19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (2024)

Spend Christmas the French way.

Hi there! I'm Marie, I'm French, and I'm here to share some recipes with you.

As you probably know, we French people take our food very seriously. And Christmas is the most important food holiday in France. December 24th and 25th make up a food marathon of raw oysters, roasted duck, foie gras, all the cheese, Yule logs, chocolate truffles, and lots and lots of wine and Champagne. It can be a bit hard to reproduce an authentic French feast in the U.S. because a lot of local French ingredients can be difficult to find or very pricey. But, here are a few realistic French recipes you can (and should) add to your holiday menu.

David Lebovitz / davidlebovitz.com, David Lebovitz / Via davidlebovitz.com

This ethereal, savory cheese dish is a work of art. Use some good French cheese like Comté for the tastiest results.

Recipe: Cheese Soufflé

2. Bûche de Noël

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (2)

Alex Lau / Bon Appetit / Via bonappetit.com

If there's one French dessert that epitomizes Christmas, it's this one. The name literally translates to "Yule log" and it's meant to look like a tree trunk. There are frozen versions you can buy, as well as others made with French buttercream or praline. This one features a chocolate sponge cake and chestnut cream. Baking it from scratch is a bit of an undertaking, but this recipe allows you to choose between three levels of difficulty, depending on how daring you're feeling.

Recipe: Bûche de Noël

3. Gratin Dauphinois

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (3)

Recipe Tin Eats / Via recipetineats.com

This traditional dish is the French version of scalloped potatoes. The secret (as you will find with many French dishes) is lots of butter and cream. Some purists will tell you not to top this gratin with more cheese, but I say forget the rules. Cheese is never a bad idea.

Recipe: Gratin Dauphinois

4. Endive Boats With Pear, Blue Cheese, and Shallot Vinaigrette

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (4)

Alexandra Cooks / Via alexandracooks.com

A French Christmas is usually a feast of rich dishes like foie gras, poultry, gratins, cheese, and chocolate. So in the midst of all this decadence, a fresh and lighter recipe is always welcome like this winter salad, which combines bitter endives, sweet pear, and tangy blue cheese.

Recipe: Endive Boats With Pear, Blue Cheese, and Shallot Vinaigrette

5. Parisian Hot Chocolate

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (5)

David Lebovitz / Via davidlebovitz.com

This drink is so rich and so, so luxurious, it's basically a gift from the gods to any chocolate lover. The recipe only calls for two ingredients – milk and chocolate –so opt for high quality ingredients here. You can also add brown sugar if you like your cocoa sweeter.

Recipe: Parisian Hot Chocolate

6. French Onion Soup

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (6)

Gimme Some Oven / Via gimmesomeoven.com

In France, this classic would almost be considered too rustic for an elegant holiday meal. But it's so comforting and delicious that IMO, it's the perfect addition to any winter meal.

Recipe: French Onion Soup

7. Pistachio and Hazelnut Nougat

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (7)

Molly Yeh / Via mynameisyeh.com

In Provence, one traditionally serves 13 desserts on Christmas to represent Jesus and his 12 apostles. One of those desserts is nougat, a honey-based candy bar. It's definitely worth trying to make at home, especially if you can't find a decent store-bought version. This pistachio and hazelnut version is a treat for the ages and you'll want to recreate it every holiday season.

Recipe: Pistachio and Hazelnut Nougat

8. Kir Normand

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (8)

David Lebovitz / Via davidlebovitz.com

The better known Kir Royal co*cktail is made with crème de cassis (a blackcurrant liqueur) and Champagne. This drink is similar, but with a special twist from Normandy. It also throws Calvados (apple brandy) into the mix. Serve these bubbly co*cktails for Christmas or New Years...or any random Tuesday night when you're in the mood for something festive.

Recipe: Kir Normand

9. Chocolate Truffles

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (9)

Humming Bird High / Via hummingbirdhigh.com

Christmas in France is a chocolate lover's dream. These rich and delicious chocolate truffles, which are made with just five ingredients, are one of our most traditional treats.

Recipe: Chocolate Truffles

10. Gougères (French Cheese Puffs)

Olivia's Cuisine / Via oliviascuisine.com

Two words: Cheese puffs. Need I say any more?

Recipe: Gougères (French Cheese Puffs)

11. Duck Fat Potatoes

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (11)

recipetineats.com

The French know that the secret to the crispiest, most delicious roast potatoes is duck fat. In Southwest France, potatoes are tossed in duck fat and sprinkled with a bit of salt, but this recipe goes a step further and calls for semolina flour to make them even more decadent.

Recipe: Duck Fat Potatoes

12. Black Cherry Macarons

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (12)

Naomi Robinson / bakersroyale.com

Macarons aren't the most traditional Christmas treat, but we all know Americans love 'em (and I have to agree that they're pretty darn good).

Recipe: Black Cherry Macarons

13. Escargots à la Bourguignonne

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (13)

Saveur / Via saveur.com

Some people will probably be grossed out by the idea of eating snails, but trust me, these are amazing. Cooked in butter, garlic, and parsley, they taste completely delicious. If you're still not convinced, that's okay. It means more for the rest of us!

Recipe: Escargots à la Bourguignonne

Not Quite Nigella / Via notquitenigella.com

When I was in high school, I would spend most of my allowance money on candied chestnuts from the local chocolaterie after school. This treat can be hard to find in the U.S., but luckily you can make them at home. Enjoy them on their own or serve them on top of other desserts.

Recipe: Candied Chestnuts

15. Cassoulet

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (14)

J. Kenji Lopez-Alt / seriouseats.com

Cassoulet, a hearty meat and beans stew, isn't usually served for Christmas in France, but IMHO it's the best winter dish ever invented. It takes days to make, so I'd say it's worthy of a special holiday meal.

