French Vocabulary - Going to a Café

Posted by Chanda

I have just read in my international edition of Newsweek that the French government is going to lower its tax rate by 72% on food and drinks at restaurants and cafĂ©s this summer hoping that people will start frequenting the country’s beloved cafĂ©s again as many are closing due to the financial crisis.  I wrote an article about this some months back.  So, since many of you might be some of those that enjoy that tax cut when on vacation this year, I thought I would give you some vocabulary to help you order.

un Vittel - a famous French brand of mineral water, you can order it even if you just mean you want mineral water
un Perrier (citron) - a famous French brand of carbonated mineral water which you can now get lemon and lime flavored
une menthe Ă  l’eau - this is mineral water with a little bit of mint-flavored syrup
un Coca - a Coke as in Coca Cola
un Orangina - this is an orange and mandarin citrus soda which is very popular in France
une limonade - something like 7Up or Sprite
un citron pressé - lemonade
une orange pressé - like lemonade, but made with oranges (ice, freshly-squeezed orange juice, chilled water and sugar)
un jus d’orange - orange juice
un diabolo menthe - lemonade and mint syrup
une bière allemande - German beer
une bière française - French beer
un demi - 1/4 liter of draught beer
un kir - a drink made of cassis liqueur and a little white wine
un verre de rouge - a glass of red wine
un verre de blanc - a glass of white wine
un lait fraise - a thin, strawberry milk shake
un lait au chocolat - chocolate milk
un chocolat chaud - hot chocolate
un express - espresso coffee
un café au lait - coffee with milk, served in a larger cup (normally for breakfast)
un café crème - coffee with milk, but served in a smaller cup
un thé citron - tea with lemon
un thé nature - just normal tea
un thé au lait - tea with milk 

Why don’t you tell us about your favorite drink to order at a French cafĂ© or restaurant??

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6 Comments

  • Sarah commented on May 26, 2009 at 6:13 pm |Permalink

    My two favorite things to order in a French café:

    un demi pèche - a half pint of beer with peach syrup in it

    un Perrier cassis - Perrier water with blackcurrant syrup - it is so refreshing!

    Another useful term (I have never used it but have noticed it on menus) is ‘un cafĂ© allongĂ©’ - if you just order ‘un cafĂ©’ it will be a small cup of espresso, but the cafĂ© allongĂ© is closer to what you would get if you ordered coffee in the US.

  • mohamed commented on May 27, 2009 at 8:48 am |Permalink

    my favourity drinck un express cofe

  • Chanda commented on May 27, 2009 at 9:16 am |Permalink

    Thanks so much Sarah! I think the ‘demi pèche’ sound very interesting and I will try it the next time I’m in a French cafĂ©.

  • heidenkind commented on June 1, 2009 at 7:02 pm |Permalink

    I liked to order l’eau avec syrup, although I never pronounced syrup correctly. Anyway, the plus of that drink is, it’s really really cheap.

  • Chanda commented on June 3, 2009 at 4:15 am |Permalink

    Here’s a link to a French restaurant drink menu if you’d like to check out prices just to get an idea… http://www.restaurant-marguerita.com/boissons.htm

  • Chanda commented on June 3, 2009 at 4:23 am |Permalink

    Thanks for telling us about your favorite drink to order Heidenkind! The correct French spelling is ’sirop’ and it is pronounced ’si-ro’. The ‘p’ is silent.

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