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Quince cheese is prepared with quince fruits. The fruit is peeled and cored, and cooked with a teaspoon of water and from 500 to 1000 g sugar [2] per kg of quince pulp, preferably in a pressure cooker, but it can also be left for longer (40 minutes–1 hour) in a regular pot, in this case with a little more water (which will then evaporate).
A paste made of fat and flour and often stock or milk is an important intermediary for the basis for a sauce or a binder for stuffing, whether called a beurre manié, [2] a roux [3] or panada. [4] Sago paste is an intermediary stage in the production of sago meal and sago flour from sago palms. [5]
Hilbet – a paste made in Ethiopia and Eritrea from legumes, mainly lentils or faba beans, with garlic, ginger and spices [5] Hummus – made from chickpeas with the addition of tahini, olive oil, lemon juice, salt and garlic [6] Moretum; Pesto; Quince cheese; Ssamjang – a Korean sesame- and bean-based paste used as a sauce on meat
Jajang, a meat and vegetable sauce that tops noodles in the Korean-style Chinese dish Jajangmyeon. [5] Korma, an Indian sauce made with meat and/or vegetables braised in yogurt and served with rice. [6]: 24 Palaver sauce, a west African stew-like sauce containing vegetables, meat and/or seafood, and served with rice, fufu, or other starches. [7]
Au jus – Meat gravy made from cooking juices; Barbecue sauce – Sauce used as a marinade, basting, topping, or condiment; Béarnaise sauce – Sauce made of clarified butter and egg yolk; Béchamel sauce – French white sauce based on roux and milk; Black pepper – Ground fruit of the family Piperaceae
This paste is an excellent addition to any home baker’s pantry. One jar contains the equivalent of 12 vanilla beans. The texture is thick and syrupy, with an almost creamy taste to it.
Quince cheese or quince jelly originated from the Iberian peninsula and is a firm, sticky, sweet reddish hard paste made by slowly cooking down the quince fruit with sugar. [35] It is called dulce de membrillo in the Spanish-speaking world, where it is eaten with manchego cheese. [36] Quince is used in the Levant, especially in Syria.
Popular sweets are membrillo quince jam and dulce de leche, which is made from caramelized milk. A sweet paste, dulce de leche, is used to fill cookies, cakes, pancakes, milhojas, and alfajores. The alfajores are shortbread cookies sandwiched together with dulce de leche or a fruit paste. Dulce de leche is used also in flan con dulce de leche.