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Sweetbread is a culinary name for the thymus (also called throat, gullet, or neck sweetbread) or pancreas (also called stomach, belly or heart sweetbread), typically from calf (French: ris de veau) or lamb (ris d'agneau). [1] [2] Sweetbreads have a rich, slightly gamey flavor and a tender, succulent texture.
A Christmas pastry that is traditionally made from puff pastry in the shape of a star or pinwheel and filled with prune jam and often dusted with icing sugar. Kalács: Hungary: A Hungarian sweet bread very similar to brioche, usually baked in a braided form, and traditionally considered an Easter food. Until the end of the 19th century, the ...
This is a list of veal dishes, which use or may use veal as a primary ingredient. Veal is the meat of young calves, in contrast to the beef from older cattle. Though veal can be produced from a calf of either sex and any breed, most veal comes from male calves. [1] Generally, veal is more expensive than beef from older cattle.
A Polish cream pie made of two layers of puff pastry, filled with whipped cream, creamy buttercream, vanilla pastry cream (custard cream) or sometimes egg white cream, and is usually sprinkled with powdered sugar. [5] Pączki: Pastries traditional in Polish cuisine; the Polish word pączki is often translated to English as "doughnuts". Pańska ...
How do you make sweetbreads? Cooking sweetbreads is not for the faint of heart. Not only do they take a lot of time and patience to prepare, but you have to be ready to get your hands dirty.
Pan de coco – Philippine sweet bread; Pan de muerto – Mexican pastry; Pan de regla – Philippine bread with a red bread pudding filling; Pan de Pascua – Chilean cake associated with Christmas; Pan dulce – General name for a wide variety of Hispanic pastries [23] Pandoro – Italian sweet bread [24] Panettone – Italian yeasted cake [25]
A mille-feuille (French: [mil fœj]; lit. ' thousand-sheets '), [notes 1] also known by the names Napoleon in North America, [1] [2] vanilla slice in the United Kingdom, and custard slice, is a French dessert made of puff pastry layered with pastry cream.
The pastry cook's art of choux pastry began to develop around the 17th century. [14] The patissier Jean Avice [ 16 ] developed the pastry further in the middle of the 18th century and created choux buns, with the dough becoming known as 'pâte à choux', since only choux buns were made from it.