T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1000.1 | Crazy Bread | BASVAX::HAIGHT | | Tue Feb 23 1988 10:59 | 10 |
| Actual Sicilian pizza is made from bread dough that is placed in
a square pan (like a cookie sheet) and allowed to raise to just
over the edges of the pan. The dough is then brushed with olive
oil and slivers of garlic cloves are pushed down into the dough.
Some are made with chunks of pork rind an green pepper, also.
Sprinkle lightly with regular table salt.
You just cook the flavored bread like pizza and cut it into 1" strips
the length of the pan and eat it that way...kinda like Crazy Bread
from Little Caesar's.
|
1000.2 | Calzone? | XCELR8::CORMIER | | Tue Feb 23 1988 12:55 | 8 |
| It sounds a little like Calzone. It's sort of a folded-over pizza.
You roll out the dough, fill it with whatever you choose (I use
fresh mushrooms, provolone, and prosciutto), fold it in half and
bake it. Pardon my ignorance, but what's "fromage blanc"? Translated
it means "white cheese", but is it some specific type of cheese,
or "any" white meltable cheese?
Sarah
|
1000.5 | your not-pizza is still pizza | TIGEMS::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Wed Feb 24 1988 08:20 | 24 |
| Pizza need not have tomato sauce to be pizza.
Pizza is a flat bread that predates the Romans. Tomatoes did not
become common in Italy until the mid 1800's. So the early pizze had,
and many modern pizza have, rather simple toppings that varied from
nothing to only oil to combinations of three or four non-dominating
items. What we Americans think of as pizza is more properly called
"pizza alla Napoletana", although that term could be restricted now to
a topping of tomatoes, oregano, anchovies, mozzarella, and oil.
Without the anchovies and with basil instead of oregano, it is "pizza
Margherita". Pizza without tomato is broadly classed as "pizza in
Bianca", white pizza; the pizza described in .1 with only slivers of
garlic and olive oil is "pizza con Olio e Aglio".
Pizza along the northwest coast tends to use onion as a prime
ingredient; the French terms in your recipe would seem to support that
origin. Assuming that fromage blanc is a young white cheese, then I
think your mystery dish could be called "pizza con La Mozzarella e
Cipolla". The addition of fresh cream and bacon would seem to be
variations.
Calzoni and sfinciuni are closed variations of the open pizza.
Pizzelle, calzoncelli, and panzarotti are miniature, deep-fried
relatives of calzoni.
|
1000.6 | creme fraiche is NOT fresh cream | SMEGIT::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Wed Feb 24 1988 16:49 | 10 |
| Well I blew it on "creme fraiche". It isn't fresh cream. It is a
magic result of taking cream with at least 60% butterfat and fermenting
it (perhaps in some special way) for two or three weeks. The result
supposedly has a zing (like yogurt maybe?). When blended with other
ingredients, it thicken rather than thins the result.
Now if we could find out if fromage blanc is something other than white
cheese.
Karen, can you tell us more about your source?
|
1000.7 | Yuppie Markets and Cheese shops will know | THE780::WILDE | Imagine all the people.. | Wed Feb 24 1988 17:04 | 16 |
| > magic result of taking cream with at least 60% butterfat and fermenting
> it (perhaps in some special way) for two or three weeks. The result
> supposedly has a zing (like yogurt maybe?). When blended with other
> ingredients, it thicken rather than thins the result.
Weeks?...My sources say the rich cream is left at room temperature with the
fraiche culture in it for hours. My french cookbook says something
like 48 hours :^). You can buy it already "fraiche"d in some yuppie
markets around here - Cosentino's in San Jose for one.
Fromage Blanc may be referring to the "triple cream" cheeses that we
get in markets under brand names like Alouete. Generally the cheese is a
very rich, soft cheese with herbs added. I'm sure you can get it without
added herbs from a cheese shop.
Anyway, it sounds terrific whatever the cheese is...
|
1000.8 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 19:04 | 3 |
| Another yuppie market that carries it is Draeger's in Menlo Park.
I guess you East coast folks will just have to suffer along without
it.
|
1000.9 | I'm gaining weight even as I type | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 22:49 | 5 |
| According to "The Cheese Book", fromage blanc is sour milk poured
into a cheesecloth bag and drained of its whey. When the result
is eaten with salt and pepper, t's called fromage blanc. When heavily
sugared and eaten with sweet cream, it's called fromage a la creme.
|
1000.10 | Maybe a substitute for you | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Thu Feb 25 1988 10:54 | 14 |
|
rep .9 has it right, fromage blanc has the consistency of a thick
sour cream. It is usually eaten for breakfast in France but I've
seen it served as the fromage course during dinner. My quess is
that you could reproduce the taste and texture by taking cream cheese
and "thinning" it with alittle buttermilk until it has the consistency
of a thick sour cream. I have a recipe for a cheesecake made with
fromage blanc but it never tasted as good as one made with cream
cheese if anybody is interested.
