Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Arborio – Risotto recipes The name given to some of the best short-grained
rices grown in the Po Valley of Italy, and used to prepare risotto.
Aromatics – Plant ingredients, such as herbs and spices, used to enhance the
flavor and fragrance of food.
Arrowroot – A fine starch extracted from the rhizomes of plants of the genus
Maranta.
Aspic – A clear jelly made from stock or occasionally from fruit or vegetable
juices.
B. Cooking Terms
Bake – To cook in the oven. The terms baking and roasting are often used
interchangeably, but roasting usually implies cooking at a higher temperature—at
least at the beginning—to get the surface of the foods to brown.
Baste– To moisten food during cooking with pan drippings, sauce, or other liquid.
Basting prevents foods from drying out.
Baster – A large kitchen syringe used to baste meats with their own gravy,
another liquid, or melted fat.
Batter – A mixture of flour and liquid with the addition of flour, eggs, and
sometimes fat, used to prepare cakes, muffins, pancakes, crepes, and quick
breads. Also applies to frying batters.
Béarnaise – A warm, emulsified egg and butter sauce similar to hollandaise, but
with the addition of white wine, shallots, and tarragon.
Beat – To agitate a mixture with the goal of making it smooth and introducing as
much air as possible into it.
Béchamel – A classic white sauce made with whole milk thickened with a white
roux, and flavored with aromatic vegetables,
Beurre Blanc – A rich butter sauce made by whisking butter into a reduction of
white wine, white wine vinegar, and shallots, and sometimes finished with fresh
herbs or other seasoning.
Blanch – A method of cooking in which foods are plunged into boiling water for a
few seconds, removed from the water and refreshed under cold water, which
stops the cooking process. Used to heighten color and flavor, to firm flesh and to
loosen skins.
Boil – To cook in water or other liquid heated until bubbling vigorously. Few
techniques cause as much confusion as boiling, simmering, and poaching.
Boiling is, in fact, often a technique to be avoided. Most foods—meat and
seafood, for example—are poached instead (cooked in liquid held just below the
boil so it just shimmers slightly on the surface), because boiling turns them dry or
stringy, and it can cause the liquid to become murky or greasy.
Some foods, however, are best cooked at a rolling boil. Rice and pasta cook
more quickly and evenly in boiling water. Green vegetables are often cooked
uncovered in a large amount of boiling salted water. The large quantity of water
prevents the vegetables from lowering the temperature of the water, which would
slow their cooking and cause them to lose their bright color. The salt also helps
the vegetables retain their green color. As soon as the vegetables are done,
immediately drain them in a colander and either plunge them into ice water or
quickly rinse them under cold tap water until completely cool. This technique of
immediately chilling the drained vegetables so they retain their flavor and color is
called refreshing, or sometimes, shocking.
Bouillon – French, for broth. Refers to the liquid resulting from simmering meats,
vegetables, and aromatics in water until the meats have lost all their nutritional
elements to the water and the broth can jell upon cooling.
Bouquet Garni – A bundle of parsley stems, dried thyme, and a large bay leaf,
tied together and left to float freely in broth, stock, or sauce.
Braise – To cook in a small amount of liquid (also called stewing or pot roasting).
In contract to poaching, in which the food is completely submerged in simmering
liquid, braised dishes use a relatively small amount of liquid. Usually, the purpose
of braising is to concentrate the food’s flavors in the surrounding liquid so that it
can be made into a sauce, or allowed to reduce so that it coats or is reabsorbed
by the foods being braised.
Brioche – The famous flour, egg, and yeast cake of northern France, which is
now made in one form or another everywhere.
Brisket – A cut of beef from the lower forequarter, best suited for long-cooking
preparations like braising.
Broil – To cook with a direct heat source—usually a gas flame or an electric coil
—above the food.
Broth – Broth and stock are interchangeable terms and mean a flavorful liquid
made by gently cooking meat, seafood, or vegetables, often with herbs, in liquid,
usually water.
Butterfly – To cut and open out the edges of meat or seafood like a book or the
wings of a butterfly.
