The French word for cooking is cuisinière
faire cuire
Cuisine IS the word for French cooking.
The pan-cooking term from French is "saute" (the French word uses the accent, as sauté).
The same word is used in French, but spelled with a hyphen: arrow-root. It is masculine.
Cuisinant, cuisine, cuisiner and cuisson are French equivalents of the English word "cooking."Specifically, the present participle cuisinant can be used to describe or elaborate on an action which is related to or simultaneous with that of the main verb. The feminine noun cuisine describes the quality or style of "cooking," such as French-styled cooking. The present infinitive cuisiner literally means "to cook" but translates as "cooking" when it follows a main verb, as in "I love cooking." The masculine noun cuisson refers to the "act" of cooking, such as in cooking vegetables.The respective pronunciations will be "kwee-zee-naw," "kwee-zeen," kwee-zee-ney," and "kwee-soh" in French.
Begin! (begin cooking)
Cooking isn't a loanword from French, but "cuisine" is.
from the kitchen or the kittenit is of German origin, changed over many years meaning cooking place.
home cooking is translated "cuisine familiale" in French
One single word used for a style of cooking is 'cuisine'.While it's a French word which describes a cooking style, it is used worldwide in exactly the same context as it is used in French. So it isn't incorrect, for example, to use the phrase 'Asian cuisine', 'Latvian cuisine', 'Australian cuisine', and so on; the terms simply let us know the area that particular style of cooking - cuisine - is identified with.
Cuisine is a French word taken into English and meaning "cookery". The Latin equivalent is ars coquinaria, the art of cooking.
Julia Child
Mastering the Art of French Cooking has 720 pages.