Search results 1-10 of 5259 for "fluted_mould"

battu

[French]

Brioche. A rich, bready bun made from yeast dough with eggs and butter. Brioches are often cooked in a characteristic fluted mould. Brioche dough is used for breads, cakes and for enclosing other ingredients which may be either sweet or savoury. Italian brioches may be filled with jam (US: jelly) or custard or plain. It also means beaten, whipped up.

brioche

/bree-OSH/
[French]

A brioche is a rich, bready bun from France made from yeast dough with eggs and butter. Brioches are often cooked in a characteristic fluted mould. Brioche dough is used for breads, cakes and for enclosing other ingredients which may be either sweet or savoury. Italian brioches may be filled with jam (US: jelly) or custard or plain.

gâteau battu

[French] plural gâteaux battus

Brioche. A rich, bready bun made from yeast dough with eggs and butter. Brioches are often cooked in a characteristic fluted mould. Brioche dough is used for breads, cakes and for enclosing other ingredients which may be either sweet or savoury. Italian brioches may be filled with jam (US: jelly) or custard or plain.

gâteau wattieu

[French] plural gâteaux wattieus

Brioche. A rich, bready bun made from yeast dough with eggs and butter. Brioches are often cooked in a characteristic fluted mould. Brioche dough is used for breads, cakes and for enclosing other ingredients which may be either sweet or savoury. Italian brioches may be filled with jam (US: jelly) or custard or plain.

wattieu

[French]

Brioche. A rich, bready bun made from yeast dough with eggs and butter. Brioches are often cooked in a characteristic fluted mould. Brioche dough is used for breads, cakes and for enclosing other ingredients which may be either sweet or savoury. Italian brioches may be filled with jam (US: jelly) or custard or plain.

cannelée

[French] plural cannelées

Fluted

baguette moulée

/bah-GETT MOO-lay/
[French]

"Moulded baguette." Bread made from baguette dough baked in a mould.

baba

/BAH-bah/
[Polish]

Rum baba. A rum baba is a spongy yeast cake containing raisins and steeped, while still warm, in rum or kirsch, said to have been discovered by the Polish king Stanisław Leszczyński when he dipped a kougelhopf in rum. His pastry chef, Sthorer, later perfected a dish of brioche dipped in rum. Although ‘baba’ seems to mean ‘old woman’ it is also said to be named after Ali Baba of the 1001 Nights. It is cooked in a special fluted, cylindrical mould resulting in a cake the shape of a long, gathered skirt. The baba also has a long association with Naples. If the raisins are omitted it is technically known as a small savarin.

baba (al ron)

[Spanish] plural babas (al ron)

Rum baba. A rum baba is a spongy yeast cake containing raisins and steeped, while still warm, in rum or kirsch, said to have been discovered by the Polish king Stanisław Leszczyński when he dipped a kougelhopf in rum. His pastry chef, Sthorer, later perfected a dish of brioche dipped in rum. Although ‘baba’ seems to mean ‘old woman’ it is also said to be named after Ali Baba of the 1001 Nights. It is cooked in a special fluted, cylindrical mould resulting in a cake the shape of a long, gathered skirt. The baba also has a long association with Naples. If the raisins are omitted it is technically known as a small savarin.

baba (al rum)

/Bah-bah (ahl room)/
[Italian]

Rum baba. A rum baba is a spongy yeast cake containing raisins and steeped, while still warm, in rum or kirsch, said to have been discovered by the Polish king Stanisław Leszczyński when he dipped a kougelhopf in rum. His pastry chef, Sthorer, later perfected a dish of brioche dipped in rum. Although ‘baba’ seems to mean ‘old woman’ it is also said to be named after Ali Baba of the 1001 Nights. It is cooked in a special fluted, cylindrical mould resulting in a cake the shape of a long, gathered skirt. The baba also has a long association with Naples. If the raisins are omitted it is technically known as a small savarin.