A croque monsieur (, croque = "crunch", monsieur = "mister, gentleman") is a hot sandwich made with ham and cheese.
Croque monsieur may be baked or fried so that the cheese topping melts and forms a crust.
In the United Kingdom, a ham-and-cheese hot snack is called a toastie, and toastie makers are available to buy. In the United States, the Monte Cristo (a ham-and-cheese sandwich often dipped in egg and fried) is popular fare in .
Variants of the sandwich with substitutions or additional ingredients are given names modeled on the original croque-monsieur, for example:
Barros Jarpa | Variation with same ingredients from Chilean cuisine | |
Barros Luco | Made with roast beef instead of ham | |
Croque provençal | Tomato | |
Croque auvergnat | Bleu d'Auvergne cheese | |
Croque chevre | Topped with a large slice of goat cheese. | |
Croque norvégien | Smoked salmon instead of ham | |
Croque tartiflette | Sliced potatoes and Reblochon cheese | |
Croque bolognese / Croque Boum-Boum | Bolognese sauce | |
Croque señor | Tomato salsa | |
Croque Hawaiian | Slice of pineapple | |
Croque gagnet | Gouda cheese and andouille | |
Croque Madame | Fried egg | |
Croque monsieur with bechamel | Standard croque monsieur topped with bechamel sauce | |
Francesinha | Variation from Portuguese cuisine with steak, sausage, ham, melted cheese and a beer sauce | |
Monte Cristo | French sandwich with varying other additions, incl. but not limited to powdered sugar and fried in either egg or batter. |
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