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Basic stocks are usually named for the primary meat type. A distinction is usually made between fond blanc, or white stock, made by using raw bones and mirepoix, and fond brun, or brown stock, which gets its color by roasting the bones and mirepoix before boiling; the bones may also be coated in tomato paste before roasting.
A fish fond with gelatinous structure In the culinary arts , fond is a contraction of fonds de cuisine which is loosely described as "the foundation and working capital of the kitchen". [ 1 ] In its native usage, fond refers to the sauce created by dissolving the flavorful solid bits of food ( sucs ) stuck to a pan or pot after cooking.
Cheval blanc or Cheval-Blanc, French for white horse, may refer to: Château Cheval Blanc, a wine producer in Saint-Émilion in the Bordeaux wine region of France; Cheval-Blanc, Vaucluse, in southern France Canton of Cheval-Blanc; Le Cheval Blanc (brewpub), in Montreal; Le Cheval Blanc (mountain), in the Alps
A pile of carrots brunoise. Brunoise (French pronunciation:) is a culinary knife cut in which the food item is first julienned and then turned a quarter turn and diced, producing cubes of about 3 millimetres (1 ⁄ 8 in) or less on each side.
The manjar blanco (Spanish pronunciation: [maŋˈxaɾ ˈblaŋko], or also in Spanish as manjar de leche), known in Catalan as menjar blanc or menjablanc, is a term used in Spanish- and Catalan- speaking areas of the world in reference to a variety of milk-based delicacies.
Vidal blanc is a complex, hybrid varietal cultivated from grapevines belonging to several different species within the genus Vitis. One parent, Ugni blanc, is from the Vitis vinifera species of European grapevines that produce most of the world's well-known wines such as Cabernet Sauvignon and Chardonnay.
Blanc du Bois (French, white [grape] of the woods [forest]) is an American hybrid grape that was created in 1968 by John A. Mortensen at the University of Florida’s Central Florida Research and Education Center in Leesburg, Florida.
Sauvignon blanc's popularity on the other hand has been rising, overtaking Ugni blanc as the second most planted white Bordeaux grape in the late 1980s and now being grown in an area more than half the size of that of the lower yielding Sémillon. Wineries all over the world aspire to making wines in a Bordeaux style.