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FOOD AND DRINK

‘Scum of garlic’: When English translations of French menus go wrong

While AI translation tools can undoubtedly be helpful sometimes their efforts can go horribly wrong - as these bizarre French menu translations show.

'Scum of garlic': When English translations of French menus go wrong
Is this fish sitting on a bed of lentils or contact lenses? Photo: AFP

When in France – the land of haute cuisine – you want to be sure you’re making the right choice about what to eat, especially if you’re the kind of person who would rather avoid calf brains (tête de veau) or cow stomach in jelly (tripes).

But while English menus can certainly be helpful, some of them – which appear to have relied on online translation engines – can just cause even more confusion.

In this list we’ve collected together some of the funniest – and downright strangest – translations from French to English seen on French menus, with the help of some contributions from our readers.

1. Salad of lawyer

This one is quite common and comes from the fact that the French word avocat can translate as either lawyer or avocado. If it’s served in a salad it’s more likely to be the green fruit, at least we hope so.

2. Choice of flat

Another word with two possible translations is plat – which can mean either a dish or a main course or flat, as in plat comme une crêpe (flat as a pancake).

In this case, choice of main course might have made a little more sense.

Photo: Ingles Time!/Twitter

3. Scum of garlic

Delicious as a saddle of lamb can be, the “scum of garlic” on this menu might not be so tempting. 

L’écume can translate as either a scum or a foam, the letter of which might be slightly more appetising.

“Top tip, when you translate a French restaurant menu, ask an English speaker to check it,” said Kevin Gunning on Twitter. 

Photo: Kevin Gunning/Twitter

4. Sea bass on a bed of contact lenses
 
The French word for contact lenses – lentilles de contact or simply lentilles – is the same as for lentils, leading to some slightly surprising translations of accompaniments.

5. Cheese/goat 

The word chèvre means both a goat and the cheese that the lady goats produce, but on a menu chèvre chaud means you will get delicious warm, slightly melted goat’s cheese – not, as on the below restaurant window ‘cheese goat’.

Photo: Gideon/Flickr

Goat meat is not commonly eaten in France, but if you do come across a goat curry – perhaps in a city area that has a large African population – it will usually just be described as curry au chèvre, with the context letting you know that it refers to meat, not cheese. 

We really have no idea where this restaurant got ‘camping deer’ as a translation for the pain de campagne (rustic bread).

6. Back of wolf wipes virgin

Un loup in French is a wolf, but wolf meat doesn’t tend to appear on menus much.

However a sea bass is un loup de mer (sea wolf) often shortened simply to loup to the great confusion of anyone who has looked up terrine de loup and wondered if that can possibly mean wolf paté.

This menu below seems to have really gone to town on the bizarre translations – see also the ‘opposite of apples’ or the ‘feet packages’ – but for those wondering sauce vierge (virgin sauce) is made with lemon, shallots, tomatoes, capers and extra virgin olive oil (hence the name).

Photo: Strubacca/Twitter

7. Lard and chicken salad

Bacon rashers are not very common in France, to the endless despair of Brits who miss a bacon sandwich, so bacon tends to come in the form of lardons – small pieces of fat bacon.

However lardon often seems to be translated into English as lard – the white rendered animal fat popular with grannies for cooking but not exactly what you want to see plonked on top of your salad.

8. Hunger steak

You’re hungry and in the mood for beef… it’s time to try a ‘hunger steak’ as this menu would have it (or ‘skirt steak’/’hanger steak’ as you’re more likely to call it).

Onglet is also quite similar to ongles (finger or toe nails) which we’ve also seen as an extremely off-putting translation.  

8. Piece of the butcher

Pièce du boucher is a common sight on French menus, it refers to cuts of beef from the animal’s rump area believed by many to be the best cuts (hence the belief that butchers saved these bits for themselves, the ‘butcher’s piece’).

It does not mean you are about to be served a piece of a local tradesman.

9. Paving stone of salmon fillet

Let’s hope it comes with a hammer and chisel.

Although pavé does mean a paving stone, in this context it does not, it’s simply a salmon filet. 

Photo: Vicky Baker/Twitter

10. Chocolate roof tiles

Sticking with the DIY theme, une tuile in French does indeed mean a roof tile. But it also refers to the delicious little curved biscuits of the same name. They get their name due to their distinctive shape – made by draping the oven-warm biscuits over a curved surface – which resembles a traditional clay roof tile. 

A translation too far

A problem for many French translators is that in fact quite a lot of French terms for menu items are also used in English – especially when we get into fine dining.

There is a long-standing belief in English that adding a few French words makes things seem more fancy. This, and the fact that France pioneered many gastronomic techniques, means that diners are used to seeing French words like tuile, coulis, choux, velouté, tartare, terrine and sauce vierge litter their menus.

It’s when you attempt an exact translation that you get a dessert offering of ‘cabbage with vanilla cream’ to describe a choux pastry bun (or profiterole) with vanilla cream.

As with all translation, context is everything which is why AI might not be replacing human translators just yet.  

Member comments

  1. Yep, no. 10 – went to a restaurant serving ‘grilled paving stone’ once. You’d better have a decent dentist to order that!

  2. We’ve seen the “paving stone” also, though of beef.

    And how about “cheese of hot goat”?

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ENVIRONMENT

Why Bordeaux wine is under threat in France this year

Winemakers in the famous French Bordeaux wine region fear the weather conditions this spring may lead to a disastrous harvest.

Why Bordeaux wine is under threat in France this year

It’s the second year in a row that mildew has threatened Bordeaux vines. Around 90 percent of vineyards were affected by mildew to some extent in 2023, according to the regional chamber of agriculture.

But this year, the fungus has appeared earlier than usual. “If the weather continues, it’s going to be a disaster,” one vineyard owner told regional newspaper Sud Ouest, as mildew threatens crops. “I’ve never seen mildew strike so early.”

In its latest plant bulletin, the Gironde Chamber of Agriculture underlines the “favourable climatic conditions for [mildew] development” and is pessimistic for the coming days, fearing an increase in potential risk.

In the end, the 2023 harvest was reasonable, helped by favourable August weather – though a heatwave towards the end of the month raised concerns over working conditions.

READ MORE: France to revise its Champagne-making area due to climate change

But last year’s outbreak and the weather so far in 2024 has brought the ‘mildew season’ forward in parts of the region. The Grand Libournais and Graves winegrowing areas are particularly affected, according to May’s Bulletin de Santé du Végétal for Nouvelle Aquitaine.

Winegrowers in the Blayais region, meanwhile, have noticed that mildew spread is erratic – but the expected return of rainy conditions in the early part of next week have prompted concerns that the fungus’s spread will only increase.

“There are abandoned plots, neighbours who haven’t pruned their vines or estates that have been unable to carry out an uprooting program because of the incessant rain,” one vineyard owner said.

Official figures suggest that some 2,000 hectares of vines are uncultivated in the Gironde alone. The Fédération Départementale des Syndicats d’Exploitants Agricoles insists that the real figure is much larger – with implications for the health of neighbouring cultivated vines.

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