gâteau fourré - definizione. Che cos'è gâteau fourré
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  • etimologia

Cosa (chi) è gâteau fourré - definizione

COUNTERFEIT OF ANCIENT COIN, UNDERVALUED
Fourré; Fourree; Fourre; Serrated denarii
  • A tetradrachm from Ancient Athens, dated circa 449-413 BC. Contains multiple 'test cuts' which was how fourrées were detected in antiquity. This coin has silver beneath and is not an ancient forgery.

Gâteau Basque         
BASQUE CAKE
Gateau basque; Gateau Basque; Etxeko bixkotxa; Etxeko biskotxa
Gâteau Basque (Basque: Etxeko bixkotxa; "cake of the house") is a traditional dessert from the Northern Basque region of France, typically filled with black cherry jam or pastry cream. Gâteau Basque with cream is more typical in the Southern Basque region of Spain.
Gâteau nantais         
FRENCH PASTRY
Draft:Gâteau nantais; Gâteau du voyageur
Gâteau nantais is a cake originating in the city of Nantes in France. Gâteau nantais is a soft, round pound cake, made of flour, sugar, salted butter, eggs, and almond meal, then dampened with a punch of rum and lemon, sometimes with an apricot [centre.
St. Honoré cake         
  • Saint-honoré cake
  • Saint-honoré cake cross-section
FRENCH PASTRY DESSERT
Gâteau St-Honoré; Gâteau Saint-Honoré; Gateau Saint-Honore; Gateau St-Honore; St. Honore Cake; Saint Honoré Cake; Gâteau Saint Honoré; St. Honoré Cake; St. Honore cake
The St. Honoré cake, usually known by its French name gâteau St-Honoré, and also sometimes called St.

Wikipedia

Fourrée

A fourrée is a coin, most often a counterfeit, that is made from a base metal core that has been plated with a precious metal to look like its solid metal counterpart; the term is derived from the French for "stuffed." The term is normally applied to ancient silver-plated coins such as the Roman denarius and Greek drachma, but the term is also applied to other plated coins.

Cicero mentions that M. Marius Gratidianus, a praetor during the 80s BC, was widely praised for developing tests to detect false coins, and removing them from circulation. Gratidianus was killed under Sulla, who introduced his own anti-forgery law (lex Cornelia de falsis), that reintroduced serrated edges on precious metal coins, an anticounterfeiting measure that had been tried earlier.

Serrated denarii, or serrati, which featured about 20 notched chisel marks on the edge of the coin, were produced to demonstrate the integrity of the coin. This effort was in vain, as examples of fourrée serrati attest.