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Tête de Veau | Traditional Veal Dish From Lorraine, France | TasteAtlas
Tête de Veau | Traditional Veal Dish From Lorraine, France | TasteAtlas
Tête de Veau | Traditional Veal Dish From Lorraine, France | TasteAtlas
Tête de Veau | Traditional Veal Dish From Lorraine, France | TasteAtlas

Tête de veau

(Calf's head)

As the name might imply, this French dish consists of a calf’s head, which is boiled for a long time until the meat becomes tender and the skin develops a gelatinous consistency. The tongue and brain are also boiled separately with a combination of spices, and the three types of meat are served together in thick slices on a platter with the vegetables used in cooking, usually potatoes and carrots, and a drizzling of ravigote sauce.


Although the dish has numerous supposed origins, famous French writer Gustave Flaubert traces it back to the British celebrating the decapitation of King Charles I. After the French revolution and yet another well-known decapitation, the French followed suit.


This same dish used to be made using a pig’s head, however at some point (and for reasons unknown), the pig fell out of fashion and calf's head started to be used instead.