Creme fraiche, but it is really sour cream. And Fleurette, which isn't fresh cream either. We have an apartment in Menton by the Italian border. And right across the border, a few hundred yards from us, you can get real cream. Basically, the French don't have it. Very strange...
Yeah
No, they are too poor and primitive. After all, France is a country only recently hacked out of the jungle. It wasn't even discovered until about 500 years ago, and not developed for 200 years after that ... Oh, no, sorry, that's America. France was around long before that. Of course they have ice cream in France.
The school lunches in France are very healthy. In France schoolchildren get food such as fish, cheeses, salad, fresh vegetables and fruits. They have been known to serve roasted guinea fowl at preschools.
A Caen stone is a cream-coloured limestone used in building, named after its location in Caen, France.
through pie graphs and bar graphs with whip cream on top and a choclate streak on the ground
fresh cream
is plain fresh cream edible
Fresh Cream was created in 1966-07.
i have no idea k?
In the UK, whipping cream is just a type of cream sold for whipping. (And actually, double cream works better for whipped cream toppings). Whipped cream is a type of fresh cream, in the sense that double cream, single cream, clotted cream etc... are all types of fresh cream. Whipped cream is not "the same as" fresh cream, it is a member of the "fresh cream" group. If a recipe just says "serve with fresh cream", it's best just to pick a type of cream that suits your needs (i.e pourable or non-pourable).
no!!
Fresh cream
of course u can, you can cook with most things!!!
pure is fresh ice cream
No, they are not the same thing.
Lovin Spoon
Meegada