C. Cooking Terms
Chévre – The French word for goat and by extension the cheeses made from
goat’s milk.
Chiffonade – The fine ribbons obtained when several leafy vegetables or herbs
are tightly rolled into a cigar shape and cut across into 1/16 –to 1/8-inch wide
shreds.
Chinoise or China Cap – A very fine-meshed conical strainer used for straining
refined sauces and coulis.
Chop – To cut into irregular pieces. Foods can be chopped from very fine
(minced) to coarse.
Chorizo sausage – A spicy Spanish sausage containing a mixture of pork,
pepper, and chilies.
Cioppino Cioppino recipe A fish stew usually made with white wine and
tomatoes.
Clarified butter – Because butter contains milk solids which burn at relatively
low temperatures, it can’t be used to sauté at the high temperatures required for
browning most meats and seafood and some vegetables. Clarifying removes the
water and milk solids in butter. You can purchase clarified butter called ghee at
most larger grocery stores.
Coat – To cover the back of a spoon with a layer of a thickened sauce or stirred
custard.
Compound butter – Whole butter combined with herbs or other seasonings and
used to sauce grilled or broiled meats or vegetables.
Consommé – Broth or stock that has been clarified by simmering it with beaten
egg whites, which attract and trap the impurities clouding the broth.
Corned – As in corned beef or other meat; refers to a meat that has been salted
and cured.
Cornichon – Tiny pickles mixed with onions and other aromatics and preserved
in seasoned pure wine or cider vinegar.
Crème brulee – Custard topped with sugar and caramelized under the broiler
before serving.
Crème patisserie – Custard made with eggs, flour or other starches, milk, sugar,
and flavorings, used to fill and garnish pastries or as the base for puddings, pies,
soufflés, and creams.
Cure – To treat with an ingredient, usually salt and/or sugar, originally for the
purpose of preserving foods by protecting them from bacteria, molds, etc.
Curry – A mixture of spices that may include turmeric, coriander, cumin, cayenne
or other chilies, cardamom, cinnamon, clove, fennel, fenugreek, ginger, or garlic.
Custard – A liquid mixture that is combined with whole eggs, egg whites, or egg
yolks, or a combination, and gently baked until set. Examples of custards are a
quiche filling; a crème caramel and a crème brûlée.
D. Cooking Terms
Deglaze – To add liquid to a pan in which foods have been sautéed or roasted in
order to dissolve the caramelized juices stuck to the bottom of the pan. The
purpose of deglazing is to make a quick sauce or gravy for a roast, steak, chop,
or a piece of seafood fillet or steak. To make a pan-deglazed sauce, first pour out
any fat left in the pan, and make sure that the juices clinging to the bottom of the
pan haven’t blackened and burned. Add a few tablespoons of flavorful liquid,
such as wine, broth, or, in a pinch, water, to the pan. Gently scrape the bottom of
the pan with a wooden spoon to loosen the caramelized juices. You can use
such a sauce as is, or you can turn it into something richer and more elaborate
by adding reduced broth, swirling in a few pieces of butter, adding a little heavy
cream, or thickening it with a vegetable puree, such as garlic or tomato, and then
reducing the sauce to the consistency like. You can add nuance and flavor to the
sauce by adding chopped herbs or ingredients such as green peppercorns.
Degrease – To remove the fat that forms on the tops of simmering broths,
sauces, jus, and braising liquids. There are a couple of reliable methods for
degreasing broth. The first, which requires a little practice, is to use a ladle or
spoon to skim around the edges of the simmering broth to catch and remove just
the surface fat. An easier method is to chill the broth overnight in the refrigerator
and then remove the fat that has congealed on the surface. You can also use a
degreasing cup that is specially made for this task. You simply pour the juices
into the cup and then pour them out, leaving the fat behind.
Demi-glace – A mixture of equal parts of brown stock and brown sauce that has
been reduced by half.
Dice – To cut into cubes (unlike chopping, which cuts foods into irregular pieces).
Dredge – To coat a food with flour, any finely crumbled ingredient, or, in pastry,
with fine sugar.