-mike
|
1000.11 | Yogurt? | DECWET::NEWKERK | For every vision, there is an equal but opposite revision. | Thu Feb 25 1988 15:40 | 8 |
|
I think that the Frugal Gourmet has a recipe in his first book that
might approximate this. I seem to recall that it involves putting
plain yogurt into a cheese cloth bag and hanging it over the sink for
some amount of time to drain the liquid out of it. This might be a
little sharper that the real thing.
|
1000.12 | creme fraiche according to Julia | TIGEMS::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Fri Feb 26 1988 08:18 | 20 |
| According to "From Julia Child's Kitchen", ISBN 0-394-48071-6,
pages 500-501, on Creme Fraiche:
".. akin to our sour cream but much less acid ... higher buttertfat"
".. make a reasonable facsimile ... using heavy cream and ... sour
cream ... let sit until ... thickened ... then .. refrigerated"
"Why bother"? --- have a dab when you want it. Tastes good.
Not really essential to French cooking.
To make:
Blend one part sour cream with two parts heavy cream.
Let sit at 75 degrees for 6 to 8 hours or overnight.
Stir, cover, and refrigerate.
Before it is all used up, blend in heavy cream alone and
allow to ferment again. (The old inoculates the new.)
|
1000.13 | in search of Fromage Blanc | TIGEMS::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Sun Feb 28 1988 08:30 | 19 |
| re Note 1000.9 by Karen Kolling,
"fromage blanc is sour milk ... drained of its whey"
This is what I would have called "cottage cheese" here in New England.
Cottage cheese is whole or skim milk that has been soured by culture
inoculation or by an organic acid such as lemon juice and then
separated from the whey with warmth but with little or no rennet.
Excessive acid is rinsed from the curds, and the cheese is eaten fresh
without ripening.
Our cheese book by Flake, "Kitchen Cheesemaking", ISBN 0-8117-2108-6,
has directions on page 88 for the Hispanic "Queso Blanco". The milk is
heated to about 185 F., and lemon or lime juice is added until the milk
curdles. The curd is tiny and must be drained in a fine cloth. The
taste is supposed to be quite acidic; that characteristic plus the fine
texture might reconcile the reference by Karen with the observation of
Mike Wolinski, our local ex-resident of France. In reply 1000.10 Mike
reports that "fromage blanc has the consistency of a thick sour cream."
Our local cottage cheese has a larger curd.
|
1000.14 | Source in the East | AKOV88::BROWN | The more the merrier! | Wed Mar 02 1988 12:17 | 14 |
| Re: .8
The East Coast most certainly has its own supplies of creme
fraiche, not unheard of at all!
For those in the MA region one source is Idylewilde (sp?)
Farm in Acton -- they carry it in their dairy case. They might be
a good place to look for fromage blanc (whatever it is...) since
they have quite an extensive selection of cheese and have a lot of
'gourmet' ingredients.
Jan who_has_always_wondered_how_to_use_creme_fraiche
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1000.15 | How to use creme fraiche | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Thu Mar 03 1988 09:36 | 11 |
|
rep .14
You can use creme fraiche for any recipe that calls for cream.
It's big advantage in my mind is that it doesn't curdle like most
cream when added to very hot dishes, sauces, ...
-mike
|
1000.16 | Creme Fraiche--LOVE IT! | SSVAX::MCCULLER | | Wed Aug 24 1988 14:55 | 26 |
|
More on creme fraiche----
I have not been without 1 cup or more of creme fraiche lurking in
the secret part of the fridge (that being, away from where my 12-
year old son normally forages) for the past 15 years. It is really
incredible how many uses this delightful creme has. It has been
stirred into assortments of waffles, pancakes mixes, cake mixes,
you name it, I've tried it with creme fraiche. Because it is a
nice departure from traditional creams, I've been using a spoonful
on sourdough pancakes (mine, that is) for years.
Want to add a little zip to your fried chicken gravy? Easy-- right
toward the end of the stirring, while you are praying your gravy
will thicken before your children eat the tablecloth off the table,
stir in a dollop of creme fraiche while you are gently whisking
the gravy around the skillet (don't do it too early, 'cause you
will notice a great difference in the resulting taste of the gravy--
not bad, just different. Also, don't use much, just 1-2 TBS.)
Experiment with creme fraiche--don't just let the unused portion
turn rainbow colors in the fridge (that does take a while, by the
way!)!
Mac
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1000.17 | not calzone, slang Italian for "meat pizza pie"... | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | | Wed Mar 01 1995 12:33 | 13 |
|
Help... I've forgotten the name of the Italian "meat pizza" that
is really along the lines of a meat pie made with proscuitto,
capacolla, ricotta and a mixture of other strong Italian deli meats.
It's popular both in southern Italy and in the Italian community in
Boston's North End. I've forgotten the Italian name for it.
Anyone remember?
-Erik
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1000.18 | 'pissa gaynah' as my mother-in-law would say it | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | | Thu Mar 09 1995 15:49 | 8 |
| > Help... I've forgotten the name of the Italian "meat pizza" that
> is really along the lines of a meat pie made with proscuitto,
> capacolla, ricotta and a mixture of other strong Italian deli meats.
The name of this dish is "pizza geana." I have no idea how it's
spelled, but it's pronounced 'gay-nah'...
-Erik
|