enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tomme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomme

    Tomme. Tomme (French pronunciation: [tɔm]), occasionally spelled Tome, is a class of cheeses produced mainly in the French Alps and in Switzerland. [1] It can be made from cow's, ewe's, or goat's milk. [1] Tommes are normally produced from the skimmed milk [1] left over after the cream has been removed to produce butter and richer cheeses, or ...

  3. Goat cheese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goat_cheese

    Chevre with lavender and wild fennel. France produces a great number of goat milk cheeses, especially in the Loire Valley and Poitou. Chevre is a soft, creamy, melt-in-mouth cheese that can have a fruity taste to it. It is usually covered in a light colored rind or skin. It is not aged for very long. [3] It is sometimes served hot as chèvre chaud.

  4. Mornay sauce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mornay_sauce

    Mornay sauce is a smooth sauce made from béchamel sauce (butter, flour, milk), grated cheese, salt, and pepper, and often enriched with egg yolk. [5][6] When used for fish, the sauce is generally thinned with fish broth. [7][8] The cheese may be Parmesan and Gruyère, [6][9][8] Parmesan alone, [5] Gruyère alone, [10] or various other cheeses.

  5. Gougère - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gougère

    Gougère. A gougère (French: [ɡuʒɛʁ]), in French cuisine, is a baked savory choux pastry made of choux dough mixed with cheese. There are many variants. The cheese is commonly grated Gruyère, Comté, or Emmentaler, [1][2] but there are many variants using other cheeses or other ingredients. Gougères are said to come from Burgundy ...

  6. Tomme de Savoie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomme_de_Savoie

    It is a mild, semi-firm cow 's milk cheese with a beige interior and a thick brownish-grey rind. Tomme de Savoie dates back to ancient history. [2] Tomme de Savoie, like most Tommes, is usually made from the skimmed milk left over after the cream is used to make butter or richer cheeses. As a result, the cheese has a relatively low fat content ...

  7. Types of cheese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_cheese

    For these simplest cheeses, milk is curdled and drained, with little other processing. Examples include cottage cheese, cream cheese, curd cheese, farmer cheese, caș, chhena, fromage blanc, queso fresco, paneer, fresh goat's milk chèvre, Breingen-Tortoille, Irish Mellieriem Rochers and Belgian Mellieriem Rochers.

  8. Bucheron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bucheron

    Bucheron. Bûcheron (sometimes Boucheron, Bucherone, Boucherond, or Bucherondin) is a goat's milk cheese native to the Loire Valley in France. [1] Semi-aged, ripening for 5 to 10 weeks, Bucheron is produced as short logs that weigh 3 to 4 pounds (1.4 to 1.8 kg) [1] that are sliced and sold as small rounds in food stores.

  9. Béchamel sauce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Béchamel_sauce

    There are many legends regarding the origin of béchamel sauce. For example, it is widely repeated in Italy that the sauce has been created in Tuscany under the name "salsa colla" and brought to France with Catherine de Medici, but this is an invented story, [7] and archival research has shown that "in the list of service people who had dealt with Catherine de Medici, since her arrival in ...