Drupe – Peaches, apricots, and all plums are drupes, a juicy false fruit attached
to a wooden pit in which an almond is enclosed.
Dumpling – A small lump of soft leavened and seasoned egg, milk, and flour
dough, shaped with two spoons or piped out of a pastry bag fitted with a nozzle.
Usually it is poached in simmering water, but can be steamed over a stew.
Dutch oven – A cast-iron pot used for the preparation of stews, braises, and pot-
roasts.
Egg wash – A mixture of egg or egg white, oil, and water brushed over floured
items, which are then deep-fried or pan-fried in clarified butter or oil.
Espagnole – Brown sauce made with brown stock, caramelized mirepoix and
tomato puree, and seasonings.
Etouffe – A cooking method similar to braising in which items are cooked with
little or no added liquid in a pan with a tight-fitting lid. Also, a Cajun stew.
F. Cooking Terms
Filé – Ground sassafras leaves used to give the Southern gumbos their distinct
flavor.
Fish sauce – Clear, amber-tinted liquid that is drained from salted, fermented
fish. A very important flavoring in Thai cuisine.
Flambé – To ignite a sauce or other liquid so that it flames. Most of the time
flambéing has no real function other than to delight your guests. If you are going
to flambé a dish keep in mind that it is impossible to flambé a cold dish by
sprinkling it with spirits and trying to light it—the spirits only release their
flammable fumes when hot. Do not pour flaming spirits.
Flan – A liquid or semi liquid mixture, held together with whole eggs, egg whites,
or egg yolks, that is gently baked in a mold or pastry shell. Quiches, crème
caramel, and crème brulee are examples of sweet flans. Any puree, or pureed
soup, can be converted to a flan with the addition of egg. One whole egg, 2 egg
whites, or 2 egg yolks will bind ¾ cup of liquid.
Foie Gras – The livers of geese and ducks that have been force-fed a mixture of
corn, lard, and salted water.
Fold – To incorporate an egg-white foam into an egg yolk foam or a flour batter
without deflating it so that it retains its full leavening power.
G. Cooking Terms
Génoise – A sponge cake made with whole eggs, used for layer cakes and other
desserts.
Glaze – To give food a shiny surface by brushing it with sauce, aspic, icing, or
another appariel. For meat, to coat with sauce and then brown in an oven.
Gnocchi – Gnocchi are starchy dumplings that are made in various shapes.
There are two basic types of gnocchi: those based on potatoes and those based
on flour or cornmeal.
Grand sauce – (or Mother sauce). One of several basic sauces that are used in
the preparation of many other small sauces. The grand sauces are: demi-glace,
veloute, béchamel, hollandaise, and tomato.
Gravy – A gravy is an American-style jus that has been thickened with a roux.
This roux can be made using butter and flour or by cooking flour into some of the
fat skimmed off the jus. Cornstarch mixed with a little water can also be whisked
into the jus and the jus brought to a simmer to get the cornstarch to thicken.
Once the gravy is thickened, other ingredients, such as herbs or chopped giblets,
can be added to it to give it extra flavor. Vegetable purees can also be used to
thicken a natural jus and turn it into a flourless gravy. Garlic, roasted along with
meats and poultry, or separately, is excellent pureed and whisked into the jus to
thicken it.
Grill – To cook above the heat source (traditionally over wood coals) in the open
air.
Gumbo – An African word for okra, it is now the name of a soup of shellfish
made famous in Louisiana. It is lightly thickened with okra or the powdered
sassafras leaves called filé.
H. Cooking Terms
Haloumi – Firm white cheese made from sheep’s milk. It has a stringy texture
and is usually sold in brine.
Harissa – A hot paste of red chilies, garlic and olive oil. Available in tubes or jars.
Hash – Chopped, cooked meat, usually with potatoes and/or other vegetables,
which is seasoned, bound with a sauce, and sautéed. Also, to chop.
Hoisin sauce – A thick, sweet-tasting Chinese sauce made from fermented soy
beans, sugar, salt, and red rice. Used as a dipping sauce or glaze.
