Prix Fix menue for newbies
#1
Original Poster
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 284
Likes: 0
Prix Fix menue for newbies
Me again with newbie question:
I keep reading "prix fix" menue and want to ask if prix fix menu means that you sit down and ask "menu" and ...
does "prix fix" means you can choose from couple of those or just one ?
how do you ask to see what is for dinner in "prix fix" menue ?
I keep reading "prix fix" menue and want to ask if prix fix menu means that you sit down and ask "menu" and ...
does "prix fix" means you can choose from couple of those or just one ?
how do you ask to see what is for dinner in "prix fix" menue ?
#2
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,719
Likes: 0
Many restaurants and bistros in France offer this fixed price option, also sometimes called a "formule".
It'll be included somewhere in the menu that you are handed when seated at your table. You won't need to ask for it specially. It may also be displayed outside the restaurant, and perhaps also on a blackboard inside. Some places offer a variety of "prix fixe" menus, ranging from cheaper 2 or 3 course options to more expensive gourmet options with more courses.
Sometimes the prix fixe menus won't be available in the evenings or at weekends, but this will be stated somewhere on the menu.
The number of dishes to choose from on a prix fixe menu will vary. Usually there'll be around three starters, three main courses (with at least one fish or poultry option) and several desserts.
Hope that helps!
It'll be included somewhere in the menu that you are handed when seated at your table. You won't need to ask for it specially. It may also be displayed outside the restaurant, and perhaps also on a blackboard inside. Some places offer a variety of "prix fixe" menus, ranging from cheaper 2 or 3 course options to more expensive gourmet options with more courses.
Sometimes the prix fixe menus won't be available in the evenings or at weekends, but this will be stated somewhere on the menu.
The number of dishes to choose from on a prix fixe menu will vary. Usually there'll be around three starters, three main courses (with at least one fish or poultry option) and several desserts.
Hope that helps!
#6
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 5,129
Likes: 0
In most French restaurants, nearly everyone orders a menu as they're much better value than à la carte. There is almost always a choice of several dishes for each course. More expensive menus have more elaborate dishes and more courses.
Trending Topics
#15

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 49,560
Likes: 0
Scumpy is correct - it's UNE carafe - my typo, but you get the idea.
Good for you, Tat! By the way, if you're studying your French, it does help to be familiar with numbers, and those are often the hardest things to learn.
Learn to count to ten, and then learn how to say fifteen, twenty, twenty-five, etc., because if you are planning to order prix fixe meals, as someone mentioned, there will usually be two or more menus with different prices. When you want, say, the 25 euro menu, you'd ask for "Le menu à vingt-cinq euros, s'il vous plaît."
Good for you, Tat! By the way, if you're studying your French, it does help to be familiar with numbers, and those are often the hardest things to learn.
Learn to count to ten, and then learn how to say fifteen, twenty, twenty-five, etc., because if you are planning to order prix fixe meals, as someone mentioned, there will usually be two or more menus with different prices. When you want, say, the 25 euro menu, you'd ask for "Le menu à vingt-cinq euros, s'il vous plaît."
#18
Original Poster
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 284
Likes: 0
StCirg, don't push it ... I have Dutch to learn yet 
Why would I learn to count like they are ? To be accidentally mistaken for the local ? Ain't gonna happen !
To be looked at like "what is this foreigner doing counting like french ?>"

Why would I learn to count like they are ? To be accidentally mistaken for the local ? Ain't gonna happen !
To be looked at like "what is this foreigner doing counting like french ?>"
#20

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 49,560
Likes: 0
Tat: I was just trying to suggest you learn numbers so you can order those prix fixe menus you were asking about, not suggesting you sound like a local. I think ordering food ranks pretty high on the list of things tourists need to do on vacation, and since you indicated you were trying to learn a bit of French, I thought I might help you prioritize what you need to focus on.
BTW, asking for "maison l'eau" will probably just get you weird stares.
And you don't need to even think about learning Dutch - the Dutch are, in my experience, amazing linguists. Many of them speak better English than a lot of Americans.
BTW, asking for "maison l'eau" will probably just get you weird stares.
And you don't need to even think about learning Dutch - the Dutch are, in my experience, amazing linguists. Many of them speak better English than a lot of Americans.



)