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A soufflé (French pronunciation: ⓘ) is a baked egg dish originating in France in the early 18th century. Combined with various other ingredients, it can be served as a savoury main dish or sweetened as a dessert. The word soufflé is the past participle of the French verb souffler, which means to blow, breathe, inflate or puff. [1] [2] [3]
Mendiant – Traditional French confectionery [4] Mont Blanc – Chestnut-based dessert; Norman Tart – French almond dessert; Opera cake – French almond cake with chocolate and coffee fillings; Pain d'épices – French quick bread
Soufflé à la reine is a chicken soufflé with truffles [7] Sauce vénitienne is a sauce of white wine, tarragon vinegar, shallots and chervil, mounted with butter and finished with chopped chervil and tarragon. [6] Selle de mouton purée Bretonne is saddle of mutton with a purée of broad beans bound with Breton sauce. [7]
Pommes soufflées are a variety of French fried potato. Slices of potato are fried twice, once at 150 °C (302 °F) and a second time after being cooled, at 190 °C (374 °F). The potato slices puff up into little pillows during the second frying and turn golden brown.
The Soufflet Group is a French agro-industrial company specialising in agricultural raw material. [2] The group was family-owned from 1900 until its acquisition by Invivo Group in 2021. [3] The Group primarily operated in the wheat and barley sectors in France, Europe, and Asia. It supported arable farmers with grain collection and cereal ...
The restaurant offered classical French food, although some dishes were more modern. Notable dishes included the Soufflé Suissesse (cheese soufflé baked on double cream); Le Caneton Gavroche (whole poached duck in a light consommé served with three sauces for two); and Omelette Rothschild. [ 2 ]
Cassoulet (/ ˌ k æ s ə ˈ l eɪ /, [1] also UK: / ˈ k æ s ʊ l eɪ /, [2] US: / ˌ k æ s ʊ ˈ l eɪ /; [3] French:) is a rich, slow-cooked stew originating in southern France.The food writer Elizabeth David described it as "that sumptuous amalgamation of haricot beans, sausage, pork, mutton and preserved goose, aromatically spiced with garlic and herbs". [4]
Soufflé Rothschild is a sweet soufflé created by Marie-Antoine Carême. [1] The dish was named for James Mayer de Rothschild. [2] The original recipe included candied fruit that had been macerated in Danziger Goldwasser before the dish was cooked; later recipes replace Goldwasser with kirsch, cognac [2] or Grand Marnier.