Fruit salad

Fruit salad (also called Macedonia) is a dish consisting of various kinds of fruit, served in a liquid, either in their own juices or a syrup. When served as an appetizer or as a dessert, a fruit salad is sometimes known as a fruit cocktail or fruit cup. In different forms fruit salad can be served as an appetizer, a side-salad, or a dessert.

Contents

Description

There are a number of home recipes for fruit salad that contain different kinds of fruit, or that use a different kind of sauce other than the fruit's own juice or syrup. One variation is a Waldorf-style fruit salad, which uses a mayonnaise-based sauce. Other recipes use sour cream (such as in ambrosia), yogurt or even mustard as the primary sauce ingredient. An ever-popular variation also uses whipped cream mixed in with many varieties of fruits (usually a mixture of berries), and also often include miniature marshmallows. Rojak, a Malaysian fruit salad, uses a spicy sauce with peanuts and shrimp paste. In the Philippines, fruit salads are popular party and holiday fare, usually made with buko, or young coconut, and condensed milk in addition to other canned or fresh fruit.

There is also an extended variety of fruit salads in Moroccan cuisine, often as part of a kemia, a selection of appetisers or small dishes analogous to Spanish tapas or eastern Mediterranean mezze.

A fruit salad ice cream is also commonly manufactured, with small pieces of real fruit embedded in, flavored either with juices from concentrate, fruit extracts or artificial chemicals.

"Fruit Salad" is also the name of a song by Australian children's band The Wiggles and on the television show Wonder Pets.

"Fruit-salad" is also a slang term used for medals on a soldiers uniform- "Look at the fruit-salad on that colonel." The term refers to the bright colors of a high percentage of the ribbons that usually go with medals.[1]

Fruit cocktail

Fruit cocktail is often sold canned and is a staple of cafeterias, but can also be made fresh. The use of the word "cocktail" in the name does not mean that it contains alcohol, but refers to the secondary definition "An appetizer made by combining pieces of food, such as fruit or seafood". Fruit cocktail is sometimes used to make pruno.

In the United States, the USDA stipulates that canned "Fruit cocktail" must contain pears, grapes, cherries, peaches, and pineapples, otherwise it cannot be called fruit cocktail. It should contain fruits in not less nor more than the following percentages:

Both William Vere Cruess of the University of California, Berkeley and Herbert Gray of the Barron-Gray Packing Company of San Jose, California have been credited with the invention of fruit cocktail.[2][3] Canned fruit cocktail and canned fruit salad are similar, but fruit salad contains larger fruit while fruit cocktail is diced.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Mystique Of Military Coloured Ribbons". New Straits Times. May 21, 1996. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Q3IWAAAAIBAJ&sjid=rR4EAAAAIBAJ&dq=fruit%20salad%20military%20ribbons&pg=5782%2C68011. Retrieved August 13, 2010. 
  2. ^ Cruess, William (Vere) in The Cambridge Dictionary of American Biography: http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Cruess,+William
  3. ^ History San José: Cannery Life: The Mystery of Fruit Cocktail: http://www.historysanjose.org/cannerylife/through-the-years/1917-1966/mechanization/fruit-cocktail.html
  4. ^ David Arthey, P. R. Ashurst Fruit Processing Published by Springer, 1996 p. 151 ISBN 0-7514-0039-4, 9780751400397 248 pages preview: http://books.google.com/books?id=tlrPylXG6WYC&pg=PA151&dq=fruit+salad+fruit+cocktail#PPA151,M1

External links