"Pot-au-feu" Quotes from Famous Books
... scattered upon the floor. The room was very neat, although its furniture was poor and scanty; and by the brown saucepan perched upon the top of the diminutive German stove, which had strayed, as it were, from its chimney corner into the middle of the room, we knew that the pot-au-feu was in preparation. Madame, before whom was a small table covered with the unfinished portions of a corset, was very agreeable—rather coquettish, indeed, we should have said in England. Her eyes were bright and cheerful, and her hair drawn back from ... — A Tramp's Wallet - stored by an English goldsmith during his wanderings in Germany and France • William Duthie
... down—utterly exhausted and worn out—in the settle by the fireplace; and fell into a half doze, while the woman lit a bright fire on the hearth. In a few minutes she had drawn some liquor from the pot-au-feu—the soup pot—which stands by the fireside of every French peasant, however poor; and into which all the odds and ends of the household are thrown. This liquor she put into a smaller pot; broke some ... — The Young Franc Tireurs - And Their Adventures in the Franco-Prussian War • G. A. Henty |