J. Cooking Terms
K. Cooking Terms
Kaffir lime – A variety of lime with a knobby outer skin. The fragrant leaves are
crushed or shredded and used in cooking, and the limes are used for their juice,
mainly in Thai cuisine.
Kosher – From the Hebrew kasher. When talking about food, to prepare it at
every stage in strict observance of the Jewish dietary laws. When talking about
salt, kosher salt is a coarse salt that does not contain magnesium carbonate.
L. Cooking Terms
Liqueur – A spirit flavored with fruit, spices, nuts, herbs, and / or seeds and
usually sweetened.
London Broil – A large steak generally grilled or broiled and cut out of the rib
cap, flank, or chuck of beef.
Lox – Yiddish word derived from the German word lachs for salmon and the
name of salt-cured belly of salmon.
Lyonnaise – Lyons-style; with onions and usually butter, white wine, vinegar,
and demi-glace.
M. Cooking Terms
Macaroni Italian Macaroni – Handmade eggless pasta made from flour or a
combination of flour and semolina, water, and a small amount of salt. Often used
to refer to elbow-shaped pasta.
Meringue – Egg whites beaten until they are stiff, with added sugar or sugar
syrup, used as a topping or shaped and baked until stiff.
Mirin – Heavily sweetened rice wine used as cooking wine. You can substitute
sweet white wine.
Miso – A thick paste made from fermented and processed soy beans. Red miso
is a combination of barley and soy beans and yellow miso is a combination of
rice and soy beans.
Mix – To combine ingredients by hand or with a mixer with the goal of blending
them well and uniformly together.
Mousse – A general term that can describe any mixture lightened with
something airy, usually beaten egg whites or whipped cream.
Mousseline – A sauce made by folding whipped cream into hollandaise. Or, a
very light forcemeat based on white meat or seafood lightened with cream and
eggs.
Mozzarella – Italian cheese made of pasta filata, a cheese paste that pulls into
strings when cooked to approximately 96 to 98 degrees F.
N. Cooking Terms
Napoleon – A pastry made with alternating layers of puff pastry and a cream of
your choice and glazed.
Noodles – Pasta made with flour or a mixture of flour and semolina, whole eggs,
or egg whites.
Nori sheets – Dried seaweed pressed into square sheets. Used for nori rolls,
soups and Japanese cuisine.
O. Cooking Terms
Oeuf – Egg
Omelet – Beaten eggs that are cooked in butter, then rolled or folded into an
oval. They may be filled with any variety of ingredients before folding.
P. Cooking Terms
Paella – A Spanish dish of rice cooked with onion, tomato, garlic, saffron,
vegetables, and various meats, including chicken, chorizo, and/or shellfish.
Panfry – Most cooks use the terms panfry and sauté interchangeably, but strictly
speaking, there is a difference. Although both terms refer to cooking in a small
amount of hot oil, butter, or other fat, sautéing means to toss foods over high
heat, while pan-frying describes cooking pieces of meat, seafood, or large pieces
of vegetables in a hot pan, turning with tongs, a spatula, or a fork only once or
twice.
Pan gravy – A sauce made by deglazing pan drippings from a roast and
combining them with a roux or other starch and additional stock.
Papillote – Food wrapped in parchment paper for aluminum foil and baked in an
oven where it will steam in its own moisture and that of any vegetable added to
the package to flavor the meat.
Parboil – To cook partially in boiling water.
Parchment paper – Heat-resistant paper used in baking to line pans. It does not
need to be buttered or greased, and it keeps rich cookies from losing their shape
and from sticking to the pan.
Paring knife – A short knife used for paring and trimming fruits and vegetables.
Its blade is usually 2 to 4 inches long.
Pasta – The Italian generic name for all forms of alimentary pastes made from a
mixture of flour, semolina, and whole eggs or egg whites, but no water, as
opposed to macaroni, which contains water and no eggs.
Pastasciutta – Literally “dry pasta,” meaning fresh or dried pasta with sauce (as
opposed to a soup or a baked pasta dish).
