Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Chicken à la King ('chicken in the style of King') is a dish consisting of diced chicken in a cream sauce, often with sherry, mushrooms, and vegetables, generally served over rice, noodles, or bread. [1] It is also often served in a vol-au-vent or pastry case. [2] It is sometimes made with tuna or turkey in place of chicken.
4. Sweet and Sour Sauce. Tasting notes: sweet, sour (it’s a well-named sauce!) Pair with: Ghost Pepper Chicken Fries There’s nothing wrong with Burger King’s sweet and sour sauce. The ...
Take some white flour, and add water and make a sheet of pasta slightly thicker than that for lasagne, and wrap it around a stick; and then remove the stick and cut the pasta into pieces the size of your little finger, and they end up with the shape of thin strips or strings. Cook in fatty broth or in water, depending on the season.
5. Hot Honey Mustard Sauce. Not a bad idea in theory, but in practice it doesn’t hit as hard as it should. This is probably an if-it-ain’t-broke-don’t-fix-it situation, but combining hot ...
Chicken Kiev, also known as chicken Kyiv [1] [2] [3] and chicken à la Kyiv, [a] is a dish made of chicken fillet pounded and rolled around cold butter, then coated with egg and bread crumbs, and either fried or baked.
Café de Paris sauce is a butter-based sauce served with grilled beef. When it is served with the sliced portion of an entrecôte (in American English: a rib eye steak ) or a faux-filet (in English: a sirloin steak [ 1 ] ) the resulting dish is known as " entrecôte Café de Paris".
For a couple of tasters, the grocery chain’s sauce struck the right notes of the barbecue-sauce trifecta: sweet, tang and spice. “A well-balanced sauce,” said one. “Zingy but sweet ...
Béarnaise sauce – although often thought to indicate the region of Béarn, the sauce name may well originate in the nickname of French king Henry IV (1553–1610), "le Grand Béarnais." Béchamel sauce – named to flatter the maître d'Hotel to Louis XIV , Louis de Béchamel , Marquis de Nointel (1630–1703), also a financier and ambassador.