It is a deep sided dish, usually glass or ceramic used to bake foods. It might or might not have a cover.
Ramekins are a particular type of casserole made of white porcelain, with a round flat bottom and vertical sides, often used in making souffles, custards and other individually portioned recipes.
It is a mixture of foods that are baked together in a casserole dish. Often a grain product (rice, pasta, barley...etc.) mixed with vegetables and/or meats combined with a creamy soup or sauce. The foods are usually precooked before mixing and baking them.
Tetrazzini is a particular casserole recipe using egg noodles, cream sauce, mushrooms, and a shredded meat (often poultry or fish), and topped with bread crumbs or crumbled fried onions.
Le cassoulet is a recipe from south western France. It is a dish of cooked white beans, cooked with Toulouse sausages and gravy.
Casser means 'to break' in French.
It means "to break"
bowl
hartford is not a french word.
it is not a French word!
wage isn't a French word.
Cassé is a French equivalent of 'broken'. It's the past participle of the infinitive 'casser', which means 'to break'. It's the masculine form. The feminine equivalent is 'cassée'. Both words are pronounced 'kahs-say'.
Mailletz is not a french word, it's the name of a place
casser
vous me casser les pieds
Brian Casser was born on 1936-03-21.
Casser means "to break". In Cajun French, or even if standard French, there are no direct translations of unbreakable or say, indestructible. The only way to say something is unbreakable is to say it cannot be broken, which is pas casser (not breaking) or pas cassé (not broken). Oh yes there is! Mais bien sûr il y a un mot pour ça - incassable!
it is not a French word
if you mean the english word OR then it's ouif you mean the french word OR then it means gold
This is not a French word and means nothing in French.
There is no such word as 'rozelle' in French.
there is no such word as 'peneuf' in French.
hartford is not a french word.
That is not a French word.
There is no such word in French.