Dear Heaven, what a question. There are between 350 and 400 different cheeses produced in France, so the answer is 'every sort'. Hard, crumbly cheeses like Wensleydale or Lancashire are not common, though still available and, presumably, enjoyed. There are many soft cheeses (Camembert, Brie, etc.) and many semi-soft; hundreds of blues, and cheeses made of goat's and ewe's milk. The variety is endless and fascinating. In a formal meal, incidentally, cheese is eaten before dessert, while the red wine is still on the table, usually with a little dressed salad to follow the main course and clease the palate before the cheese board is brought out.
Goodness me, what a question! There are about 400 types of French cheese, from the mild and innocuous Mimolette to one so smelly it's called Englishman's Foot (Pied d'Anglois). Try 3 of these:
Camembert
Brie
Roquefort
Saint-Paulin
Saint-Nectaire
Neufchatel
Tomme de Savoie
or see a fairly complete list on http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_de_fromages_fran%C3%A7ais
there are numerous famous cheeses in France. The Roquefort (a ewe cheese) was already a favorite of Charlemagne 1200 years ago and the Cantal was praised under the Romans. Camembert, Brie, Pont-l'Evêque, Ossau-Iraty, Maroilles, Emmental, Comté, Bleu de Bresse, Bleu d'Auvergne... are other famous cheeses.
Maroilles is a French cheese made in the North East of France. It's name comes from the village Marroilles where there used to be a big abby that made the stuff. I'm not sure that this is the smelliest chese, some say "Munster" mader in th eEast of France I have never tasted the Corsican cheese that is supposed to have maggots growing on it before it's considered ripe.... I would say that a good ripe Maroilles is a hell of a stinker!!
It is estimated that there are over 400 different cheeses in France allowing for regional variations. Common types including washed rind cheeses like Camembert and Brie, soft cheeses like Boursin, and ewe's milk cheeses such as Roquefort.
There are lots of French cheeses: Camembert, Roquefort, Cantal are some of them.
Most of the french cheeses are named after where they come from. Brie, Roquefort and Cammembert just to mention a few...
chef de fromage
The French Chef - 1962 Cheese Souffle 9-11 was released on: USA: January 1972
I have wondered the same although the chef's name is Escoffier.
The French Chef was created on 1963-02-11.
The French Chef - 1962 The French Chef Le Cocktail 9-9 was released on: USA: January 1971
le camembert is a French cheese from Normandy (originally from the village of the same name)
The French Chef - 1962 Cheese Souffle 9-11 was released on: USA: January 1972
The French Chef - 1962 Cheese and Wine Party 1-14 was released on: USA: 1970
its a french term meaning deputy chef
The French name for the conductor's stick is "baguette de chef d'orchestre."
A four letter word for a type of French cheese? Brie?
Garde manager
I have wondered the same although the chef's name is Escoffier.
Fromage
A chef? I don't really know.
The French Chef ended in 1973.
the French word for chef or chief cook are "chef / chef cuisinier" "cuistôt" is another familiar spelling in spoken French: le cuistôt, le chef cuistôt
The French Chef - 1962 The French Chef The Artichoke 9-1 was released on: USA: January 1971