Recipe: Cassoulet

16. Duck Pâté en Croûte

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (15)

Savueur / Via saveur.com

Duck pâté wrapped in flaky pastry dough? Count me in. Keep in mind that this dish takes over 24 hours to make, but it's so worth the time and effort.

Recipe: Duck Pâté en Croûte

David Lebovitz / davidlebovitz.com

Hot wine is traditionally served in Christmas markets in France, but you can easily make it at home with red wine, honey, and some spices.

Recipe: Vin Chaud (Hot Mulled Wine)

18. Duck Confit

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (16)

Vicky Wasik / Via seriouseats.com

So straightforward and yet so brilliant, duck confit is the Chanel of the Christmas foods. Forget about ham or turkey, this indulgent duck is the main dish you need on your holiday table.

Recipe: Duck Confit

19. Kugelhopf Cake

19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (17)

saveur.com

This Alsatian dessert, also made in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria, is popular during the holiday season. It isn't overly sweet, which means you can eat it for dessert or for breakfast.

Recipe: Kugelhopf Cake

Trending Recipes

Trending Recipes

More Tasty Guides

More Tasty Guides

    See all
    19 French Holiday Recipes You'll Actually Want To Try This Christmas (2024)

    FAQs

    What are 3 traditional French Christmas foods? ›

    14 things the French eat for Christmas
    • Oysters. (Les Huîtres) ...
    • Smoked salmon. (saumon fumé) ...
    • Caviar. It isn't just fish that dominates the entrées at Le Réveillon — fish eggs, or caviar, often make an appearance too. ...
    • Foie gras. ...
    • Snails (Escargot) ...
    • Roast bird. ...
    • Gratin Dauphinois. ...
    • Haricots.
    Dec 6, 2022

    What do French people like to eat for 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 are typical Christmas foods drinks and desserts in France? ›

    What's a typical Christmas menu in France? Fresh oysters, smoked salmon, foie gras with brioche toasts, Turkey stuffed with chestnuts or a ham or roast, a “buche de noel” for dessert and of course lots of good wine and champagne to accompany each course!

    What is the special meal eaten late at night on Christmas Eve in France? ›

    Réveillon: The French Christmas Feast

    It is the main French Christmas Meal and usually starts after the midnight mass, which can be as late as 2 am, but in modern times, families begin at 8 pm till after midnight. They gather for a late-night feast featuring oysters, foie gras, and perfectly roasted meats.

    Do the French have Christmas crackers? ›

    Though cracker-pioneer Tom Smith found his 19th-century inspiration in Paris (with bonbons in paper twists), crackers themselves remain virtually unknown in France.

    What is the most common Christmas food in France? ›

    The most traditional for Christmas is probably duck in orange sauce, duck breast fillet, and duck confit. Foie gras can also be served hot; it is called stir-fried foie gras.

    How do French children celebrate Christmas? ›

    What is Christmas like in France? Forget about stockings, it's all about the shoes as each child leaves a pair of their own shoes at the foot of the Christmas tree before going to bed on Christmas Eve. This means Father Christmas will know exactly where to leave everyone's presents.

    What is the French Christmas bird? ›

    Just like turkey is to Thanksgiving, a French Christmas main dish is almost always a large roasted “dinde” (turkey). A French Christmas turkey is traditionally made with a chestnut stuffing, and served with roasted potatoes, chestnuts and sometimes cooked apples around it.

    What is the most popular dessert in France at Christmas? ›

    Bûche de Noël, or Yule log

    The most traditional Christmas cake in France is the Yule log, or bûche de Noël. A rolled sponge cake filled with buttercream, it is shaped and decorated with chocolate frosting or ganache to resemble a log of wood.

    What do French children do on Christmas Eve? ›

    On Christmas Eve, French children put their shoes (sabots) in front of the fireplace. They hope Pere Noel (Father Christmas) will fill them with presents. His partner Le PERE Fouettard (Father Spanker) would "reward" bad children with a spanking.

    What do the French call Christmas dinner? ›

    Everyone's favourite meal of the year

    And in France, as with present-giving days, the big Christmas meal is often eaten on a different day, as well. The prevailing tradition in France is for everyone to sit down together and feast on the 24th December for a long, often luxurious meal called a réveillon.

    What is the main Christmas meal in France? ›

    Just like turkey is to Thanksgiving, a French Christmas main dish is almost always a large roasted “dinde” (turkey). A French Christmas turkey is traditionally made with a chestnut stuffing, and served with roasted potatoes, chestnuts and sometimes cooked apples around it.

    What are the 7 dishes for Christmas Eve? ›

    Recipes for the “seven fishes” vary from region to region; this one uses crab, shrimp, calamari, clams, mussels, scallops and white fish.

    What do French people eat for Christmas breakfast? ›

    France's Christmas breakfast is full of sweet pastries. Many families will partake in pain au chocolat, croissants and brioche doughnuts.

    References

    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Corie Satterfield

    Last Updated:

    Views: 5934

    Rating: 4.1 / 5 (42 voted)

    Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Corie Satterfield

    Birthday: 1992-08-19

    Address: 850 Benjamin Bridge, Dickinsonchester, CO 68572-0542

    Phone: +26813599986666

    Job: Sales Manager

    Hobby: Table tennis, Soapmaking, Flower arranging, amateur radio, Rock climbing, scrapbook, Horseback riding

    Introduction: My name is Corie Satterfield, I am a fancy, perfect, spotless, quaint, fantastic, funny, lucky person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.