Pasticcio – A baked dish of pasta and other ingredients, moistened with one or
more sauces.
Pâté – A rich forcemeat of meat, game, poultry, seafood, and /or vegetables,
baked in pastry or in a mold or dish.
Pâté à choux – Cream puff paste, made by boiling a mixture of water, butter,
and flour, then beating in whole eggs.
Pecorino – really good in risotto recipes with pecorino A hard grating cheese
derived from ewe’s milk mostly made in the Roman Lazio countryside and
Sardinia.
Pesto pesto recipes – From the Italian pestare, a verb that means to pound or
crush. Pesto is traditionally made of crushed fresh basil leaves pounded with
garlic, Pecorino, either pine nuts for walnuts, and olive oil.
Phyllo dough – Pastry made with very thin sheets of a flour-and-water dough
layered with butter and / or crumbs; similar to strudel. Also called filo dough.
Pilaf A technique for cooking rice in which the rice is sautéed briefly in butter,
then simmered in stock or water with various seasonings.
Q. Cooking Terms
Quenelle – A paste made of fish, poultry, or veal meat mixed with eggs, cream,
panade, and/or beef suet. Or, an oblong dumpling made from such a paste or
other more modern and lighter pastes, shaped between two spoons, poached in
stock, and served with a sauce and garnish.
Quiche – Originally a pie made with a butter crust and filled with eggs beaten
with heavy cream and very smoky bacon. American cooks have created a
plethora of recipes for quiche.
Quick bread – Bread made with chemical leaveners, which work more quickly
than yeast.
R. Cooking Terms
Ragout – Stew.
Ragừ – A complex meat sauce that may or may not contain tomato. Our
timpano recipe link uses one of these!
Refresh – To rinse just-boiled vegetables under very cold water to stop their
cooking.
Resting – Roasted meats should not be served straight out of the over, but
should be allowed to rest in a warm place for 20 to 30 minutes, loosely covered
with aluminum foil. (The foil keeps the meat warm; loose wrapping ensures that
the outside of the meat doesn’t steam and lose its crispness.) Resting allows the
meat to relax so the juices become redistributed in the meat and aren’t squeezed
out onto the platter during carving.
Ricotta – A fresh, creamy white cheese, smoother than cottage cheese, with a
slightly sweet flavor. It is available in whole milk and part-skim milk versions, and
is often used in lasagna and stuffed pastas. A little can be stirred into a sauce to
add richness as well as creamy body. Refrigerate and use within a week.
Risotto Risotto recipes – Risotto is a creamy rice dish made with short-grain or
Arborio Italian rice. The rice is gently cooked in butter or olive oil. Liquid, usually
broth, is then added a small amount at a time until the rice is cooked and bathed
in creamy liquid. Risotto must be stirred almost constantly to release the starch
from the rice so the starch thickens the broth, giving the dish its characteristic
creamy consistency.
Romano cheese – A hard, salty grating cheese. Pecorino Romano is the best
known, and is made with sheep’s milk, while many other types are made with
cow’s milk or a blend of cow’s and goat’s milk. Grate as you would Parmesan
and use as a tangy accent for pasta dishes.
S. Cooking Terms
Sabayon –A light, frothy mixture made by beating egg yolks with water or other
liquid over gentle heat.
Sake – Japanese fermented rice wine. Used in cooking to tenderize and add
flavor. Store in a cool, dark place and use soon after opening. Substitute dry
white wine.
Salsa – Tomato sauce or other type of sauce flavored with a fairly wide variety of
ingredients.
Sashimi tuna – Finest quality tuna cut in an Asian or Japanese style. It is very
tender and used raw in Japanese cuisine.
Sauté – To cook over high heat in a small amount of fat in a sauté pan or skillet.
Scald – To heat milk just below the boiling point. Or, to immerse a vegetable or
fruit in boiling water in order to remove its skin easily.
Scallions – Immature onions (also called green onions) with a milk and slightly
sweet flavor. Both the white bulb and the green tops can be used in cooking. The
green tops also make an attractive garnish.
