{"id":10909,"date":"2017-06-04T23:30:38","date_gmt":"2017-06-04T20:30:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/metropole-voyage.com\/exotic-french-cuisine-oysters-and-frogs\/"},"modified":"2025-01-17T13:49:56","modified_gmt":"2025-01-17T10:49:56","slug":"exotic-french-cuisine-oysters-and-frogs","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/metropole-voyage.com\/en\/exotic-french-cuisine-oysters-and-frogs\/","title":{"rendered":"Exotic French cuisine: oysters and frogs"},"content":{"rendered":"
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French cuisine is characterized by great variety: all kinds of products are widely used, including shellfish and amphibians, especially oysters and frogs.<\/p>\n


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Peculiarities of oyster consumption<\/h4>\n

Even ancient people living on the seashore enjoyed eating shells. Subsequently, various types of molluscs adorned the tables of the ancient Greeks and Romans. In the Middle Ages, a paradoxical situation emerged: oysters were eaten only by the poor living in coastal villages and the rich, to whom the shells were delivered from the sea in ice chests.<\/p>\n

In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, numerous oyster traders succeeded in supplying the shellfish to the inhabitants of Paris and other major cities, resulting in a rapid decline in the shellfish population. In the mid-nineteenth century, under the auspices of Napoleon III, a great oyster lover, the first shellfish farms began to open in coastal regions.<\/p>\n


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Varieties of oysters<\/h4>\n

There are two types of shells to be found in restaurants in Paris:<\/p>\n