julienne

See also: Julienne

English

Etymology

Celery julienne

From French julienne (1722),[1] from given name Jules or Julien, presumably from an otherwise unknown chef of that name. Originally used in potage julienne (Julienne potage, soup in the manner of Jules/Julien), meaning “soup made from thin slices”; this sense is now known as chiffonade.

Noun

julienne (plural juliennes)

  1. (cooking) A garnish of vegetables cut into long, thin strips.
    • 1812, M. Appert, The Art of Preserving All Kinds of Animal and Vegetable Substances:
      I compose a Julienne of carrots, leeks, turnips, sorrel, French beans, celery, green peas, &c. These I prepare in the ordinary way, which consists in cutting the carrots, turnips, leeks, French beans and celery into small pieces, either round or long.

Synonyms

Translations

Verb

julienne (third-person singular simple present juliennes, present participle julienning, simple past and past participle julienned)

  1. (transitive) To prepare by cutting in this way.

Translations

See also

References

  1. Larousse Gastronomique. Hamlyn. 2000. p. 642. →ISBN.

French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʒy.ljɛn/

Noun

julienne f (plural juliennes)

  1. (cooking) a julienne, a garnish of vegetables cut into long, thin strips.
  2. (botany) dame's rocket
  3. (zoology) ling

Adjective

julienne

  1. feminine singular of julien

Further reading


Italian

Etymology

French julienne

Noun

julienne f (plural julienni)

  1. julienne

Norman

Etymology

You can help Wiktionary by providing a proper etymology.

Noun

julienne f (plural juliennes)

  1. (Jersey) European searocket (Cakile maritima)
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