and far fewer people are eating kidneys and other offal as frequently as back in the day. Some are overly complex, some are too rich and stodgy, and some just faded out of popularity over the decades. But if you decided to drop into a fancy hotel restaurant 100 years ago, there's a decent chance that these bygone dishes would have been on the menu. (If you're looking for even more classic menu items that are slowly disappearing, you can find them here.)

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