Sear – To brown the surface of pieces of meats and or fish by submitting them to
intense initial heat.
Semolina – The coarsely milled hard wheat endosperm used for gnocchi, some
pasta, and couscous.
Shallot – A member of the onion family, looking rather like large cloves of garlic.
Shallots are used to infuse savory dishes with a mild, delicate onion flavor.
Refrigerate for not more than 1 week to maintain maximum flavor.
Shred – To cut into fine strips. Shredding is similar to cutting into chiffonade but
less precise.
Shitake mushroom – A meaty, Oriental variety of mushroom with an almost
steak-like flavor, used in pasta sauces and salads for depth. Choose fresh
shitakes that are plump and unblemished, and avoid broken or shriveled caps.
Skim – To lift and discard any unwanted foam or fat from the surface of a stock,
broth, sauce, or soup.
Smother – To cook in a covered pan with little liquid over low heat.
Sorbet – A frozen dessert made with fruit juice or another flavoring, a sweetener
(usually sugar), and beaten egg whites, which prevent the formation of large ice
crystals.
Souffle – A preparation made with a sauce base, whipped egg whites, and
flavorings. The egg whites cause the soufflé to puff during cooking.
Spatzle – Small flour, egg, and milk dumplings resembling fine noodles which
are poached in water and then buttered.
Spring-form pan – A cake pan with a detachable bottom and a clamp on its side
that can be released to easily unmold the cake. You make Tiramisu link in one of
these.
Steam – To cook in steam by suspending foods over (not in) boiling water, in a
covered pot or steamer.
Stock link – A rich meat, fish, or vegetable broth. It is used as a base for soups,
sauces, and other preparations.
Sugo – A simple tomato sauce or other type of sauce comprised of relatively few
ingredients.
Sun-dried tomatoes – Plum tomatoes that have been dried slowly to produce a
chewy, intensely flavorful sauce ingredient. They are available in both oil-packed
and dry-packed. For many recipes, the dried tomatoes must be soaked in hot
water to soften them before using.
Sweat – To cook foods over gentle heat, usually covered or partly covered, until
they release their moisture. Vegetables, meats, and seafood are often sweated
when making soups, stews, and sauces so that the foods release their juices into
the pan and surrounding liquid. Sweating is the opposite of sautéing.
T. Cooking Terms
Tamarind paste – A product from the ripe bean pods of the tamarind tree. It can
be purchased as pulp or in the more convenient form of tamarind concentrate
ready to use.
V. Cooking Terms
Vinaigrette – The classic French salad dressing made of one part vinegar and
three parts oil. Mustard and cream can be added if desired.
W. Cooking Terms
Wasabi – A spice that comes from a knobby green root of the Japanese plant
wasbia japonica. A traditional condiment served with Japanese sushi and
sashimi. It has the same warming or stinging nasal sensation as horseradish.
Whip – To beat a preparation with the goal of introducing air into it. Or, the
balloon wire whisk often used to do so.
White mirepoix – Mirepoix that does not include carrots and may include
chopped mushrooms or mushroom trimmings. It is used for pale or white sauces
and stocks.
White sauce – Traditional white sauces are divided into two types: those based
on béchamel sauce and those based on velouté sauce. A basic béchamel sauce
is made by adding hot milk to a white roux, and a basic veloute sauce is made by
adding hot broth to a white roux.
White stock – A light-colored stock made with bones that have not been
browned.
Wok – A round-bottomed pan, usually made of rolled steel, used for virtually all
Chinese cooking methods.
Y. Cooking Terms
Yogurt – Milk cultured with bacteria to give it a slightly thick consistency and
sour flavor.
Z. Cooking Terms
Zabaglione – A whipped custard made with egg yolks and sugar gradually
diluted over heat with Marsala or other wine, fruit juice, or liqueur.
Zest – The thin, brightly colored outer part of the rind of citrus fruits. The oils
make it ideal for use as a flavoring. Remove the zest with a grater, citrus zester,
or vegetable peeler. Be careful to remove only the colored layer, not the bitter-
white pith beneath it.